Summary
This volume addresses a perennial pastoral tension, how do covenant grace and covenant commands relate in the Christian life. It seeks to handle the biblical language of works, obedience, and faithfulness without collapsing into legalism on the one hand or antinomianism on the other.
The author works through key biblical themes and texts to show how obedience functions within covenant relationship. The aim is to clarify the place of commandment for believers, and to show how Scripture speaks of faith working through love without undermining justification by grace.
The book is written with a theological tone but with practical interest. It wants readers to think clearly so that churches can pursue holiness with confidence, humility, and joy, grounded in the grace of God rather than in self effort.
Strengths
The first strength is its willingness to face real confusion. Many Christians struggle to describe obedience without fear or pride, and the author addresses that need. He insists that grace and obedience belong together in the Bible, and he works hard to define that relationship carefully.
A second strength is its attention to biblical categories. It does not merely rehearse a systematic scheme, it tries to show how Scripture uses the language of covenant, command, and faithfulness across redemptive history. That helps readers see why obedience is neither optional nor meritorious.
A third strength is its pastoral direction. The book repeatedly aims at the heart, showing that obedience is the fruit of grace and the path of grateful love. That emphasis can strengthen preaching that calls for holiness while still exalting Christ as the only hope for sinners.
Limitations
The argument sometimes moves through theological distinctions that will be unfamiliar to general readers. It is not overly technical, but it expects readers to track definitions carefully. Some pastors may also want a few more worked examples of how these distinctions function in counselling situations.
In addition, because it is thematic, it can feel less anchored to long stretches of exegesis. It is best read alongside close study of key passages in Romans, Galatians, and James.
How We Would Use It
This book is useful for sermon preparation when teaching on faith and works, obedience, or assurance. It can help you avoid false contrasts and speak with the full range of biblical language. Read a chapter, summarise its main claim, then test it against the passage you are preaching.
It also works well for discipleship. Many believers either fear commandments or treat them casually. This volume can help leaders explain why God commands for our good, and how grace trains us for godliness. Extract key sections and discuss them in small group settings.
For pastors in training, it can be part of a theology of sanctification module. Students can be asked to define terms carefully and then to show how the definitions protect both the freeness of grace and the seriousness of holiness.
Closing Recommendation
If your church needs clearer teaching on obedience within grace, this book can help. It is a thoughtful supplement that supports careful preaching and healthy discipleship.
It is not the final word, but it offers useful categories and a steady biblical direction. Used wisely, it can help cultivate holiness that is both earnest and humble.
Bradley G. Green
Bradley G. Green is an American theologian of the early twenty first century, working within confessional Baptist and Reformed evangelical circles.
He has written on the doctrine of Scripture, theological method, and the history of Christian thought, seeking to recover a classical and ecclesial approach to theology. His work often emphasises the church as the interpretive community and the coherence of biblical revelation.
Green is valued for his historical awareness, theological seriousness, and desire to see doctrine serve the life of the church. He writes with conviction and clarity, encouraging readers to think deeply about Scripture while remaining rooted in historic Christian orthodoxy.
Theological Perspective: Baptist