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The Art of Turning

From sin to Christ for a joyfully clear conscience

Kevin DeYoung

5.0

+ Free eBook

5.0

The Art of Turning

From sin to Christ for a joyfully clear conscience

Kevin DeYoung

Quantity

The conscience seems somewhat mysterious. We're often not really sure how to listen to it, if we can trust it or what role it should play in our lives. Kevin DeYoung shows us it isn't something to be puzzled over but rather that a conscience is something good, given by God.

As you read this book, you'll discover freedom from the low-level guilt and shame we commonly experience. DeYoung explains that when we daily turn to Christ, we experience a clear conscience that comes with knowing that Jesus' blood covers all our wrong.

What others are saying about the book:

"Short enough to read in one sitting, significant enough to change your whole life." - Nancy Guthrie, Bible teacher and author

"This is a wonderfully clear teaching about a joyfully clear conscience. It's instructive and even perhaps surprising to hear all the Bible has to say on this topic we too often neglect. These words spur us on to walk in open relationship with God, through his Spirit, conscience cleansed by the blood of Christ." - Kathleen Nielson, The Gospel Coalition

"Kevin DeYoung engagingly explains what the conscience is, how to have a clear one, and why it matters." - Andy Naselli, assistant professor of New Testament and theology at Bethlehem College & Seminary in Minneapolis, co-author of Conscience

"Our conscience is always with us yet its unique purpose in the Christian life is not often explored. This book takes a practical look at the role of the conscience through the lens of Scripture and puts a spotlight on needed truth. It is a resource that gets the reader to dive in with both feet and experience the powerful encouragement and fundamental conviction that the conscience brings to the Christian life. Kevin convincingly helps readers to understand how our consciences are intrinsically connected to our spiritual decline or flourishing. As a biblical counselor I am grateful for this resource as it is sure to be helpful for anyone who reads it." - Eliza Huie, author and counselor

"This excellent short book takes us, through the lens of a proper Biblical understanding of conscience, to the heart of the Gospel. It is written for Christians, and will do us much good, but I will feel confident in handing it to those exploring the Christian faith." - William Taylor, St Helen's Bishopsgate, London

  • Title

    The Art of Turning

  • Author(s)

    Kevin DeYoung

  • ISBN

    9781911272212

  • Format

    Paperback

  • Publisher

    10Publishing

  • Topic

    Holiness

  • Audience

    Adults

  • Pages

    38

  • Published

    06/01/2017

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Kevin DeYoung

Kevin DeYoung

Kevin DeYoung is senior pastor at Christ Covenant Church (Matthews, North Carolina). He serves as Chancellor’s Professor of Systematic and Historical Theology at Reformed Theological Seminary and is the author of several best–selling books, including Just Do Something, Crazy Busy and The Hole in Our Holiness.

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Overall rating

5.0 based on 2 reviews

Powerful, both challenging and liberating, and crystal clear

This is an excellent little book with life-changing potential. Crystal clear, beautifully written, and utterly faithful to the Bible, Kevin DeYoung packs each of its 40 pages full of the gospel as well as his trademark pastoral wisdom and illuminating exposition. For those new to Christianity, it offers a compelling path away from the despondency and hopelessness of a guilty conscience towards the joy and liberation of a clean conscience. For those whose Christian walk has involved daily reminders of sin and the pressing burden of a tender conscience, it provides a glorious reminder of the freedom and forgiveness we have if we turn to Christ. And for those Christians whose conscience is all too used to being shoved aside, being ignored, or otherwise "misfiring", it plots a route to repentance and the joyful clarity of a conscience that finds full forgiveness at the foot of the cross. Jonathan Storey Grace Church Cheltenham

Jonathan Storey

The Christians best friend

"10 of those" the excellent Christian publisher do attractive and short books aimed at the general Christian reader. The latter feature is particularly important as in general people's attention span and patience to wade through huge tomes is shrinking fast, especially young people. They consume information but in bite sized chunks. Well, this is definitely bite sized with 40 small pages. Kevin DeYoung who is an American pastor (and the illustrations and examples are therefore American) writes helpfully and practically about the conscience. I am not aware of any other (recent) books on this though the Puritans in particular wrote a lot of good stuff about it. JI Packer for example writes “ The concern which was really supreme in the minds and hearts of the people called Puritans was a concern about God—a concern to know Him truly, and serve Him rightly, and so to glorify Him and to enjoy Him. But, just because this was so, they were in fact very deeply concerned about conscience, for they held that conscience was the mental organ in men through which God brought His Word to bear on them. Nothing, therefore, in their estimation, was more important for any man than that his conscience should be enlightened, instructed, purged, and kept clean. To them, there could be no real spiritual understanding, or any genuine godliness, except as men exposed and enslaved their consciences to God’s Word." So what is the conscience? DeYoung defines it as "the moral faculty within human beings that assesses what is good and what is bad". He looks at some practical examples which are well developed - Luther and Paul. Although Luther now almost every historian agrees did not actually say “ Here I stand” - but it was an ideal very much in the spirit of his "stand" at the Diet of Worms. As always with DeYoung who is a prolific and enjoyable writer he writes fluently, biblically and practically. He looks at misfiring consciences for example and makes some good points. What I found particularly helpful is his emphasis on having a balanced approach. It is possible to be morbidly continually examining ourselves and a few of the Puritans were perhaps by temperament inclined this way. But today we have likely gone much more to the opposite extreme of not using our God given moral faculty. De Young concludes by saying that the conscience is or should be “the Christians best friend'. Additionally, if you liked this I hope it whets your appetite as there are many Puritan books on the conscience, the classic being Richard Sibbes “The Bruised Reed”. But even better I think is Bunyan's wonderful and shockingly overlooked classic allegory “The Holy War” which is in my view as good as “Pilgrims Progress”. “Mr Recorder” is the conscience of Mansoul (the City which is humanity) and his job is to support and learn from “Lord Secretary” — the Holy Spirit. When Mr Recorder, the conscience, is alive and active it is therefore just as DeYoung says our greatest friend for it brings us the Spirit into everyday life. But when he’s asleep watch out boys and girls, for here comes the devil creeping in who infiltrates and then captures the city and the first thing he does is get rid of Mr Recorder. For if we have no divine sense of good and evil we are truly in trouble. Read them both yourself, both classic books and also available through the estimable 10 of those.

Jeremy Marshall

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