I intensely relate with Alisa! She isn't satisfied with listening to the talking heads or reading about the summaries of primary sources, but rather reads them all herself. Her relentless pursuit of truth is so admirable to me, and I deeply respect her for the journey she went through and the way she fought to find the answers to these harrowing questions. I also yelped with glee when she said she was going to read the church fathers - that's something I would do! All these things make for a book that straightforwardly refutes deceptive progressive doctrine with common-sense, biblical, and historical arguments.
I really do love the memoir style that was attached to something primarily apologetic, but the narrative does seem to take a backseat and feels a little disjointed. Other than that, I loved this book and recommend it.
I intensely relate with Alisa! She isn't satisfied with listening to the talking heads or reading about the summaries of primary sources, but rather reads them all herself. Her relentless pursuit of truth is so admirable to me, and I deeply respect her for the journey she went through and the way she fought to find the answers to these harrowing questions. I also yelped with glee when she said she was going to read the church fathers - that's something I would do! All these things make for a book that straightforwardly refutes deceptive progressive doctrine with common-sense, biblical, and historical arguments.
I really do love the memoir style that was attached to something primarily apologetic, but the narrative does seem to take a backseat and feels a little disjointed. Other than that, I loved this book and recommend it.