
In his preface, Tozer expresses concern that though there are good Bible teachers teaching vital right doctrine and the fundamentals of the faith, they seem “strangely unaware that in their ministry there is no manifest Presence,” that “ God’s children starving while actually seated at the Father’s table,” that “there may be a right opinion of God without either love or…right temper toward Him (pp. 🙂 ) It had been years since I had read The Pursuit of God and I couldn’t remember much about it, so I decided to delve into it again. (Good thing I don’t rely much on my memory.


When I actually checked, however, what I had read last year was Tozer’s The Knowledge of the Holy.

Tozer for Carrie‘s Reading to Know Classics Book Club, this month because I thought I had read it just last year. I had not originally planned to reread The Pursuit of Godby A.
