[Great Conversations 01] • The Lamb and the Fuhrer · Jesus Talks with Hitler (Great Conversations)
- Authors
- Zacharias, Ravi
- Publisher
- Multnomah Publishers
- Tags
- religion , philosophy , fantasy
- ISBN
- 9780307563101
- Date
- 2005-01-01T00:00:00+00:00
- Size
- 1.99 MB
- Lang
- en
Destruction and Evil Meet Life and Peace
Adolf Hitler spilled the blood of millions for his own sake. Jesus Christ shed his own blood for the sake of millions. Hitler sethimself up as a god and the masses succumbed. Jesus Christ was God in the form of lowly man. Hitler created a living hell for the masses. Jesus endured hell to save the masses. Hitler's name is synonymous withpower, evil, and genocide. Jesus' name with love, peace, and life. Put the two in a room together and you won't believe your ears. The third compelling book in Ravi Zacharias' GreatConversations series addresses fundamental issues of life and death, the evil of violence in light of the value of human life, and other tough issues in modern society.
Adolf Hitler
Evil. Hatred. Pride. Destruction.
Jesus Christ
Peace. Love. Humility. Life.
What could they possibly have totalk about?
In this compelling dialogue, two men of contrasting values meet face-to-face. They address fundamental issues of life and death, the evil of violence in light of the value ofhuman life, and the timeless search for unity in diversity. Dietrich Bonhoeffer, the German pastor Hitler ordered hanged, joins in and the heat intensifies when the three begin to weigh the value of relationships, love, and forgiveness.
You won't want to miss this imaginative discourse that will take you inside the mind of one of the most brutal tyrants of all time...and the very God who made him.
"The works of Ravi Zacharias are a vital resource around our house."
Frank Peretti
Story Behind theBook
This third book in the intriguing Great Conversations series takes Jesus out of the New Testament setting and places him in the 1900s to confront one of the world's mostinfluential people of all time--Adolf Hitler. The other books in the series reveal fictitious conversations Jesus might have with Buddha and with Oscar Wilde. The three books combine to attract readers who havefriends practicing other religions, or who admire or question contemporary figures. These conversations are rich, begging for eavesdroppers. "From the Hardcover edition."