![]() Eldredge's books have attracted some brief critiques, including a CT review of Wild at Heart and Waking the Dead ("Battle Cry," November 2003) and an essay in Modern Reformation magazine. ![]() That passage, among others, drew a sustained critique from Rut Etheridge III, a seminarian and a member of the Reformed Presbyterian Church of North America. "You are Henry V after Agincourt … the man in the arena, whose face is covered with blood and sweat and dust, who strove valiantly … a great warrior … yes, even Maximus." In Wild at Heart, he writes about feeling exhausted and beat-up while flying home from a trip to England, and asking God in his journal, "What of me, dear Lord? Are you pleased? What did you see?" Journal-keeping is important in Eldredge's spiritual life, and his entries include what he considers direct, personal communications from God. ![]() Just as Eldredge offers tough words for his fellow evangelicals, some evangelicals push back-sometimes even questioning whether he's an orthodox Christian. ![]()
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