Dr. John A. Huff man, a leading figure in evangelical circles,
says:
"Dwight Carlson has courageously tackled some of the toughest
questions about heaven/hell and who will and will not be
saved...One cannot read this book and remain content to have easy
answers to heavy, complex questions. Instead one is overwhelmed
with God's grace....Don't read Who'll Be in Heaven and Who Won't]
unless you are willing to think, have previously unquestioned
presuppositions challenged and to consider that perhaps when the
veil of mystery is lifted you discover a God more demanding in his
righteousness and more mercifully generous in the scope of his
salvation than you have previously considered."
The author asserts that there is a significant body of crucial
information about life after death that is not being communicated
to the average person on the street. Apropos is John Sanders's
statement: "I have found that many laypeople have hopes for the
unevangelized but do not know how to articulate and defend such
hopes. Within evangelicalism, the wider hope is more popular in the
pews than in the pulpits." In fact, it has been suggested that
"evangelical leaders have managed to keep a tight lid on this
volatile topic." i]
i] John Sanders, No Other Name: An Investigation into the
Destiny of the Unevangelized (Eugene, OR: Wipf and Stock, 2001),
23, 20.
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