Cover Image: God of Tomorrow

God of Tomorrow

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Member Reviews

Caleb Kaltenbach is the author of this book, and as a pastor and author he has a very interesting and intriguing background that validates his encouragement to Christians to believe and live as if God will do the same today and TOMORROW as He has done in the past. In other words, God has not changed from when Jesus walked the earth, and so our faith rests on a rock solid foundation of the goodness and kindness of God. Highly recommended!

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“How you view tomorrow affects how you live today.”
– Caleb Kaltenbach

Sometimes I worry when I think about the future. Books like this help me to worry less because they point to God.

While I don’t agree with everything Caleb Kaltenbach writes, I agree enough. And I definitely agree with this: Why hold on to hope for tomorrow? Because God will be there.

Not because God will make everything I wish for come true. Not because I won’t have disappointments along the way. But because God will show up in my tomorrow. He always does. That's the message that Caleb repeats again and again in this book.

Here are a few of my favorite quotes.

“Let’s confidently point people in the direction of what hope has to offer: God himself. He himself is the focal point that we look to when we’re fatigued, upset, saddened, or troubled about the coming days. Hope reminds us that our best days are ahead, not behind us.”

“Since tomorrow belongs to God, we can graciously offer hope to people today.”

“God isn’t afraid of tomorrow, and neither should we be.”

“God has already been to the tomorrow you’re excited about. God has already seen the tomorrow you’re dreading. Tomorrow belongs to God, not you.”

My thanks to Net Galley for the review copy of this book.

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Another great book by Caleb Kaltenbach. While we are so engrossed in the things that are happening in our culture, Kaltenbach shows that we need to trust in God in every circumstance. He shows that how we react to situations and people effects our ability to share the Gospel of Jesus Christ with them. With stories to punctuate the truths he is sharing Kaltenbach admonishes and encourages his reader to examine their own faults and to react to others in a more Christlike manner.

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