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Gary W. Moon - Becoming Dallas Willard: The Formation of a Philosopher, Teacher, and Christ Follower

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Becoming Dallas Willard: The Formation of a Philosopher, Teacher, and Christ Follower: summary, description and annotation

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ECPA 2019 Christian Book Award Finalist 2018 Foreword INDIES Book of the Year Award Finalists - Biography Dallas Willard was a personal mentor and inspiration to hundreds of pastors, philosophers, and average churchgoers. His presence and ideas rippled through the lives of many prominent leaders and authors, such as John Ortberg, Richard Foster, James Bryan Smith, Paula Huston, and J. P. Moreland. As a result of these relationships and the books he wrote, he fundamentally altered the way tens of thousands of Christians have understood and experienced the spiritual life. Whether great or small, everyone who met Dallas was impressed by his personal attention, his calm confidence, his wisdom, and his profound sense of the spiritual. But he was not always the man who lived on a different plane of reality than so many of the rest of us. He was someone who had to learn to be a husband, a parent, a teacher, a Christ follower.The journey was not an easy one. He absorbed some of the harshest and most unfair blows life can land. His mother died when he was two, and after his father remarried he was exiled from his stepmothers home. Growing up in Depression-era, rural Missouri and educated in a one-room schoolhouse, he knew poverty, deprivation, anxiety, self-doubt, and depression. Though the pews he sat in during his early years were not offering much by way of love and mercy, Dallas, instead of turning away, kept looking for the company of a living, present, and personal God.In Gary W. Moons candid and inspiring biography, we read how Willard became the person who mentored and partnered with his young pastor, Richard Foster, to inspire some of the most influential books on spirituality of the last generation. We see how his love of learning took him on to Baylor, the University of Wisconsin, and the University of Southern California, where he became a beloved professor and one of the most versatile members of the philosophy department.The life of Dallas Willard deserves attention because he became a person who himself experienced authentic transformation of life and character. Dallas Willard not only taught about spiritual disciplines, he became a different person because of them. He became a grounded person, a spiritually alive person as he put them into practice, finding God, as he often said, at the end of his rope. Here is a life that gives us all hope.

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InterVarsity Press PO Box 1400 Downers Grove IL 60515-1426 ivpresscom - photo 1

InterVarsity Press
P.O. Box 1400, Downers Grove, IL 60515-1426
ivpress.com

2018 by Gary W. Moon

All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form without written permission from InterVarsity Press.

InterVarsity Pressis the book-publishing division of InterVarsity Christian Fellowship/USA, a movement of students and faculty active on campus at hundreds of universities, colleges, and schools of nursing in the United States of America, and a member movement of the International Fellowship of Evangelical Students. For information about local and regional activities, visit intervarsity.org.

Scripture quotations, unless otherwise noted, are from the New Revised Standard Version of the Bible, copyright 1989 by the Division of Christian Education of the National Council of the Churches of Christ in the USA.
Used by permission. All rights reserved.

George Fox by Sydney Carter is used with permission from Hope Publishing. Copyright 1964 Stainer & Bell, Ltd. (Admin. Hope Publishing Company, Carol Stream, IL 60188). All rights reserved. Reprinted under license #78593.

Finally Home by Don Wyrtzen and L. E. Singer is used with permission from Capitol CGM Publishing, license 607062. Copyright 1971 New Spring Publishing Inc. (ASCAP) (adm. at CapitolCMGPublishing.com) / Unknown Publisher. All rights reserved.

Teach Me to Stop and Listen by Ken Medema is used with permission from Word Music.

The statement by the students at the Dallas Willard Memorial Service is used by permission of Ara Astourian.

Cover design: David Fassett
Interior design: Jeanna Wiggins
Images: Dallas Willard cover photo by Becky Heatley

ISBN 978-0-8308-9921-0 (digital)
ISBN 978-0-8308-4610-8 (print)


Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

A catalog record for this book is available from the Library of Congress.


Becoming Dallas Willard is dedicated to the founding board of the Martin Institute for Christianity and Culture and The Dallas Willard Center and Research Library for Christian Spiritual Formation:

To Eff and Patty Martin
for your vision, passion, and generosity,
and being so much like Dallas yourselves.

To Gayle Beebe
for your courage, integrity, and leadership.

To John Ortberg
for your contagious love and deep
appreciation for Dallas.

To Wally Hawley
for your ability to see the future
before it appears to the rest of us.

To Jane Willard and Becky Willard Heatley
for your willingness to enter into such a painful
and joyful process so soon after the loss of
your dear husband and father.

And to my mother, Euree Strickland Moon,
who gave me a love for writing and telling stories.

CONTENTS
Foreword
Richard J. Foster

Picture 2


I f we are fortunate, once in our lifetime a human supernova presence streaks across our mental and emotional horizon, and the intensity of this light changes us forever. Dallas Willard was such a supernova for me.

The gnawing question is, exactly how did a person with the rare combination of exceptional brilliance and unadulterated goodness come to be? Brilliance is often marred by arrogance. Goodness is often combined with an absence of rigorous intellectual effort. So, how did this unique blending of brilliance and goodness happen?

This is precisely the complicated, even tangled, issue Gary Moon seeks to unravel in Becoming Dallas Willard. And he does so with unusual success.

Weaving a story that stretches all the way back to the heart-rending losses Dallas experienced in the Missouri Ozarks, and all the way forward to him becoming an international authority on Edmund Husserl and his philosophical system known today as phenomenology. Both sides of the story are crucial to understanding how Dallas Willard became such an extraordinary person.

The pain-filled losses of childhood are almost too much to bear. His mother dying suddenly... his father making a tragic moral choice... Well, perhaps I had best leave these stories for you to discover from the book itself.

There are also amazing graces. As a child of nine, Dallas becomes convinced that Jesus Christ [is] the greatest person that ever lived, and I wanted to be on his side. As a teenager he reads every book in the high school library. (Oh, it was a small library, he once told me.) This leads him to adventure stories like The Count of Monte Cristo and the sweeping histories of Flavius Josephus, a book his father buys for him. And then his favorite, Platos Republic, a book he carries with him all through his time as a migrant agricultural worker. And more.

Now, to speak of Platos Republic leads us to consider the brilliant side of this man. Over the years I have been around a fair number of genuinely bright people, but Dallas, I think, is the only person I have known that I would place in the genius category. I once asked him if he had a photographic memory. He demurred. Well, if his mind was not photographic, it certainly was close.

Scott Soames, the department chair of USCs School of Philosophy, says that Dallas was the teacher with the greatest range in the school of philosophy, regularly teaching courses in logic, metaphysics, ethics, aesthetics, history of philosophy of religion, and the history of philosophy from the seventeenth through the twentieth centuries, including both sides of the split between analytic philosophy and phenomenology.

It is in discussing the brilliance of Dallas that Gary Moons skills shine brightly. Somehow, dont ask me how, he is able to take concepts like metaphysical realism and epistemic realism and make them understandable for ordinary people like you and me. Even more, he skillfully shows us how these concepts are absolutely critical for Dallass teaching on, for example, the invisible realities of the Trinity and the kingdom of God.

Dallas, of course, is best known for his writing and teaching in Christian spirituality. I would consider The Divine Conspiracy a masterpiece and his most important work. The Spirit of the Disciplines lays a philosophical, theological, and psychological foundation for the practice of the Christian spiritual disciplines in ordinary life. Renovation of the Heart is a careful unpacking of how the human person can be formed, conformed, and transformed into the likeness of Jesus Christ. And Hearing God is the best book on divine guidance I have ever read. Other books and essays by Dallas are out there in abundance.

Of course Dallass brilliance, as important as it is, is far from the whole story. He possessed in his person a spiritual formation into Christlikeness that was simply astonishing. Please understand, Dallas and I had a working friendship for more than forty years, so, believe me, I knew the warts and the wrinkles. Still, I saw rich character-forming realities deepen and thicken in him over many years.

I am struggling for the words to share with you what I mean. To put it negatively, Dallas was amazingly free from manipulation and control. To say it positively, he showed graciousness and kindness to everyone who came in contact with him.

Every society, every culture, every age needs models of a life well lived. The deepest, most fundamental reason for studying the life of another person is so we can learn to live our lives more fully, more truly, more authentically. This is why

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