Whole, Aaron Williams
Whole, Aaron Williams
List: $19.95 | Sale: $13.97
Club: $9.97

Whole
The Life-Changing Power of Relating to God with All of Yourself

Author: Aaron Williams, Kathryn Maack

Narrator: Kirby Heyborne, Jaimee Draper

Unabridged: 6 hr 3 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: B&H Books

Published: 11/13/2024


Synopsis

Do you ever feel like your spiritual life is incomplete? That makes sense, because we can tend to separate things God always meant to go together. We say we are a thinker or a feeler. A “be” person or a “do” person. A “truth” person or a “Spirit” person. While separating these things seems normal to many Christians, doing so is as crazy as calling yourself an “inhaler” or an “exhaler”—after all, both are necessary to survive. If you’re feeling like you’re missing something on your spiritual journey, this segmented view of relating to God could be the problem. In Whole, journey along with Kathryn Maack and Aaron Williams (founders of Dwell Ministries) as they explore the spiritual change that’s possible when learn how to reunite these areas of your Christian life: head + heart being + doing truth + spirit sinner + saint God never meant for you to relate to Him with only part of yourself. He wants the whole you. Discover the life-changing power of relating to God with all of yourself.

About The Author

Kathryn Maack is the cofounder of Dwell Ministries. She is passionate about the future of the Church and loves catalyzing ideas and people toward their highest Kingdom potential. She and her husband BJ live in Little Rock, AR, and have four kids: Libby, Anna, Rachel, and Andrew.  Aaron Williams is a worship leader, writer, and cofounder of Dwell Ministries. He is passionate about leading people with a creative and thoughtful vision for the future. Aaron and his wife Mallory have two sons, Michael West and Beckham, and they live in Dallas, TX. 


Reviews

Goodreads review by Pat on April 25, 2025

Modern, well executed. Be careful reading reviews; high potential for spoilers. Scene early in book when protagonist assaults a young man on campus felt a little "off" to me.......more