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K. Bradley Watson is a captivating storyteller. Using imagery of travelling a path, he invites readers into a life-giving journey of attentiveness to God, others, creation, and oneself. For those willing to walk this path, a meaningful way of life awaits. A Path Called Compelling is a hopeful and engaging book for those exploring the Christian faith for the first time, those with doubts about Christianity, and those with strong Christian roots.

— Joel Thiessen, author of The Meaning of Sunday and Signs of Life
Professor of sociology, Ambrose University

A Path Called Compelling is a heartfelt winsome guide through a journey every Christian must take. In it, following Jesus becomes more than the truth we believe. He becomes our way of life. A master at telling a good story and a serious reader of the biblical text, K. Bradley Watson has written a gift of a book for all of us seeking a deeper life in Jesus.”

— David Fitch, author of Faithful Presence and The Church of Us vs Them
C
hair of evangelical theology, Northern Seminary

Our decisions are shaped by myriad influences and invisible suggestions. Whether consciously or unconsciously, we’re all walking a path. In this winsome book, K. Bradley Watson joins us as a hiking companion, bringing new perspective to old paths with fresh insights and plenty of humor. His writing, like the Way itself, is brilliant and compelling.

— Kevin Makins, author of Why Would Anyone Go to Church?
Founding pastor, Eucharist Church

I must confess that over the last two decades I have become increasingly disillusioned with the Christian faith—a religious path so littered in North American with fallacious debris and misplaced markers that, dare I say, it is almost unrecognizable. K. Bradley Watson’s A Path Called Compelling helped reawaken a former joy about what the Jesus path looks like and what it feels like to walk it. A much-needed read for me (a stuffy, old-professor type) and for anyone attempting to follow Jesus!

— William J. Webb, author of Bloody, Brutal, and Barbaric? and Corporal Punishment in the Bible
Adjunct professor of biblical studies, Tyndale University