

His answers to the above questions are just as damaging as the problems he addresses. Eldredge’s book is a classic case of the cure being worse than the disease. Unfortunately, however, my praise and agreement with Eldredge ends there. They are all issues and questions men must face. that men feel ‘doing good’ and ‘being nice’ is the heart of the Christian faith). In particular, he talks about the damaging effects of pornography, the worrying trend of growing fatherlessness, confusion between the genders, and moralism in the Church (i.e. Throughout the book, Eldredge does well to highlight some issues that particularly face men. The questions he raises and the implications he draws from such questions are vital. With this, I wholeheartedly agree with him. Though the book was written 20 years ago, the questions it raises are all the more relevant in a day and age where gender is arguably the key issue.Įldredge’s view is that recapturing the heart of true masculinity will not only help a lost, confused, and spiritually wounded generation of men but also the women with whom those men relate (whether as wives, daughters, or mothers). Very important questions, in fact, for our time.

What does it mean to be a man? What is the heart of a man, specifically, a Christian man? These are the questions that Wild at Heart seeks to answer.
