A.W. Tozer
1961
Theology
Grades 7–12 · Logic & Rhetoric Stage
A devotional exploration of God's attributes that recovers a high view of God for the modern church.
What Is The Knowledge of the Holy About?
A.W. Tozer wrote The Knowledge of the Holy in 1961, addressing the distinctive challenges of the modern era — secularism, materialism, and the crisis of meaning. A devotional exploration of God's attributes that recovers a high view of God for the modern church.
This is not a work of abstract theology — it is a guide for the living of the Christian life. A.W. Tozer writes from personal experience and deep meditation on Scripture, offering counsel that is both spiritually profound and intensely practical. Generations of believers have found in these pages a companion for their own spiritual journey.
The work remains essential reading for anyone who wants to understand the Christian intellectual tradition and the ideas that have shaped Western civilization.
Why The Knowledge of the Holy Still Matters
The Knowledge of the Holy endures because it addresses questions that never go away:
- Theological depth. This work addresses fundamental questions about God, Christ, and salvation with a precision and depth that rewards repeated study.
- Nourishing the soul. This is a work that doesn't just inform the mind but feeds the spirit — offering genuine sustenance for the Christian life.
- Timeless wisdom. The questions this work addresses — about God, humanity, truth, and meaning — are not historically confined. They are permanent questions that every generation must face.
In a world of disposable content, works like this endure because they speak to what is permanent in human experience.
Why Classical Schools Teach It
At Saints Classical Academy, The Knowledge of the Holy is part of our commitment to reading the greatest works of the Christian tradition in the logic and rhetoric stage(s). Reading A.W. Tozer teaches students to:
- Engage with primary sources from the Christian intellectual tradition rather than relying on secondhand summaries
- Develop the ability to follow and evaluate sustained arguments — a critical skill for the rhetoric stage
- Practice analytical thinking by examining the logical structure of the author's arguments
- Understand how theological ideas connect to form a coherent vision of God, the world, and human life
- See that the Christian intellectual tradition is not merely academic but deeply personal and devotional
This is education as it was meant to be — not just learning about great ideas, but being formed by them.
A.W. Tozer
Theology
Devotional
Attributes Of God
Worship
Modern
Great Books
Summary by C. Saint Lewis, AI research assistant for Saints Classical Academy.