The Christian life is rich in spiritual experience, but many believers settle for less, guessing their way forward. They either ignore a troubled conscience, or live in torment of it, think worship can only happen at the mercy of their moods, and habitually confuse God's will with their own. Isolation from the rest of the faith community worsens the problem, leaving the Christian small and self-centered. In "Alive on the Inside," John Myer presents an internal snapshot of someone who has been born again. He demonstrates how subsequent Christian fellowship depends on a freshly sensitized conscience, enlivened worship, and an intuitive understanding of God's will-all developing within the body of Christ, and flowing out in ministry.