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Showing posts with label book review. Show all posts
Showing posts with label book review. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 19, 2020

Ever Ancient Ever New Book Review

Before I was even aware, I was part of a movement. Through God’s Providence, I stumbled onto the Daily Office, then one book, then another, and then a podcast or two. All of my evangelical and charismatic instincts and questions were finding fulfillment and answers in the sacramental tradition. Eventually, my wife and I moved four hours away to join an Anglican church in the hope of becoming church planters. We found a treasure hidden in a field: history, tradition, Eucharist, and the one, holy, catholic, and apostolic Church. To our surprise, everywhere we went we found others on the same journey and with the same experiences, feelings, thoughts, and even books and podcasts. In Ever Ancient, Ever New (Zondervan. Grand Rapids, MI. 2019), Winfield Bevins gives a concise summary of this movement of young people into the liturgical tradition. Although a priest in the Anglican Church in North America, Bevins makes no apologetic for Anglicanism specifically. Instead, he draws from his experience as a church planter and professor to tell the stories of young people who are disillusioned and discontent with their current “low-church” experience (whether of the evangelical, non-denomination, or charismatic variety) and are making their way into churches and traditions rich in liturgy, history, and the sacraments. 

Sunday, November 10, 2019

Book Review: The Next Christendom by Philip Jenkins


This was originally written for my Missional Formation class at Asbury Theological Seminary.

In The Next Christendom: The Coming of Global Christianity (Oxford University Press, New York: 2007), Philip Jenkins persuasively and dramatically argues that in the next 50-100 years the center of global Christianity will shift from the traditional strongholds of Europe and North America to the booming regions of Africa, South America, and Asia. Using history, theology, anthropology, and sociology, especially population predictions, Jenkins shatters the typical secular Euro-American predictions of Christianity’s inevitable decline. Instead, all indications point to a growing and thriving Christianity for generations to come, albeit one that is increasing global, poor, brown or black, and Pentecostal (a problematic term that includes many denominations and “Spirit focused” movements). 

Tuesday, October 29, 2019

Book Review: Santa Biblia by Justo Gonzalez

This was originally written for my New Testament class at Asbury Theological Seminary.

Santa Biblia: The Bible Through Hispanic Eyes by Justo L.
Gonzalez (Abingdon Press, Nashville: 1996) is a short and concise theology book expressing various interpretations of the Bible from a Hispanic perspective. Gonzalez plays the role of editor, compiler, and commentator on the views of pastors and professors, teasing out what it looks like to interpret “the Bible through Hispanic eyes (21).” He explains that this book is needed because “perspective is important for two complementary reasons: first, because it cannot be avoided; second, because it should not be avoided (15).” Perspective cannot be avoided because, despite the claims and efforts of modernism, we are still imperfect, biased, and sinful creatures who inevitably bring our experiences into the reading of Scripture. Furthermore, perspective should not be avoided because our differences are not merely hindrances to objectivity but actually gifts to one another. Like different views of the same landscape, the Holy Spirit gifts different cultures and people with different perspectives in order to build one another up within the one, catholic church. In light of this gift to the church, over the course of the book, Gonzalez defines five key elements of the Hispanic experience that informs their perspective and interpretation of Scripture: Marginality, Poverty, Mastizaje and Mulatez, Exiles and Aliens, and Solidarity.