Review: The Search for a Rational Faith

Cover image for "The Search for a Rational Faith" by Daniel K. Williams

The Search for a Rational Faith

The Search for a Rational Faith, Daniel K Williams. Oxford University Press (ISBN: 9780197748039) 2026.

Summary: Anglo-American efforts to make a reasoned defense of Christian faith amid the rise of Enlightenment reason.

It was not uncommon in campus ministry to encounter people who asserted that no thinking person could believe in Christianity. Daniel K. Williams argues that this is a reflection of secularization theory. That is, as Enlightenment rationalism advances, science progresses, and higher education becomes more accessible, religious belief will dwindle, especially among the educated. The problem is, while skeptics exist, college-educated Christians actually are more likely to attend church than those who are not. What is interesting is that many of these did not find reason and science to conflict with their faith. This is true to some extent in England and a greater extent in the United States, whereas secularization has advanced as expected in other parts of Europe. What is the difference?

Daniel K. Williams argues in his new book, The Search for a Rational Faith, that from the 1700’s to the present, there has been an Anglo-American effort concentrated in higher education and related intellectual circles to offer a reasoned defense of Christian belief, responding to Enlightenment challenges. He shows how courses on Christian evidences were a centerpiece of a college education until the early twentieth century. The books used in these courses could be found in the libraries of famous individuals throughout this time from John Adams to Alexander Hamilton.

Williams also traces how the content of these courses change over time. Puritans focused on classical proofs for God but believed conversion was a work of grace by God alone. However, Arminians made a place for human initiative and believed that rational evidences may help convince one to believe. Thus, until the rise of biblical criticism and Darwinist evolution in the mid nineteenth century, these evidences were widely embraced. They served as an intellectual foundation for the American Republic, argues, Williams.

As biblical criticism and Darwinism spread, apologists needed to adapt. Some engaged these theories, either trying to refute them, or adopt approaches that reconciled the theories to Christian belief. Williams traces a shift from historic, empirical evidences to those emphasizing the evidence of religious experience. Increasingly, the argument was for the value of Christianity in promoting American values. These changes even invaded Princeton Seminary, leading to an exodus of conservative scholars.

Williams then traces the parallel developments among conservatives and liberals in the mid-twentieth century. The Princeton exiles develop presuppositionalist apologetics, starting with belief in God, not as something proven, but assumed. This approach would shape the ministry of Francis Schaeffer with countercultural seekers and his subsequent books. Meanwhile liberals went from Reinhold Niebuhr’s neo-orthodoxy that argued that Christian belief alone made sense of human nature and history to a radical skepticism of the existence of God.

Finally, Williams traces the resurgence of Christian apologetics among evangelicals, even as liberalism was imploding, influenced by the works of C. S. Lewis, Timothy Keller, and on a more intellectual level, Alister McGrath and John Lennox and Craig Keener.

What is exceptional in this work is the history over four centuries of this apologetic enterprise. It was fascinating to learn of thinkers and their works throughout this history. It’s fascinating how some of them anticipate present day efforts. I also appreciated the exploration of the relationship of rational defenses of the faith to conversion. In most periods, Christian evidences seemed far more important in offering Christians a solid basis for confident assertion of their faith. Finally, I appreciate the tension his work reflects in differing approaches to Enlightenment rationalism. While some befriend rationalism, others recognize the incompatibility of man-centered reason with God’s revelatory and illuminating work.

Having worked among graduate students and faculty in the public setting, I certainly gained a great appreciation for approaches that addressed the challenges of science as well as the rise of post-modernity and critical theory in the humanities (the latter is not addressed here). But I would also have liked to see Williams gesture toward efforts that are not merely defensive, but bring to bear Christian premises, doctrines, and values in a constructive engagement with academic disciplines. I think of efforts by Christians in a variety of disciplines, including history, to think Christianly. Williams’ discipline of history is an example of such efforts by people like George Marsden, Mark Noll, and Harry S. Stout. For many, Abraham Kuyper’s rallying cry of “every square inch” has been a rallying cry for moving beyond a defensive posture.

What George Marsden did for understanding the relationship of Christianity to American higher education in The Soul of the American University, Williams has done for the apologetic enterprise. Not only does he offer this comprehensive history, he gives the lie to the secularization hypothesis. He shows how Christians through American history have offered a cogent, reasoned defense of the faith equipping generations of Christians for confident (and hopefully winsome) assertion of their faith. This is a great text for contemporary Christian apologists. There are lessons in this history as well as inspiration in learning of the shoulders on which they stand.

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Disclosure of Material Connection: I received a complimentary copy of this book from the publisher for review.

Review: The Common Rule Youth Edition

Cover image of "The Common Rule Youth Edition" by Justin Whitmel Early

The Common Rule Youth Edition

The Common Rule Youth Edition, Justin Whitmel Early. InterVarsity Press (ISBN: 9781514010433) 2025.

Summary: Eight spiritual habits or practices for teens and tweens to help them grow in their faith.

I first trusted my life to Christ at age eleven and seriously began following Christ when I was just short of sixteen. I heard a lot about how to become Christian. Then I went on retreats that encouraged me in my faith in Christ. But no one for a long time shared with me about how I might grow in my faith. So, it is with great pleasure that I welcomed the publication of Justin Whitmel Early’s The Common Rule Youth Edition. In additional to seeing how helpful his earlier The Common Rule was with the young adults with whom I worked, I thought, “this is the book I wish I had as a teen follower of Jesus.”

This book is much like his earlier book. He offers eight habits, four daily and four weekly. Two of each focus on loving God and two on loving neighbor. Also, two of focus on embracing the good in God’s world and two of each on resisting destructive cultural influences. They are:

Daily:

  1. Kneeling Prayer morning, midday, and bedtime (Love God/embrace)
  2. One meal with others. (Love neighbor/embrace)
  3. One hour with phone off (Love neighbor/resist)
  4. Scripture before phone (Love God/resist)

Weekly:

  1. One hour of conversation with a friend (Love neighbor/embrace)
  2. Four hours of physical activity (Love neighbor/resist)
  3. Fast from something for twenty-four hours (Love God/resist)
  4. Sabbath (Love God/embrace)

The one difference from the adult version is substituting four hours of physical activity for “curate media to four hours.” This recognizes the need of teens for intense physical activity for both physical and spiritual health as well as the gift of our bodies which our screen-oriented society encourages us to neglect. Also, it does set some boundaries on social media.

A chapter is devoted to each of the eight habits. Early offers an explanation of each habit and then a practical section at the end with “The Habit at a Glance,” “Three Ways to Start,” and “Three Considerations.”

One of the ideas of a “common rule” is to pursue these practices with others and Early offers suggestions for sharing these practices in a youth ministry in church, or with friends in a school setting. He adapts the practices to the lives of middle and high schoolers. He also recognizes that meals together may need to be negotiated with parents and refraining from food should be cleared with them and never be done by someone with an eating disorder.

Early opens the book discussing the value of habit, including the pattern of destructive habits that brought him to create the Common Rule. But what I thought of even greater help is his concluding chapter on failure, something I often struggled with as a young Christian (and still do!). Early suggests that when we fall, we fall into grace. And so we get up and “keep walking toward beauty.” He observes how a life consists of the small daily decisions to get up and keep embracing these habits of faithfulness.

This is not a “silver bullet.” If there is one, I haven’t found it. But I can see how this might be so helpful in a youth ministry, particularly with supportive adults who are also using the rule. And the practices lend themselves to be fleshed out with scripture and prayer resources. Furthermore, these habits temper or replace destructive habits fostered in our culture, offering another way to live. I hope this book enjoys wide use.

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Disclosure of Material Connection: I received a complimentary copy of this book from the publisher for review.

Review: God Looks Like Jesus

Cover image of "God Looks Like Jesus" by Gregory A. Boyd and M. Scott Boren

God Looks Like Jesus

God Looks Like Jesus, Gregory A. Boyd & M. Scott Boren. Herald Press (ISBN: 9781513815510) 2025.

Summary: In the life, ministry, teaching, and crucifixion of Jesus, we see the embodiment of what God is like.

Sooner or later, many parents have to answer, first, the question of “Where is God?” and then, often, the question of “What is God like?” This latter question is one many of us grapple with all of our lives, consciously or subconsciously. How we answer that question is vitally important. It shapes not only how we worship but how we live. Some may live under a cloud of guilt while others angrily deny God’s place in their lives because they don’t like what they believe God is like. Yet, still others live in the joyful security and outward facing generosity of believing they are God’s extravagantly loved children.

Gregory A. Boyd and M. Scott Boren advance a simple but profound assertion in this book. God looks like Jesus. If you want to know what God is like, God has definitively revealed himself in his Final Word, Jesus. This Jesus, incredibly, both fully God and man, humbled himself to live under human constraints. This includes the ultimate constraint of death on the cross. Indeed, all of his life was formed by and toward the cross, to bear the sins of a lost humanity. The authors call this cruciform life the “center of the center.” This leads them to propose that we read all of scripture with “cross-tinted glasses.” Thus, they would contend that all of scripture is about an points toward Christ.

But this raises the question of how we deal with scriptures in which God sanctions violence. Part of the answer is that we see in the cross God taking upon God’s self, the Incarnate Son, the violence and evil of the world to reconcile the world to himself. But this doesn’t erase the herem passages from scripture. Commendably, the authors neither rationalize nor try to minimize the actual extent of herem. Rather, they argue that Moses misunderstood God and commanded herem in God’s name. He cites Exodus 23:28-30 and Leviticus 18:24-25 to indicate God’s intent to gradually displace the Canaanites. But God’s non-violent plans were too radical for Moses, who didn’t get it and commanded violent conquest. In the end, God in God’s humility accommodates this. Thus, the authors preserve the loving, humble God revealed in Christ.

To me, this seems a bit of fancy exegetical footwork. It dodges the plain meaning of the texts. I appreciate the effort, because these are among the most troubling texts in scripture and they seem to contradict the portrait of the loving, humble servant God we see in Jesus. Yet, I think this portrait becomes a Procrustean bed that does violence to these violent texts. I continue to wrestle with these texts personally. The best treatment I’ve found is L. Daniel Hawk’s The Violence of the Biblical God (reviewed at: https://bobonbooks.com/2019/08/05/review-the-violence-of-the-biblical-god/). Hawk accepts that God-sanctioned violence is one of the “voices” in scripture and must not be glossed over but which ultimately (as the authors of this work also argue) takes violence upon himself and thus signals its end.

The authors move on from this to discuss the kingdom Jesus proclaims, and how cruciform love shapes it. Enemies are loved and love is extended in broadly inclusionary fashion to all those society, and often the church, would marginalize. They also argue that instead of the classical notions of God’s unchanging nature, the loving God we encounter in Jesus has passions and suffers. Finally, our ultimate hope is in a renewed creation where God does right by all that moves us to exercise God’s love for it in the present.

I found much to commend in this compact book. Especially, I commend the focus on Christ and his cross as central to the gospel message and our rubric for understanding all of scripture. And to understand experientially that the Christ we encounter in scripture reveals the God we may worship joyfully in Spirit and Truth–that is a gift! While I differ in the authors’ attempt at theodicy, I affirm the courage to address the signal objection to their thesis. I would commend Hawk’s approach, not cited by the authors. But above all, for those who struggle with what they think the God they believe in is like, this book cuts through the verbiage and says “look at Jesus and you will see what God is truly like.”

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Disclosure of Material Connection: I received a complimentary copy of this book from the publisher for review.

Review: How Did They Read the Prophets?

Cover image of "How Did They Read the Prophets? by Michael B. Shepherd

How Did They Read the Prophets?

How Did They Read the Prophets?, Michael B. Shepherd. Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Co. (ISBN: 9780802885418) 2025.

Summary: A study of Hebrew and Greek interpretations of the canonical prophets including Christian readings.

The author of this book observes in his introduction that the Bible has always been an interpreted book. Later texts interpret earlier ones. For example, 1 and 2 Chronicles interpret earlier histories of the kings of Israel and Judah. Michael B. Shepherd observes that this interpretive work continued in the scribal work on Hebrew and Greek texts of the Old Testament, in subsequent commentaries, including those discovered at Qumran, and by the new Testament writers.

In this book, Shepherd focuses on the prophets of the canonical Old Testament. He adopts the assumption and methods of James Kugel in his study of the books of Moses. Kugel contends ancient readers adhered to four assumptions: 1) the Bible is fundamentally cryptic; 2) the bible is one grat book of instruction and this a relevant text; 3) Scripture is perfect and perfectly harmonious; and 4) Scripture is of divine origin and inspiration. He looks at the ancient extant texts, including the Old Greek, the Masoretic (Hebrew) text, and the Septuagint. Shepherd also considers other early extant texts and targums as well as New Testament readings of relevant texts.

Shepherd applies this method to the prophets, offering chapters on Isaiah, Jeremiah, Ezekiel, and the Book of the Twelve. Rather than offer a traditional commentary, Shepherd focuses on texts cited in the New Testament. He traces the various renderings of texts in different sources as well as how New Testament writers appropriated the text. Shepherd shows how these interpretations “prepared the way” for New Testament readings.

Shepherd’s concluding chapter, “Prophets as Exegetes” opens with some fascinating conclusions about the intersection pf prophets, scribes, and exegesis:

“The older conception of a scribe as a mere copyist has given way to a newer, more accurate view of scribes as exegetes and composers. The older view of prophets as preachers of oral messages has been complemented by an awareness that the concept of a prophet developed in such a way that the scribe became the new prophet. The result has been a greater appreciation for the role of scribal prophets in the interpretation and production of biblical texts. The prophet is essentially redefined within biblical literature itself as someone who exegetes biblical texts and then produces biblical texts on the basis of that exegesis” (p. 114).

Shepherd then unpacks the implications for the formation of the prophetic canon alongside the Five Books of Moses as well as for the “New Testament Prophets.”

For pastors, the chapters on the prophets are most helpful when one is studying a particular biblical text. I suspect access to Bible software that includes the various sources he references is helpful, but not necessary. For me, the concluding chapter was worth the price of admission as a discussion of canonical formation.

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Disclosure of Material Connection: I received a complimentary copy of this book from the publisher for review.

The Weekly Wrap: January 11-17

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The Weekly Wrap: January 11-17

Adjusting to the New

I wrote awhile back about our impressive new Barnes & Noble store that replaced the old standby located nearby. However, I didn’t mention that it just didn’t feel like–well, home. I have to confess that there have been times when I just felt bewildered. Not only that, there were several times I walked out without any books.

That old store just felt so familiar. I knew where everything was and was accustomed to the way they displayed books. Basically, the store was laid out with rows of shelves with a center aisle with a help desk. There was a separate area for children’s books. The new store seems a bit more like a maze of sections.

We ended up there the other day when a scheduling mix-up gave us a couple hours to kill. And for the first time, it began to feel a bit more like home. For one thing, it was the slowest day in terms of business I’d seen. There was time to linger and read the shelves without feeling you were in someone’s way. I explored some new sections to see what they had. And my wife and I enjoyed a lovely time at the cafe, something we always enjoyed at the old store.

I’m wondering if I’m the only one who has experienced the feeling of displacement when a new bookstore replaces an old favorite. One expects everything to be novel at a new store one is exploring. But when the new store becomes one of your “defaults,” I think that is different. But I’m always reminded that every store was new to us at one time. And I’m glad that there is a new store, and not simply an empty reminder of what was once there.

Five Articles Worth Reading

This week, three of the articles feature reviews I thought interesting.

First, imagine Moby Dick with a female narrator. Xiaolu Guo has done just that with Call Me Ishmaelle. William Giraldi reviews this audacious attempt in “A Retelling of ‘Moby-Dick,’ With a Young Woman at Its Center.”

Second, imagine a novel based on the online life of a family and its real-life repercussions. In “The Unhappy Literary Families of the Internet Age” Gideon Leek reviews Lost Lambs by Madeline Cash. Leek thinks the novel need a few wolves.

The third review is of a book on my “to read” pile, The Last Supper: Art, Faith, Sex, and Controversy in the 1980s by Paul Elie. My friend Byron Borger, at Hearts and Minds Bookstore recommended this book, an analysis of the crypto-religious modern art of the 1980’s. I won’t get around to reading it for a while, so I thought I’d pass along Stephen Westich’s review: “Jesus in the Junk Shop.”

On a different note, Ted Gioia contends we are witnessing the rise of a new Romanticism. He defends that idea in this article which offers “25 Propositions about the New Romanticism.”

Finally, did you know that Wikipedia just turned 25? In “Happy Birthday, Wikipedia: We need you now more than ever,” Troy Farah argues why, amid the advent of AI and Elon Musk’s “Grokipedia,” an attempt to replace Wikipedia, Wikipedia is a uniquely valuable resource.

Quote of the Week

Essayist and novelist Susan Sontag was born January 16, 1933. She explains why I have never liked taking photographs at events:

“The camera makes everyone a tourist in other people’s reality, and eventually in one’s own.”

Wonder what the implications of this insight are for our Instagram age.

Miscellaneous Musings

Another of Byron’s recommendation is Beth Macy’s Paper Girl, a memoir of growing up in Urbana, Ohio, an hour west of me. In her opening pages she introduces us to a tenth grade dropout and to a high school grad, a young trans male weighing suicide when his plans for welding training fell through because his car blew a head gasket. She asks how her community has changed so much since the 1980’s. Riveting so far.

Oh, and I forgot to mention that I walked out of Barnes & Noble with 1929 and Gemini. The latter book reminded me of my love for the Gemini program back in the 1960. I even built a model of the Gemini capsule that I had in my room. As for 1929, I approach this one with some trepidation because I sense the author will argue that it can happen again.

After a lull over the holidays, five more books for review have arrived this week at my doorstep. Not only that, at least a couple more are due to arrive today. Well, I’m more than ready in the reading department for the next snowstorm or cold stretch to come our way!

Next Week’s Reviews

Monday: Michael B. Shepherd, How Did They Read the Prophets

Tuesday: Gregory Boyd with M. Scott Boren, God Looks Like Jesus

Wednesday: Justin Whitmel Early, The Common Rule Youth Edition

Thursday: Daniel K. Williams, The Search for a Rational Faith

Friday: Siddhartha Mukherjee, The Emperor of All Maladies

So, that’s The Weekly Wrap  for January 11-17.

Find past editions of The Weekly Wrap under The Weekly Wrap heading on this page.

Review: Beyond the River

Cover image of "Beyond the River" by Ann Hagedorn

Beyond the River

Beyond the River, Ann Hagedorn. Simon & Schuster. (ISBN: 9780684870663) 2004.

Summary: A history of the Underground Railroad line passing through Ripley, Ohio, featuring the Rankin family and other townspeople.

One of the aspects of Ohio history of which I am most proud is our efforts to end slavery. From the advocacy of countless individuals to Uncle Tom’s Cabin and the numerous lines of the Underground Railroad, moving slaves to freedom in Canada, Ohio was on the forefront of opposing this form of human bondage. We are the home of the National Underground Freedom Center in Cincinnati. When I was a campus minister at Ohio State, I learned that one of those lines ran through the land that would become Ohio State, with a stop where the main library would later be located. The newest iteration of the student union features a three-story octagonal structure at the south end, an architectural representation of a lantern, a symbol for a stop on the underground railroad. Incidentally, The Lantern is also the name of the student newspaper.

Enough for giving kudos to my home state. Or not quite, because this review features a small Ohio town on the Ohio River that played a major role in underground railroad history. Ripley, Ohio is about as far south as you can get and still be in Ohio. Early settlers to the town included a number from the South who abhorred slavery. The town sat just across from Kentucky, a slave state on the north edge of the South. In between sat the river, which would sometimes freeze over in the city or run shallow in the summer.

Ann Hagedorn writes a vivid account of the townspeople who rescued and sheltered slaves, setting them on their way to Canada through a network of stops spanning the state. In order to write this history, Hagedorn moved to Ripley. Thus, she interviewed descendants, mined local archives, and saw the lay of the land, largely unchanged.

A figure who looms large in the account is Rev. John Rankin. He was among those moving from the South, not only because he opposed slavery, but had the temerity to do so in his preaching. The call to Ripley brought him to a small church more amenable to his views. The church not only served as a platform for his views but also a springboard to abolitionist advocacy and organizing throughout the state and nationally. Hagedorn chronicles how he “walked the talk” in helping fugitive slaves on their way north. He moved out of town to build a house atop the hill with a lantern that could be seen from across the river. Slaves knew to make for the lantern. Rankin’s whole family was involved and Hagedorn chronicles how mother and sons, toting guns repelled slave hunters seeking fugitives.

With the passage of the Fugitive Slave Act, aiding fugitives was illegal. Hagedorn describes the ways “stationmasters” avoided detection. For example, they usually knew only the next stop so that they limited exposure of the line. Fugitives were moved quickly. Often, townspeople did not know who else was involved.

But some paid heavily. John Mahan was one. Hagedorn describes how slave hunters from Kentucky trapped him. Subsequently, officials extradited him to Kentucky. After months in jail, the jury acquitted him of criminal charge, allowing him to return home. However, legal costs, and a subsequent civil trial for damages from the slave owner led to bankruptcy.

Ripley had its own Harriet Tubman. John Parker was a former slave, who made frequent forays into Kentucky to bring slaves across the Ohio. All this was at great risk, especially when he saw wanted posters with his picture. But he never got caught.

Hagedorn shows the connections those in Ripley had to a wider network, particularly abolitionists in Cincinnati. One winter, the rescue, over melting ice of a slaved named Eliza and her children, contributed to one of the most memorable narratives in Uncle Tom’s Cabin.

The narrative also traces the intensification of the hostility as more slaves crossed the river that mirrored the rising hostility between north and south. This included increasing incidents of violent attacks on Ripley residents.

Hagedorn combines scrupulous scholarship with vivid storytelling. She introduces us to “everyday heroes” as well as dominant figures like John Rankin. Also, behind this story is the question of when moral conviction and the laws of the land conflict. Hagedorn draws out the “higher law” that drove people like Rankin to courageously subvert the legal structures supporting slavery. Again, the local situation illustrates how untenable it is to sustain such a conflict. Something to think about.

Review: Interpreting Jesus

Cover image of "Interpreting Jesus" by Dale C. Allison Jr.

Interpreting Jesus

Interpreting Jesus, Dale C. Allison Jr. Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Co. (ISBN: 9780802879196) 2025.

Summary: Six essays on Jesus addressing eschatology, Moses, miracles, women with Jesus, memory, and methods of attestation.

In 2010, after completing Constructing Jesus, Dale C. Allison Jr. told his wife, “Honey, I’m done with Jesus” to which she replied, “He’ll be glad to hear that.” In the Preface to this book, he confesses, “But I was wrong. I have been unable to stay away. What he thinks now I do not know.” I cannot speak for Jesus, but I’m glad he didn’t stay away. I found each of the six essays here thought-provoking, the work of a careful scholar not afraid to engage prevailing scholarship with fresh ideas.

The first essay explores the indications that Jesus believed the “last things” were imminent and that the latter days had begun. Yet his followers had to deal with delay beyond what they expected (and we all the more). However, Allison notes the indications as Jesus nears Jerusalem and faces not only unreceptiveness but imminent death, that he foresaw some form of interim period before his triumphal return. He cites the parables of the bridegroom’s delay and the master’s delay as examples. And he looks at examples of contingency in Jewish literature and allows for the possibility of the delay being contingent on the occurrence of certain events.

The next essay explores how Jesus’ life may be seen as a type of fulfillment or enactment of Moses. He does this by way of noting some of the parallels between Moses and Simeon Stylites and exploring how these map onto Jesus. Allison follows this with what I thought one of the most important essays that took exception in some ways to the radical skepticism of Jesus scholarship of the miracle accounts. He allows, with scholars like Michael Licona, that historical investigation does not require on to a priori rule out the miracle accounts. He notes credible contemporary testimony documented both in Catholicism and scholars like Craig Keener. Should the possibility of credible testimony to the miraculous be ruled out for the accounts of scripture?

The Chosen introduces the idea of women being included in the company of Jesus, sometimes traveling with Jesus and the male disciples. While Allison does not interact with this portrayal, his next essay discusses the biblical accounts. He notes the support women gave, and their presence in various accounts. Allison also notes Jesus teaching on the lustful look and other issues relating to men and women. He seems to be reluctant to allow for women as a permanent part of an itinerating band, while allowing for them to accompany a larger group to Jerusalem for feasts.

But how reliable are the memories of the eyewitnesses? Allison’s next essay addresses the question of the reliability of memory. He particularly has in view Richard Bauckham’s strong defense of the eyewitness accounts of the life of Jesus. He considers the case of Peter and Mark and how the literature on memory leads him to bring a measure of caution in weighing their accounts. While not dismissing Bauckham, he raises the question of whether all memories are equally reliable. May some be more reliable than others?

The final essay is a deep dive into the criteria and methodologies used in historical Jesus scholarship. The question is what may we most confidently attribute to Jesus? For example, scholars consider themes that have multiple attestation as more likely to be authentic. They discredit independent sources. Likewise, there is the criteria of dissimilarity. That is, scholars credit Jesus with saying things found nowhere else. Allison explores a number of exceptions to this methodology.

I must confess that as a non-professional, I knew of Allison but have not read his prior works. While evangelicals may not agree with all his conclusions, his careful scholarship also offers encouragement. What struck me about these essays was a sense of even-handed fairness and an openness to modify his own views. I appreciated his engagement with scholars like Michael Licona, Craig Keener, and Richard Bauckham. And I appreciated his candor in wrestling with questions any of us who have studied the gospels at length have wrestled with.

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Disclosure of Material Connection: I received a complimentary copy of this book from the publisher for review.

Review: The Reformed Pastor

Cover image of "The Reformed Pastor" by Richard Baxter

The Reformed Pastor

The Reformed Pastor (Puritan Paperbacks), Richard Baxter. Banner of Truth Trust (ISBN: 9780851511917) 1974 (first published in 1656).

Summary: On pastoral care, beginning with care of oneself, and then of the people, emphasizing catechesis through visitation.

In the mid-1600’s, Richard Baxter was vicar of a church in Kidderminster, England. He took a town that was pretty rough around the edges and taught them to follow Christ as a godly people. Surrounding ministers in Worcestershire asked him to give a series of talks about his ministry in 1656. This book was the result of those messages and served as a handbook for generations of pastors who want to be diligent shepherds of their people.

The outline of the book reveals why this has been such a helpful guide. Firstly, Baxter stresses the importance of oversight of oneself before oversight of others. He is concerned that pastors have truly been converted and know the grace of God in their lives. Furthermore, he urges them to persevere in those exercises that keep grace “lively.” He would have them practice what they proclaim, and avoid the sins against which they preach. He argues for the importance of this oversight recognizing both the importance of working out one’s own salvation. Likewise, there are the vulnerabilities of our own fallen nature as well as the greater temptations of public ministry.

Secondly, he teaches on the nature and manner of the pastor’s oversight. He extends this to all the flock. It seems he has a parish or locality in mind. He includes seeking the conversion of those who do not believe, including those under conviction of sin. Then he addresses building up those who believe, including families and especially the sick. Oversight also means reproving those engaged in some form of sin, and leading the church in discipline of those who refuse to turn from sin. Throughout, his focus must be on the salvation of his people, and those things most necessary for them to enjoy all the riches of that salvation. He commends a series of attributes that set a high bar for all pastors: simplicity, humility, seriousness, love, patience, reverence, spirituality, and a deep sense of one’s insufficiency for this work and dependence on Christ.

Thirdly, he turns to how pastors may neglect their ministry. He speaks of laziness in preparation and study, indifference to the needy, and being caught up in material things. He also condemns neglect of the unity and peace of the church. Previously, he has encouraged unity with other ministers. Pastors are not to be fractious!

Finally, the latter half of the book turns to a major focus, the catechesis of people through visitation in homes. As important as he considers preaching, he argues that much of the work of seeing Christ formed in people occurs through this personal work. He personally set aside two days for this work weekly. Baxter begins by listing seventeen benefits of this work from conversion of the lost to better knowing the spiritual state of one’s people to revealing the true nature of the ministerial office.

He takes time to address objections and difficulties. One is that there are too few ministers to do this well in many situations. However, he does not see lay leadership as an answer for this apart from heads of families with their own families. Then he offers a detailed set of directions on both the content of their catechism and the “flow” of a pastoral visit.

While our language may differ at points from his and our culture may differ from the parish culture of Kidderminster, I think there is much any pastor or person involved in ministry. First is the importance of attending to one’s own spiritual life and the qualities of godly ministers. Second is the importance of evangelism. Have people experienced a genuine work of grace or are they just socialized Christians? Thirdly, Baxter raises the vital importance of catechesis, and the reality that pulpit ministry alone will not accomplish this. It may not be through extensive visitation, but some other structure. Today, the lack of Christian formation is evident in aberrant beliefs from Christian nationalism to syncretic/eclectic faiths. Fourthly, there is the issue of knowing one’s people. Wendell Berry has suggested that farmers shouldn’t farm more land than what they can steward well. Perhaps the same might be true in churches.

Many have commended the re-reading of Baxter periodically and I think this worthwhile. But I’d also commend those like Eugene Peterson who have also thought deeply about the integrity of pastoral ministry, something deeply needed in our time. Given so many scandals, regular self-examination, mutual care with other pastors, and hopefully, the humbling sense of our insufficiency apart from Christ, are all things to be commended.

Review: The Man Who Died Twice

Cover image of "The Man Who Died Twice" by Richard Osman

The Man Who Died Twice

The Man Who Died Twice (Thursday Murder Club, Number 2) Richard Osman. Penguin Books (ISBN: 9781984881014) 2022.

Summary: Ibrahim is badly assaulted by a teenage thug and Elizabeth’s ex-husband shows up, suspected of stealing diamonds.

Ibrahim was enjoying his jaunt to a local bookstore–until assaulted by a group of young thugs–including vicious kicks that landed him in the hospital from one of them. One of the side plots is how the Thursday Murder Club figures out a way to get even with with Ibrahim’s assailant. Interestingly, Ibrahim does not want revenge–he just wants to hide out at the Villages. Psychologist though he is, he is suffering both physical and emotional trauma.

Meanwhile, the main plot begins when Elizabeth receives a letter from a former “associate.” Closer than that, Douglas Middlemiss was once married to Elizabeth. Now he is on the run, suspected of stealing diamonds worth £20 million from a shady banker who needs them to pay off the New York mob. And he wants to hide out in the Villages. Also, it turns out that a new girl working there, Poppy, is actually an agent there to protect him. It turns out he needs it. Poppy kills a hit man attempting to kill Douglas. They are removed to a safe house. But it is not very safe. Elizabeth finds both of them dead, when she responds to a message from Douglas.

Now the Thursday Murder Club kicks into high gear, minus Ibrahim for a time. But Joyce pulls him into action eventually. Bogdan joins them, resourceful and not afraid to deal with a female drug dealer. Chris and Donna are pursuing that drug dealer as well. Meanwhile, Elizabeth, with Joyce as an increasingly useful sidekick, follows a trail of clues both to find Douglas killer and the diamonds. But the trail raises a disturbing possibility. Did Douglas fake his own death at the safe house and is still about? And if not, who found the safe house and killed Douglas and Poppy?

One thing for sure, is that this ends in an exciting climax involving all these actors. But I won’t spoil the fun, and fun it is. We discover more in this book how good Elizabeth was at her tradecraft, as well as being the one Douglas allowed to get away to his wistful regret. Joyce comes increasingly into her own. Seemingly sentimental, taken up with making and giving out friendship bracelets, she doesn’t bat an eyelash at dead bodies, or mafia hit men. She offers insights that Elizabeth misses. And her friendship bracelets even provide a crucial clue! All in all, everything came together to make this an enjoyable book, beginning to end.

Review: The Journey of God

Cover image of "The journey of God" by J. D. Lyonhart

The Journey of God

The Journey of God, J. D. Lyonhart. IVP Academic (ISBN: 9781514009246) 2025.

Summary: A re-telling of the Christian story in six movements, exploring questions seekers, skeptic, and believers ask.

“Tell me a story.” Isn’t that often the longing behind our trips to the bookstore. I wonder, though, if that is our thought when we attempt to read the Bible. Do we open the Bible looking for a story? Or are we just looking for a pick-me-up thought? Then again, maybe scripture just baffles us. What is this book all about?

The Journey of God is an exploration of the Christian story. J.D. Lyonhart, a theologian and philosopher believes we desperately need books like C.S. Lewis’s Mere Christianity that help people see the Christian story and think about it in a fresh way, whether they are a skeptic or a seasoned believer. It’s been nearly a century since Lewis wrote for a very different time and culture. He sets the ambitious goal to fill that gap.

His description of the process of arriving at a title and how this made sense of what he was trying to do will also give you a sense of his writing style: thoughtful, yet witty and a bit edgy.

“However, I’ve slowly warmed to this new title, for the beauty of a journey is that it doesn’t need to be just one thing but can be many things spread over time and over many legs of the adventure. A fight scene with knives and lovemaking can be followed up by a philosophical interlude over a pint. As such, I’ve allowed each chapter in the book to feel a little different from the last. I’ve tried to dance between philosophy, science, poetry, romance, violence, history, historical fiction, comedy, drama, dialogue, and death, weaving them through various genres and styles into one mostly coherent, occasionally bonkers journey–less Sunday school, more Pulp Fiction” (p. xi).

Lyonhart unfolds the journey as one of six movements, devoting two to six chapters to each:

  • Movement I | Creation: Creation Begins • Creation is Not God • Creation is Good
  • Movement II | Fall: Humanity in God’s Image • Humanity Gone Wild
  • Movement III | Nation: Abraham Finds Faith • Moses Meets I Am • Goodness is Commanded • Beauty in the Promised Land • King David and His Boy • Justice Exiles the Nation
  • Movement IV | Redemption: Jesus is Born • Jesus is Walking Around Saying Stuff • Jesus is Dying to Meet You
  • Movement V | Church: The Spirit Arrives • The Church Begins • The Apostle Paul Converts • The Church Expands • The Church Today
  • Movement VI | End: The End of the World as We Know It • Highway to Hell or Stairway to Heaven?

The chapters average around ten pages. Typically, he will move from biblical narrative, such as the “earthiness” of the birth of Jesus, the meatiness or fleshiness of the incarnation, to discussing a Brene’ Brown video, to a personal story or theological implication. Or he will move from the expansion of the early church to our quest for love, affirmation, and identity. But its never preachy and often interspersed with self-deprecating personal stories.

At times he will be provocative, such as when he asks, “Does God have a penis?” I can imagine a child asking this and learning about the questions you don’t ask in church. He uses the question to introduce a discussion of what it means that humanity is in “God’s image.” Considering that our sexuality is an aspect of that image, the question is not that far out.

One of the most telling chapters the one on the exile of Israel as the expression of God’s justice. We tend to want justice when it involves the other guy and mercy for ourselves. However, Lyonhart presses home the objective reality of God’s justice–something we both want and wrestle with as we consider ourselves objects of God’s justice.

In the course of the book, I found all the elements Lyonhart mentions in his introduction. This conveys how all of life is connected to the journey of God and our journey with God. He exemplifies his contention that all God has made is good, and that Christ redeems all things. So, I can easily recommend this book to all the audiences Lyonhart writes for. He unpacks God’s story and show how all of our stories connect. And he does this with clarity and wit that invites us all to enlarged perspectives. I know that was so for me.

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Disclosure of Material Connection: I received a complimentary copy of this book from the publisher for review.