Tuesday, September 24, 2019

Review: "Trinity Without Hierarchy"


Paul writes,But I want you to understand that the head of every man is Christ, the head of a wife is her husband, and the head of Christ is God” (I Corinthians 11:3, ESV).

The collections of essays in Trinity Without Hierarchy:  Reclaiming Nicene Orthodoxy in Evangelical Orthodoxy, edited by Michael F. Bird and Scott Harrower, is largely concerned with how the above verse should be interpreted and how the church universal has interpreted it over the years. 

The essays also largely respond to the work of Wayne Grudem and Bruce Ware who, when exegeting this verse to prove complementarianism between men and women, are forced to argue for the eternal functional submission of the Son to the Father.

Many might respond, “Who cares?”  But it is a critical issue.  If the Son is in any way substantially or essentially less than the Father, then the Son is not God – He is something else.  The reader enters the territory of Arianism here – and it is not the argument that Grudem and Ware are Arians, but that their arguments necessarily lead to this heresy.

Rather, the essays argue that the Father and Son (and Holy Spirit) are one in essence, but distinct in their roles in carrying out His Will.  Likewise, they argue that the submission that is found – especially in the Gospel of John – must be read with the understanding that Jesus is the God-Man.  He is 100% God and 100% human in one person, with two natures and two wills.  So, in His humanity, of course Jesus submits to God the Father.

The first four chapters look at the Scripture and what it has to say about the relationship between the Father and the Son.

Chapters five through nine engage historical theology through the ages, and chapters ten through sixteen engage systematic theology on the question and address Grudem and Ware directly.

Each chapter contains copious footnotes and bibliography, and the book ends with a Scripture and Ancient source index, as well as a name index.

This book is a powerhouse of scholarship which ought to greatly further the debate – and perhaps end it biblically.

I found the biblical chapters most helpful and the strongest.  And some essays were better than others – in my opinion – for a variety of reasons.  For example, as I read the chapter on John Owen, I felt like the author didn’t care for Owen, which distracted from the argument.

The book is well worth purchasing and reading and using in continuing to express the relationships, will and work, of the Trinity.

I received this book free from the publisher in exchange for an honest review.

            [This review appears on my blog, Amazon.com, Kregel, and Goodreads.com.]

Monday, September 16, 2019

Review: "Blue Mind" by Wallace J. Nichols


            A very kind woman at the pool lent me her copy of Blue Mind by Wallace J. Nichols to read.  We have talked – her daughter is a swimmer – I enjoy a casual float around the pool – and she thought I might like to read it – that I might find what he said true and affirming.  And I did – as someone who looks forward to the beach every year and finds staring into the surf a profund evidence of the divine…

            Nichols’ book is divided into three basic sections:

            In the first section, he looks at the brain – and, in particular, the neuro-plasticity of the brain – how the brain itself can rewire based on certain stimuli.  I found the evidence he put forward fascinating, and I wondered, for example, if it is possible to rewire the brain of a sociopath so he would no longer be a sociopath.  Much possibility for good and evil in this ability of our brains.

            Then he looks at the scientific evidence that shows that being anywhere near or in water actually improves health.  Why is this?  Could it have something to do with the experience in the womb?  Something to do with evolution?  With the fact that we are mostly water?  There are many possibilities, but the benefits seem quite clear.  (I wondered for those who prefer mountains or are afraid of water if being in those places would have a similar affect on them.)

            Finally, he looks at the need to keep the water clean – considering waste, recycling, and so forth.  Water is not merely enjoyable and healthful, but necessary to human and all life.  So, there is the rightful plea to do all we can to keep garbage and other dangers out of the water.

            Reading this book made me appreciate the peacefulness and well as awesome power I feel when in and around water.  I only wish he had given more practical application in the book.

            The book includes extensive endnotes, an index of key words, and a study guide for groups.  It is well worth the read.

            [This review appears on my blog, Amazon.com, and Goodreads.com.]