Christmas books

Christmas books

Five books for Christmas:

Gregory K. Beale, A Biblical Theology of the New Testament (Baker).  Monumental work.  My students know I have a thing about people who use `eschatological' every other sentence (the Reformed equivalent of quoting Bono among trendies) but in Greg's case, I'll forgive him.  The book has already changed the way I think about New Testament teaching on eldership.  It is self-contained (good job at over 1 000 pages) but familiarity with Greg's work on the Temple is useful.

J. Todd Billings,  Union with Christ (Baker Academic).  Those who have enjoyed Dr Billings' work on Calvin and on scriptural interpretation will know what to expect.   Thought-provoking treatment of a hot topic.  To be read alongside Robert Letham's book with the same title.  Both of these books are both theological and doxological.  Letham also has one of the most concise and brilliant summaries of Cyrilline Christology to be found anywhere.

James Dolezal, God Without Parts (Pickwick).  An important elaboration and defence of divine simplicity, a doctrine frequently rejected today but rather less frequently understood.The Reformed Orthodox would have regarded divine simplicity as one of -- if not the most -- important element of their doctrine of God.

Derek Prime, Charles Simeon: An Ordinary Pastor of Extraordinary Influence (Day One).  OK, I have not read this yet; but the combination of author and subject is irresistible.  Mine is on the way from the UK but some Christian bookshop in the USA needs to take this on.

Finally, guilty pleasure for anyone with a (British) sense of humour: Adam Macqueen, Private Eye: The First Fifty Years (Private Eye).  Nothing Christian about this one.  I became an avid Eye reader at age 13 and it inspired me to go on to be part of the team that put together the semi-underground satirical magazine for my school (greatest achievement: getting it banned from the girl's school next door because of `unacceptably subversive' material).  My role was writing parodies written in the style of the local newspaper and in the manner of various schoolmasters.  All the inspiration came from the Eye.  If you are suspicious of establishments, the self-important, Rupert Murdoch, celebrities of any stripe and have never grown up, this is the book to read.  And Craig Brown is one of the few living geniuses.