Book Notices: Some Upcoming Titles and More

Most Anticipated Books of 2016

This first list is a short one, but no less strong on that account.

And A Few Edited Volumes Worth Noting

Essay Collections can be tricky endeavors. Often they deliver an uneven product. They might have really only one or two essays that command your attention, while the rest of their contents don’t quite follow suit. The following collections, however, I consider exceptions to this rule. They all feature rosters of leading theologians working at the top of their game on some of the hottest topics in contemporary academic theology. So if you’ve got any interest in questions related to topics in theological ontology, God’s (in)capacity to suffer, divine providence, or the character of the Christian life, here are some titles worth considering.

Link: Kate Bowler on illusions of control

Yesterday the New York Times published, “Death, the Prosperity Gospel and Me,” a short essay by Kate Bowler, a professor of church history at Duke Divinity School. Bowler writes on coming to terms with her recent diagnosis with cancer (as a 35 year old), and how this experience squares with her understanding of the meaning of a “blessed life.” It’s a moving piece. It also sketches a more thoughtful alternative to accounts of suffering and grief than are typically offered by advocates of various prosperity gospels.

For more from Bowler, an expert on the history of prosperity gospel movements, consider her book Blessed: A History of the American Prosperity Gospel (Oxford UnivPr, 2013).

On Failures of Agency

Some Varieties of Failures of Agency A. Paul Holmer on Weakness of Will (or lack of desire) … when I can no longer decide between opposing options, or when I completely lack wants and wishes, then much of daily life loses its challenge, and I begin to think there is little sense left. The philosopher Aristotle noted […]