News and activities at Norma Marion Alloway Library, Trinity Western University

Category: Literature (Page 6 of 24)

New Titles Tuesday, March 23

 24 hours in ancient Rome: a day in the life of the people who lived there /Philip Matyszak. Walk a day in a Roman’s sandals. In this entertaining and enlightening guide, bestselling historian  Matyszak introduces us to the people who lived and worked there. In each hour of the day we meet a new character – from emperor to slave girl, gladiator to astrologer, medicine woman to water-clock maker – and discover the fascinating details of their daily lives.

 A brief introduction to Buddhism /updated and revised by Tim Dowley ; general editor: Christopher Partirdge. The content is enhanced by charts of religious festivals, historic timelines, updated maps, and a useful glossary. It is ideal for courses on Buddhism and Asian religions and will be a useful reference for all readers eager to learn more.

 A brief introduction to Hinduism /updated and revised by Tim Dowley ; general editor: Christopher Partridge. This brief introduction to Hinduism is designed to help readers understand this important religious tradition. The user-friendly content is enhanced by charts of religious festivals, timelines, updated maps, and a useful glossary. It is ideal for courses on South Asian religions and will be a useful reference for all readers eager to learn more.

 After the monkey trial: evangelical scientists and a new creationism /Christopher M. Rios. This book sheds light on the under-studied story of twentieth-century Christians who remained theologically conservative, but refused to take up arms against modern science – those who sought to show the compatibility of biblical Christianity and the conclusions of mainstream science, including evolution.

 Altogether lovely: a thematic and intertextual reading of the Song of Songs /Havilah Dharamraj. Dharamraj approaches the Song with a clear vision of the gendering of power relationships in the ancient Near East and through an intertextual method centered not on production but on the reception of texts. She sets the Song’s lyrical portrayal of passion and intimacy alongside other canonical portrayals of love spurned, lust, rejection, and sexual violence from Hosea, Ezekiel, and Isaiah. The result is a richly nuanced exposition of the possibilities of intimacy and remorse in interhuman and divine-human relationship.

 American encounters: natives and newcomers from European contact to Indian removal, 1500-1850 /edited by Peter C. Mancall and James H. Merrell.  This timely anthology brings together much of the best work available on early Native American history, offering comprehensive yet focused coverage on a wide array of topics from contact, exchange and diplomacy to religion, disease and warfare.

 Bible and ethics in the Christian life: a new conversation /Bruce C. Birch, Jacqueline E. Lapsley, Cynthia Moe-Lobeda, and Larry L. Rasmussen. Biblical scholars and Christian ethicists carry on “a new conversation” that engages how Christians are to understand the authority and use of Scripture, the basic elements of any full-bodied Christian ethic attuned to our circumstances, and the nature of our responsibility to our planetary neighbors and creation itself.

 Body parts: a theological anthropology /Michelle Voss Roberts. Body Parts claims the importance of embodiment, difference, and limitation–not only as descriptions of the human condition but also as part of the imago Dei itself. This thesis is inspired by a parallel claim in an Indian tradition that posits the reflection of the divine body in humanity. Its thirty-six parts invite Christians to consider how consciousness, limitations, mental and emotional capacities, organs of sensation and action, and elements are reflections of divinity. Each chapter pursues openings in the Christian theological tradition in order to imagine these sets of “body parts” as the image of God.

 Charcoal’s world: the true story of a Canadian Indian’s last stand /Hugh A. Dempsey. This book tells the story of Charcoal, the son of a great Blackfoot leader who’s beliefs had no place in a world transformed by the white man’s rules. Clinging to his people’s traditions, he came into conflict with the new laws of the land and became an outlaw. His story reflects the conflicting values and cultures of turn-of-the-century Canada and the relationship between white men and Natives.

 Chief Buffalo Child Long Lance: the glorious imposter /Donald B. Smith. Sylvester Long, the son of mixed-blood parents born into slavery in the American south,” entered an Indian residential school and became “the noble savage,” sought for motion pictures and social events with America’s elite.

Chief Smallboy: in pursuit of freedom /Gary Botting.  Chief Smallboy was from the Ermineskin Reserve near Hobbema, Alberta. Gravely concerned about the corrupting effects of White society on his people, Smallboy spent fifteen years planning and dreaming a solution. Then, in 1968, he led 140 members of his band to establish a traditional Native community on sacred Indian land in the foothills of the Rocky Mountains. Botting relies on the vibrant and highly accurate Cree oral tradition for story details. Thus, he presents a fascinating account that approximates the way Chief Smallboy viewed himself and his family history, meticulously corroborated by written records and through other sources.

 Chippewa customs /by Frances Densmore. Chippewa Customs, first published in 1929, remains an authoritative source for the tribal history, customs, legends, traditions, art, music, economy, and leisure activities of the Chippewa (Ojibway) Indians of the United States and Canada.

Christian exegesis of the Qur’an: a critical analysis of the apologetic use of the Qur’an in select medieval and contemporary Arabic texts /Scott Bridger. A revealing exploration of how Arabic-speaking Christians have used the Qur’an for exegetical purposes, providing insights relevant to Muslim-Christian relations today.

 Christian slavery: conversion and race in the protestant Atlantic world /Katharine Gerbner. In this book, the author contends that religion was fundamental to the development of both slavery and race in the Protestant Atlantic world. This book shows how the contentions between slave owners, enslaved people, and missionaries transformed the practice of Protestantism and the language of race in the early modern Atlantic world.

 Christian understandings of creation: the historical trajectory /Denis Edwards. This book attempts to explore a trajectory of the Christian theology of creation that begins with the Scriptures, and runs through the work of theologians from the second to the twenty-first centuries. There is a sense in which this broad theological tradition constitutes a trajectory, in the singular. But there is a rich diversity of creation theologies in this tradition, beginning with the diversity of the biblical texts themselves.

 Christianity made in India: from apostle Thomas to Mother Teresa /Roger E. Hedlund. Discusses the indigenization of Christianity in the Indian context. It is set in the larger context of the exceptional growth of the church in the non-Western world during the twentieth century, which has been characterized by a diversity of localized cultural expressions. It recognizes that the center of Christian influence numerically and theologically is shifting wouthward to Africa, Latin America, and Asia. It affirms the reality that wherever the gospel goes, it takes root in the local culture.

 Communal reading in the time of Jesus: a window into early Christian reading practices /Brian J. Wright. Wright exames evidence that demonstrates communal reading events in the first century. He disproves the simplistic notion that only a small segment of society in certain urban areas could have been involved in such communal reading events during the first century; rather, communal reading permeated a complex, multifaceted cultural field in which early Christians, Philo, and many others participated. His study thus pushes the academic conversation back by at least a century and raises important new questions regarding the formation of the Jesus tradition, the contours of book culture in early Christianity, and factors shaping the transmission of the text of the New Testament.

Crispina and her sisters: women and authority in early Christianity /Christine Schenk, CSJ. This book explores visual imagery found on burial artifacts of prominent early Christian women. It carefully situates the tomb art within the cultural context of customary Roman commemorations of the dead. Recent scholarship about Roman portrait sarcophagi and the interpretation of early Christian art is also given significant attention. A review of women’s history in the first four centuries of Christianity provides important context.

 Cross vision: how the crucifixion of Jesus makes sense of Old Testament violence /Gregory A. Boyd. With the sensitivity of a pastor and the intellect of a theologian, Boyd proposes the “cruciform hermeneutic,” a way to read the Old Testament portraits of God through the lens of Jesus’ crucifixion. In Cross Vision, Boyd follows up on his epic and groundbreaking study, The Crucifixion of the Warrior God. He shows how the death and resurrection of Jesus reframes the troubling violence of the Old Testament, how all of Scripture reveals God’s self-sacrificial love, and, most importantly, how we can follow Jesus’ example of peace.

 Diaspora Christianities: global scattering and gathering of South Asian Christians /editor, Sam George. This volume includes biblical reflections on diasporic life, charts the historical and geographical spread of South Aisian Christianity, and closes with a call to missional living in diaspora. It analyzes how migrants revive Christianity in adopted host nations and ancestral homelands

 Dignity and grace: wisdom for caregivers and those living with dementia /Janet Ramsey. Drawing on her own experience, as well as interviews with eight family and professional caregivers, Janet L. Ramsey helps caregivers and those with impaired memories learn as they listen to each other. She also shows them how the Holy Spirit can awaken their imagination and understanding while they discover how to live with dementia.

 Doing justice: congregations and community organizing /Dennis A. Jacobsen. Doing Justice introduces people of faith to congregation-based community organizing rooted in the day-to-day struggles and hopes of urban ministry. Jacobsen weaves theological and biblical warrants for community organizing into concrete strategies for achieving justice in the public arena and discusses fundamental organizing principles like power, self-interest, and agitation

 First principles, second thoughts: Aboriginal peoples, constitutional reform, and Canadian statecraft /Bryan Schwartz.

Governments in conflict?: provinces and Indian nations in Canada /edited by J. Anthony Long and Menno Boldt in association with Leroy Little Bear.

 How to pronounce knife: stories /Souvankham Thammavongsa. With these startling stories, Thammavongsa paints an indelible portrait of immigrants and refugees caught between cultures, languages, and values, and struggling to find their bearings far from home, even as they do the necessary “grunt work of the world.” In spare, intimate prose charged with emotional power and a sly wit, she immerses us in the lives of watchful children, lovelorn men, and restless women, illuminating their hopes, heartbreaks, acts of defiance, willingness to laugh at themselves, and, above all, their pursuit of a place to make their own. Told with tenderness, wry humour, and an unflinching eye for the sometimes absurd realities of having to start your life over again, How to Pronounce Knife announces Thammavongsa as one of the most striking voices of her generation.

 Indian herbalogy of North America /Alma R. Hutchens. For more than twenty years this pioneering work had served as a bible for herbalists throughout the world. It is an illustrated encyclopedic guide to more than two hundred medicinal plants found in North America, with descriptions of each plant’s appearance and uses, and directions for methods of use and dosage. Native American traditions are compared with traditional uses of the same plants among other cultures where the science of herbs has flourished, particularly in Russia and China. Included is an annotated bibliography of pertinent books and periodicals.

Lenin in Zurich: chapters /Alexander Solzhenitsyn ; translated by H.T. Willetts. With incomparable knowledge of the events and people, Solzhenitsyn explores and clarifies the crucial years 1914-17 and draws a compelling psychological portrait of the man who was the architect of the Revolution. Lenin in Zurich chronicles Lenin’s frustrating exile in Switzerland, from his arrest in Cracow and subsequent flight to Zurich at the outbreak of World War I to his departure for Russia in 1917 in a sealed train protected by the German government, years in which Lenin stood alone, without support from the deeply divided European socialist movement and isolated from his fellow revolutionaries. Solzhenitsyn examines the private man as well as the familiar public figure, concentrating on facets of Lenin’s personality and behavior that have been glossed over in most books about him: his disillusionment and dejection over the future of the Bolshevik cause, his love for lnessa Armand, his preoccupation with the difficulties of subsidizing the activities of his party, and, most important, his secret safe-passage and financial arrangements with the Germans.

 No foreign land: the biography of a Northern American Indian [by] Wilfred Pelletier and Ted Poole. Pelletier’s tale is a quiet and beautiful account of one man’s belief in his people and in their traditions and customs

Partners in confederation: aboriginal peoples, self-government, and the Constitution. Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples.

 The Ghost Dance /James Mooney. First published a century ago, The Ghost Dance is a unique first-hand account of a messianic movement against white subjugation that arose among Native Americans of the West and the Plains in the latter part of the 19th-century.

 The Ojibwa of western Canada, 1780 to 1870 /Laura Peers. This work traces the origins of the western Ojibwa, their adaptations to the West, and the ways in which they have coped with the many challenges they faced in the first century of their history in that region, between 1780 and 1870. The Ojibwa of Western Canada differs from earlier works by focussing closely on the details of western Ojibwa history in the crucial century of their emergence. It is based on documents to which pioneering scholars did not have access, including fur traders’ and missionaries’ journals, letters, and reminiscences. Ethnographic and archaeological data, and the evidence of material culture and photographic and art images, are also examined in this well-researched and clearly written history.

 We get our living like milk from the land /edited Lee Maracle [and others] ; researched and compiled by the Okanagan Rights Committee and the Okanagan Indian Education Resource Society.  The first historical overview of the Okanagan Nation. It starts with the Creation Story, moves through the first contact of colonization and ends in the present.

New Titles Tuesday, March 16

Here is a selection of print and ebooks added to the catalogue in the past week.

 Ancient mariner: the amazing adventures of Samuel Hearne, the sailor who walked to the Arctic Ocean /by Ken McGoogan.  tells the riveting story of how Samuel Hearne–a sailor at 12, a northern explorer at 24, an admirer of Native peoples–became the first European to reach the Arctic coast of North America. Yet, as Ken McGoogan reveals, Samuel Hearne’s place in the history books has been a subject hotly disputed over the past two centuries. This fascinating saga, a skillful blend of literary detective work and finely imagined narrative, delights and surprises as it restores Hearne’s rightful place in history.

 Ben Jonson’s Volpone, or the fox / edited and with an introduction by Harold Bloom.

Cassell’s English-Dutch, Dutch-English dictionary =Engels-Nederlands, Nederlands-Engels Woordenboek / completely revised by J.A. Jockin-La Bastide and G. van Kooten.

 Changing military patterns of the Great Plains Indians (17th century through early 19th century) /by Frank Raymond Secoy ; introduction to the Bison book edition by John C. Ewers. As a historical study covering not only tribal changes, conflicts and movements, but also the effect of horse and gun on the balance of power and on the fur trade, this is both interesting and stimulating reading.

 Crazy Horse and Custer: the parallel lives of two American warriors /by Stephen E. Ambrose ; illustrated by Kenneth Francis Dewey ; [maps by Walter T. Vitous]. This masterly dual biography tells the epic story of the lives of these two men: both were fighters of legendary daring, both became honoured leaders in their societies when still astonishingly young, and both died when close to the supreme political heights. Yet they – like the nations they represented – were as different as day and night.

 Ezekiel 2: a commentary on the Book of the prophet Ezekiel, chapters 25-48 /by Walther Zimmerli ; translated by Ronald E. Clements ; edited by Frank Moore Cross and Klaus Baltzer, with the assistance of Leonard Jay Greenspoon.

Kamloops history: fictions, facts, and fragments /by Wayne Norton.

 Kitchi-Gami: life among the Lake Superior Ojibway /by Johann Georg Kohl ; translated by Lascelles Wraxall ; with a new introduction by Robert E. Bieder ; and additional translations by Ralph Neufang and Ulrike Böcker. The extent of Kohl’s observations is really amazing. They cover the fur trade, canoe building, domestic utensils, quillwork, native foods, hunting, fishing, trapping, cooking, toboggans, snowshoes, gardening, lodge building, games and warfare.

 Prophetic worlds: Indians and whites on the Columbia Plateau /by Christopher L. Miller ; with a foreword by Chris Friday and a new preface by the author. This provocative ethnohistory offers an innovative reinterpretation of relations between Native Americans and Christian settlers on the Columbia Plateau. Miller draws on a wealth of ethnographic resources to show how culturally-derived perceptions and systems of rationality played more of a determining role in the interactions between these two groups than did material forces. Initially, Plateau Indians and the American missionaries who came to convert them perceived each other as crucial to the fulfillment of their own millennial destiny. When these views were contravened, relations quickly and fatally soured. In explaining this devolution, Prophetic Worlds provides a novel and insightful rendering of the cultural understandings that underwrote the mid-nineteenth-century transformation of life on the Plateau.

 Shakespeare as political thinker / edited by John Alvis and Thomas G. West. The essays contained in this book proceed from the common conviction that Shakespeare’s poetry conveys a wisdom about politics commensurate with his artistry. Well-known thinkers discuss Shakespeare’s understanding of politics, the idea of the best polity, the relationship between character and political life, and the interpenetration of poetry, politics, religion, and philosophy.

 Traction: get a grip on your business /by Gino Wickman. In Traction, you’ll learn the secrets of strengthening the six key components of your business. You’ll discover simple yet powerful ways to run your company that will give you and your leadership team more focus, more growth, and more enjoyment. Successful companies are applying Traction every day to run profitable, frustration-free businesses–and you can too.

New Titles Tuesday,, February 2

Here is a sample of new titles added to the catalogue in the past week

 A light so lovely: the spiritual legacy of Madeleine L’Engle, author of A Wrinkle in Time /by Sarah Arthur. L”Engle, was known the world round for her imaginative spirit and stories. She was also known to spark controversy – too Christian for some, too unorthodox for others. A Light So Lovely paints a vivid portrait of this enigmatic icon”s spiritual legacy, starting with her inner world and expanding into fresh reflections of her writing for readers today.

 African Christian leadership: realities, opportunities, and impact /by edited by Robert J. Priest and Kirimi Barine. Featuring input from over 8,000 African survey participants and 57 in-depth interviews, it provides invaluable insight and concise analysis of the dynamics of the development of African Christian leaders today.

 Beyond measure: the poetics of the image in Bernard of Clairvaux /by Isaac Slater, OCSO. A study of the literary, philosophical, and theological strands densely interwoven through the writings of Bernard of Clairvaux. His apparent iconoclasm with respect to art, affectivity, and the humanity of Jesus is revealed as an alternative mystical aesthetic, congruent with his program for monastic reform.

 Biblical interpretation in early Christian Gospels.|nVolume 4,|pThe gospel of John /by edited by Thomas R. Hatina. TWU AUTHOR. Hatina’s latest edited collection begins with an introduction surveying methodological approaches used in the study of how scriptural allusions, quotations, and references function in John, with subsequent essays grouped into four categories that represent the breadth of current interpretive interests. Each study contains not only recent research on the function of scripture in John, but also an explanation of the approach taken, making the collection an ideal resource for both scholars and students who are interested in the complexities of interpretation in John’s context as well as our own.

 Dead Sea Scrolls, revise and repeat: new methods and perspectives /by edited by Carmen Palmer, Andrew R. Krause, Eileen Schuller, and John Screnock. (TWU AUTHOR) This book examines the identity of the Qumran movement by reassessing former conclusions and bringing new methodologies to the study of the Dead Sea Scrolls. The essays in this volume reassess the categorization of rule texts, the reuse of scripture, the significance of angelic fellowship, the varieties of calendrical use, and celibacy within the Qumran movement. Contributors consider identity in the Dead Sea Scrolls from new interdisciplinary perspectives, including spatial theory, legal theory, historical linguistics, ethnicity theory, cognitive literary theory, monster theory, and masculinity theory.

Defending shame: its formative power in Paul’s letters /by Te-Li Lau ; foreword by Luke Timothy Johnson. Explores the Apostle Paul’s use of shame and reclaims its positive usage for moral formation.

 Disruptive leadership: Apple and the technology of caring deeply : nine keys to organizational excellence and global impact /by Rich Kao. In this highly readable and engaging book, a disruptive leadership framework is proposed in which caring deeply is placed at the center of the model. By turning care into a focal point, a triphasic model is proposed that moves from the personal sphere (individual), to the corporate arena (organizational), and then to the global stage (impact). Apple is profiled as a leading example of leveraging what is termed the technology of caring deeply. Other companies, such as Nike, IKEA, Zappos, Starbucks are also profiled. Finally, a leadership canvas is provided to help activate the lessons shared in the book.

Embody: five keys to leading with integrity /by Karoline M. Lewis. Embody your Christian beliefs in every decision, every act of ministry leadership.

 Embodying integration: a fresh look at Christianity in the therapy room /by Megan Anna Neff and Mark R. McMinn. A fresh look at integration in a postmodern world. Modeling how to engage hard questions, they consider how different theological views, gendered perspectives, and cultures integrate with psychology and counseling.

For the joy: 21 missionary mother stories of real life & faith /by edited by Miriam Chan and Sophia Russell. Dive in to For the Joy and laugh and cry with 21 Australian missionary mothers as they share stories of raising kids in both remote far-flung places and some of the most populated cities in the world. These inspiring stories will resonate in the heart of the reader as fear, faith, and figuring it out come together in page-turning reality. Stories include: home-schooling while living in a bus, navigating the toddler years as a “third culture mum”, raising a child with special needs, recovering from anxiety on the field, giving birth in a foreign hospital, the grief of losing your family to persecution … and more! Honestly written, raw in emotion, sad and joyful in equal measure, this collection of stories offers insight into the complexities of parenting children while serving God no matter where you call home

 How the Qur’an interprets the Bible: comparing Islamic, Jewish, and Christian scriptures /by John Kaltner, Christopher G. Frechette. Introduces readers to the Qur’an by exploring how Islamic as well as Jewish and Christian scriptures convey meaning by drawing on traditions about some of the most well-known characters found in both texts.

In stone and story: early Christianity in the Roman world /by Bruce W. Longenecker. This beautifully designed, full-color textbook introduces the Roman background of the New Testament by immersing students in the life and culture of the thriving first-century towns of Pompeii and Herculaneum, which act as showpieces of the world into which the early Christian movement was spreading.

 Paul and the resurrected body: social identity and ethical practice /by Matt O’Reilly  O’Reilly makes the case that the social dimension of future bodily resurrection is just as important, if not more so, than individual salvation and resurrection. Through a close reading of key, O’Reilly argues that resurrection is integral to Paul’s understanding of Christian social identity. In Paul’s theological reasoning, a believer’s hope for the future depends on being identified as part of the people of God who will be resurrected.

Reading the Bible with giants: how 2000 years of biblical interpretation can shed light on old texts /by David Paul Parris. Using reception theory, the goal of Reading the Bible with Giants is to bring our tradition of biblical interpretation into our dialogue with the text in order to engage the contemporary reader, the Bible and the history of its interpretation in a three-way dialogue.

 Recovering from the Anabaptist vision: new essays in Anabaptist identity and theological method /by edited by Laura Schmidt Roberts, Paul Martens & Myron A. Penner. TWU AUTHOR  This volume performs a critical and vibrant reconstruction of Anabaptist identity and theological method, in the wake of the recent revelations of the depth of the sexual abuse perpetrated by the most influential Anabaptist theologian of the 20th century, John Howard Yoder. In an attempt to liberate Anabaptist theology and identity from the constricting vision appropriated and reformulated by Yoder, these essays refuse the determinative categories of the last half century supplied by and carried beyond Harold Bender’s The Anabaptist Vision. The volume offers a Trinitarian and Christological framework that holds together the importance of Scripture, tradition, and the lived experience of the Christian community, as the contributors examine a wide variety of issues such as Mennonite feminism, Anabaptist queer theology, and Mennonite theological methods. These essays interrogate the operations of power, violence, exclusion, and privilege in methodology in this changed context, offering self-critical constructive alternatives for articulating Anabaptist theology and identity.

  Sacramental preaching: sermons on the hidden presence of Christ /by Hans Boersma. This primer on the ministry of preaching connects reading the Bible theologically with preparing and preaching sermons. Boersma explains that exegesis involves looking beyond the historical and literal meaning of the text to the hidden sacramental reality of Christ himself, which enables us to reach the deepest meaning of the Scriptures.

Scribes and scrolls at Qumran /by Sidnie White Crawford. The author provides a thorough case for supporting the traditional position in Qumran scholarship, that Qumran was an Essene scribal center in competition with the Jerusalem temple and that the surrounding caves were used regularly for scrolls storage.

 Seeing with the eyes of the heart: cultivating a sacramental imagination in an age of pornography /by edited by Elizabeth T. Groppe. The essays in this volume offer a theological critique of pornography and aim to retrieve an alternative visual culture from the Christian tradition. Iillustrated with 72 full color images of classical and contemporary iconography and art.

 Spirit in session: working with your client’s spirituality (and your own) in psychotherapy /by Russell Siler Jones. Siler Jones helps therapists feel more competent and confident about having spiritual conversations with clients. He includes extended case studies and clinical dialogue so readers can hear how spirituality becomes part of case conceptualization and what spiritual conversation actually sounds like in psychotherapy. He writes about a complex topic with an elegant simplicity and provides how-to advice in a way that encourages therapists to find their own way to apply it.

 The end of youth ministry?: why parents don’t really care about youth groups and what youth workers should do about it /by Andrew Root. Using an innovative first-person fictional narrative, an expert in youth ministry diagnoses the challenges facing the church today and offers a new way to think about what youth ministry can be for: not happiness, but joy.

Time to talk about dying: how clergy and chaplains can help senior adults prepare for a good death /by Fred Grewe. This guide provides clergy and chaplains with essential tools for supporting senior adults, helping them to feel comfortable about death and dying before they begin to approach life’s end. Focusing on strengthening relationships with loved ones, it applies unique therapeutic methods for promoting a positive experience of ageing.

 To cast the first stone: the transmission of a gospel story /by Jennifer Knust and Tommy Wasserman. The story of the woman taken in adultery features a dramatic confrontation between Jesus and the Pharisees over whether the adulteress should be stoned as the law commands. Knust and Wasserman trace the story’s incorporation into Gospel books, liturgical practices, storytelling, and art, overturning the mistaken perception that it was either peripheral or suppressed, even in the Greek East. The authors also explore the story’s many different meanings. To Cast the First Stone calls attention to significant shifts in Christian book cultures and the enduring impact of oral tradition on the preservation–and destabilization–of scripture.

 Toward a theology of the Septuagint: Stellenbosch Congress on the Septuagint, 2018 /by edited by Johann Cook and Martin Rösel. TWU AUTHOR  Focuses on the question of whether it is appropriate and possible to formulate a theology of the Septuagint. Nineteen English and German essays by an international group of scholars examine Old and New Testament texts from a variety of methodological perspectives to demonstrate that such a theology is indeed possible.

New Titles Tuesday, January 26

Here is a selection of new titles added to the collection in the past week. TWU login may be required to access these eBooks.

 Adventures in evangelical civility: a lifelong quest for common ground /by Richard J. Mouw. One of the most influential evangelical voices in America shares his nearly half-century quest for commonness, arguing for a convicted civility when conversing with those with whom we disagree.

 Bonhoeffer’s black Jesus: Harlem Renaissance theology and an ethic of resistance /by Reggie L. Williams. The Christology Bonhoeffer learned in Harlem’s churches featured a black Christ who suffered with African Americans in their struggle against systemic injustice and racial violence-and then resisted. In the pews of the Abyssinian Baptist Church, under the leadership of Adam Clayton Powell, Sr., Bonhoeffer absorbed the Christianity of the Harlem Renaissance. Bonhoeffer’s Black Jesus argues that the black American narrative led Dietrich Bonhoeffer to the truth that obedience to Jesus requires concrete historical action. This ethic of resistance not only indicted the church of the German Volk, but also continues to shape the nature of Christian discipleship today.

 The Epistle to the Ephesians /by Karl Barth, Francis Watson, and John Webster. This masterful example of theological interpretation of the biblical text presents Barth’s insights on an important Pauline epistle.  Now available in English for the first time, this work introduces theological and exegetical issues pertinent to the study of Ephesians. Introductory essays by world-renowned scholars Francis Watson and John Webster are included.

 The Inklings and culture: a harvest of scholarship from the Inklings Institute of Canada /by edited by Monika Hilder, Sara L. Pearson, and Laura N. Van Dyke. TWU AUTHORS In this first collection of its kind, addressing the entire famous group of seven authors, the twenty-seven chapters in The Inklings and Culture explore the legacy of their diverse literary art—inspired by the Christian faith—art that continues to speak hope into a hurting and deeply divided world.

 Luther’s Jews: a journey into anti-semitism /by Thomas Kaufmann. Kaufmann explores the vexed and sometimes shocking story of Martin Luther, and his increasingly vitriolic attitudes towards the Jews – as well as the ominous legacy of Luther’s anti-semitism for the future of Germany in the centuries to come.

 Rethinking holiness: a theological introduction /by Bernie A. Van De Walle. Based on years of conversations with students, this approachable theological introduction to the Christian doctrine of holiness challenges the commonly held idea that holiness is primarily a moral category. The author explains that holiness is grounded not in ethics but in the basic nature of God. The book highlights the Bible’s necessary and corrective role in defining holiness and shows how individual holiness is grounded in the community that is the church catholic.

 Sons and mothers: stories from Mennonite men /by edited by Mary Ann Loewen. In Sons and Mothers, Mennonite men reflect on the women who raised them, showing their mothers’ hopes, dreams, and fears, and who they are today.

Wesley: a guide for the perplexed /by Jason E. Vickers. After more than two centuries of scholarly reflection on Wesley’s life and work, leading historians still agree on one thing: John Wesley is an elusive, enigmatic figure. Fortunately, recent developments in the study of the long eighteenth century have shed new light on many aspects of Wesley’s life and work.

 

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