Help Me Spend $$$
Here's the deal. I have $35 in gifts cards from Amazon, but my book wish list is well beyond that. Try as I might, I cannot decide what books to get. In my despair I thought that I would turn to you, gentle readers, for guidance. So leave a comment with your suggestion of how I should spend these gift cards. You can check my library to see if I already have a book you're thinking of suggesting. As added motivation, feel free to use your Amazon Associates links to suggest titles and if I go with your suggestion, I'll follow your link when I make the purchase.
Any suggestions?
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Follow @WTravisMcMaken
Any suggestions?
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Follow @WTravisMcMaken
Comments
Commentary on Galatians (Luther)
God's Long Summer (Marsh) [Fascinating!]
Franny and Zooey (J.D. Salinger)
The Idiot (Dostoyevsky)
Hermeneutics (Thistleton)
* Christ Without Absolutes: A Study in the Christology of Ernst Troeltsch (Coakley)
* Powers and Submissions: Spirituality, Philosophy and Gender (Coakley)
* Feminist and Womanist Essays in Reformed Theology (Pauw)
* Reformed Confessions: Theology from Zurich to Barmen (Rohls)
* Anything by Randall C. Zachman
* If you can really splurge by putting the amazon card to a larger purchase CBD is releasing all 38 vols. of the old ECF series for 229.99 this April. Of course, some of the translations are outdated, but it might be useful to have on hand.
As for "Look", the Calvin bit is enticing but that's at CBD and my cards are for Amazon. The Pauw book is the only really temping one so far...
Kevin, you're totally right. But...why am I not excited?
Adam, what's in the TFT book? Is it stuff not published before?
Or perhaps you might consider purchasing a book on economics. I think that one of the greatest threats (if not the greatest) to ethical and responsible action in the world is the pervasive economic illiteracy of the clergy and the theological profession at large. I fear that the majority of theologians still view mankind through a primitive anthropological lens that is fundamentally anti-scientific and outdated.
We must be careful that as theologians we address real man as he really is in the day to day of human existence. If our theological ethics are beholden to a fundamentally flawed view of man and the world, we run the risk of not addressing men at all. Instead we address an idol, a world and a man of our own making. We, in effect, become our own gods. The Word of God is addressed to real man as he really is, and thus we cannot ignore the advances of economic science and what it reveals about the world in which we live.
The church is outdated and irrelevant insofar as we ignore this reality and the coming-of-age of man. There are, I think, deep ecclesiological implications of this line of thinking.
Best of luck on your decision!
D.R.