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The Best Christian Writing 2000 [Paperback]

John Wilson (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)


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Book Description

Best Christian Writing August 22, 2000

In the inaugural volume of this important annual series, editor John Wilson brings together an elegant and engaging array of essays by contemporary Christian luminaries. These distinguished writers distill the riches of Christian belief into lucid explorations of faith and truth, offering diverse works that reflect the many dimensions of Christianity as it moves into its third millennium. A thought-provoking introduction by Philip Yancey, author of the bestselling The Jesus I Never KnewHarvey Cox's pointed depiction of The Market as GodAlasdair Macintyre on morality and desire in The Recovery of Moral Agency?Religion and the Shape of National Culture, Robert Bellah's surprising inquiry into the sacramental imaginationEugene Peterson's Wise Teachers, Sound Teaching, a gentle instruction on healthy thinking and believingDallas Willard on Jesus' intellectual power in Jesus the LogicianA Cold Day in December, Frederica Mathewes-Green's lyrical reflection on God as suffering parentA tale of grace and guidance from Larry Woiwode, The Feel of Internal Bleeding

Offering testimony and prayer, debate and benediction, The Best Christian Writing 2000 is a revealing and inspiring look at religious faith in the modern world.


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Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

Feeling inspired by The Best Spiritual Writing series, John Wilson, an editor at Christianity Today, has assembled this impressive collection of standout Christian writing. Considering that some sociologists claim that there are roughly 1.8 billion Christians in the world today, Wilson acknowledges that it would be impossible to represent every angle of Christian vision within one anthology. Instead he gathered a collection of North American voices that reads like a classroom full of the best and brightest seminary students. Each essay and story has a unique personal history and point of view and yet they all have a common purpose--that of exalting, living, and illuminating the Christian path.

The big-name writers in the collection include Jean Bethke Elshtain writing on "Abraham Lincoln and the Last Best Hope," Harvey Cox's essay "The Market As God" (originally published in The Atlantic Monthly), and Eugene Peterson on "Wise Teachers, Sound Teaching." Unfortunately, this anthology leans toward the theological, with only a few essays sustaining a hearty personal narrative. As a result, some readers may find the overall package a little dry. However, connoisseurs of Christian writing will recognize the merits of these well-crafted and provocative essays. In fact, the anthology's strength lies in a very satisfying and familiar formula--one that has always worked for successful sermon writing--linking biblical stories with a smattering of personal anecdotes and then applying them to our collective modern dilemmas. --Gail Hudson

From Publishers Weekly

Any collection that purports to contain the "best" writing of a given year should immediately raise skeptical eyebrows, yet Wilson has successfully culled together 26 marvelous essays (and one acerbically funny cartoon) that speak to the heart of Christian experience. Bestselling author Philip Yancey opens with a meaty autobiographical essay on the power of writing, and the ensuing essays generally meet the aesthetic standards Yancey sets forth. Wilson (editor of the periodical Books and Culture) has arranged the essays noncommittally, not attempting to group them according to theme, but only alphabetically by the author's last name. Several essays reveal their authors grappling with ambiguity: Lauren Winner discusses her painful, yet joyful, conversion from Orthodox Judaism to Anglican Christianity, Susan Wise Bauer tackles the loneliness of being a committed evangelical at a Harvard feminist conference, and Randall Balmer discusses the "wrestling with God" that has characterized his journey away from his fundamentalist upbringing. Other writers muse eloquently on family life; Virginia Stem Owens addresses "how best to be a burden" in her old age, Ben Patterson recounts learning about God's mysterious ways through his son's struggles with Tourette's syndrome, andDin the collection's most startlingly poignant contributionDa young pastor grapples with his own imminent death from cancer in a sermon called "Surprised by Death." There are of course a couple of clunkers, including a na ve piece by a college sophomore who extols stay-at-home mothers, but the essays are generally first-rate and drawn from the entire spectrum of Christian life.
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 352 pages
  • Publisher: HarperOne (August 22, 2000)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0060693827
  • ISBN-13: 978-0060693824
  • Product Dimensions: 7.9 x 5.3 x 0.9 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 10.6 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,680,566 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

 

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Average Customer Review
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16 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A mixed bag, as expected, October 14, 2000
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This review is from: The Best Christian Writing 2000 (Paperback)
It's difficult to review an anthology-type book like this because the quality (or, more precisely, the usefulness) of the articles vary greatly. The great majority of the essays included, although interesting, cannot be considered life-changing. But one essay, in my opinion, is worth the price of the book. "Jesus the Logician" by Dallas Willard could change (and enhance) the way one looks at the central figure of Christianity. Expounding on a theme introduced in his brilliant book "The Divine Conspiracy", namely, that Jesus is the most intelligent person who ever lived, Willard explores Jesus' use of rigorous logic, especially when answering the queries of his opponents. Indeed, a logical analysis of Jesus' sayings can be the key to their proper interpretation. To me, this article stands head and shoulders above the others.

Other worthwhile essays by other authors include "Wise Teachers, Sound Teaching", "Surprised by Death" and "The Market as God". Other entries, of which "The Recovery of Moral Agency?" is a good example, seem dry and difficult. Everyone will have their favorites in this collection, and normally such a mixed bag would earn this book three stars. But the Dallas Willard article gives this anthology a boost to the next level.

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4.0 out of 5 stars mixed bunch, March 15, 2008
This review is from: The Best Christian Writing 2000 (Paperback)
There is no real surprise that this is a mixed bag of pieces. There are some really good ones, some really, really good ones, but there are also a lot of dull or pointless pieces. A lot of it comes across as dry, but hey, it is still worth the price. And it is a debut collection, and these always get better as time goes and the editor and others become more experienced.
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0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Outstanding Writings by Various Christians, June 20, 2003
I took this book with me on a spiritual retreat hoping for fresh perspectives, inspiring insights and good, to great, writing. I was not disappointed. The book delivered essays that I would not have otherwise read. Many essays gave me pensive perspectives and prompted me to consider worlds that hithertofore did not exist.

Some of the selections are provocative; they shun being "politically correct" (Read Gilbert Meilaender's essay: After Sept. 11th.). John Wilson's, the editor, selections are broad and cover subjects that probably would have escaped your attention (Paul Elie's 'The Last Catholic Writer in America' for example).

The title of this book pressed me to ask two provocative questions: "What constitutes 'BEST' , and what constitutes 'CHRISTIAN'?.

Editors strive, one would think, for clarity among multiplicity. However, John Wilson says nothing about his criteria for selecting the 'Best' 'Christian' essays. He chooses, and the reader is to accept, in a "fundamentalist" way (without questioning) his discernment.

I wanted to know how Wilson determines what is 'best'? The very word, 'best', by itself, implies a critical comparative judgement. Did Wilson, in his selections, hold these writers to the stellar scale of such 'Christian' writers as: Origin, Augustine, Luther, Bunyan, Kierkegarrd, Schweitzer, Bart, C.S. Lewis, Tolkien or Brueggemann (to name just a few)? Nothing is said.

Then there is the significance of the heavy laden word 'Christian'. I consider myself one (though others would contest this assertion). The word 'Christian' has substantial implications. To most in North America, 'Christian' implies, at the very least, a moral and spiritual value system. However, every 'Christian' tradition has a different take on this. Which tradition does Wilson tap for his guiding standards? Maybe Greek Orthodox? Catholic? Primitive Baptist? Pentecostal? Presbyterian? Lutheran? Episcopalian? Congregational? Unitarian Universalist? Or the Metropolitan Church? Nothing is said.

Also you read the various essays with no specific destination in focus. Normally, "Christian" writing exists to cause one to reflect, or consider, moral or spiritual issues. Most "Christian" writing has an agenda and often presses the question, "How shall we live" as 'Christian'? In this book, with its diverse subjects, you finish the book as you would a good bowl of vegetable soup, satisfied but without a sense of any distinct flavor.

Maybe a more accurate title for this book, maybe: 'Outstanding Writings by Various Christians 2002' I strongly recommend the twenty two essays in this for those who want a devotional that will take them outside of their norm. 4.5 stars

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