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  • Review: The Covid Pandemic and the World’s Religions edited by George D. Chryssides and Dan Cohn-Sherbok

    Review: The Covid Pandemic and the World’s Religions edited by George D. Chryssides and Dan Cohn-Sherbok

    This book brings together 30 contributors, representing 14 religions, each writing about the pandemic and their faith. Each writer received […]

  • Review: Lower than the Angels by Diarmaid MacCulloch

    Review: Lower than the Angels by Diarmaid MacCulloch

    Historian Diarmaid MacCulloch offers a calm and thorough history of sex and Christianity in this compendium.

  • Review: On Voice. Speech, Song, Silence: Human and Divine

    Review: On Voice. Speech, Song, Silence: Human and Divine

    The array of topics covered range from the sad tale of eunuchs to the mysterious voices of bird and whale song, and a fascinating reflection on how the timeless synthesised voice of Stephen Hawkings defied his debilitated body and captured his youthfulness.

  • Review: Vile Bodies. The Body in Christian Teaching, Faith and Practice.

    Review: Vile Bodies. The Body in Christian Teaching, Faith and Practice.

    Before reading Vile Bodies, I had no idea how alien the ancient understanding of bodies and sex were to ours. These ancient understandings seem risible to us now – and I did laugh many times reading this book – but the consequences of them are no laughing matter.

  • Review: Passions of the soul

    Review: Passions of the soul

    Williams introduces the book as ‘non-scholarly’, though the introduction was dated ‘Michaelmas 2022’, using the esoteric Oxford calendar. I’m not a scholar and I had to read this book without distraction and often multiple times. I suppose I was forced into a monastic experience of reading.

  • Review: Unknowing God: Towards a Post-Abusive Theology

    Review: Unknowing God: Towards a Post-Abusive Theology

    I recently completed the Church of England’s safeguarding training – mandatory for me as a Parochial Church Council member. The training was rigorous but something felt missing. This book identifies that gap: it is the failure to understand how theology can harm. The Church has failed to explore how its theology is a contributor to…