Our sister publication Christianity Today just announced its annual book awards, which reminded me that I haven’t highlighted any history books for awhile. So here are a few volumes that have recently crossed my desk (or, more accurately, my book-strewn floor):
The Christian Travelers Guide series
Irving Hexham, general editor (Zondervan, 2001) So far this series offers guides to four European countries: Great Britain, Italy, France, and Germany. Each portable volume begins with a history of the country and an introduction to its music, art, and architecture. Part 3 contains a listing and map of major Christian sites, and the rest of each book is devoted to alphabetical city-by-city listings of key attractions, primarily but not exclusively those with Christian connections. Sidebar-like boxes point out significant biographies and artifacts.
The need for these guides arose, according to the preface, because leading tour books (Frommer’s, Fodors, and Rough guides) “tend to underplay the Christian contribution to Western Civilization through neglect or a negative tone.” Such an approach does a disservice both to history and to Christians who wish to reconnect with their roots. Hexham and his co-contributors rediscover people and places of faith, both of which have been abundant in the four featured countries.
These guides won’t replace the old standards, because they lack information on transportation routes, hotels, restaurants, and fees. But for Christian tourists who wish to know more about their destinations than which political leader slept there and where to find the trendiest boutiques, the books will be a valuable source of insight.
The Reverend Mark Matthews: An Activist in the Progressive Era
by Dale E. Soden (University of Washington, 2001) Mark Matthews (1867-1940) made a cameo appearance in CH issue 66: Christianity in the Wild West, where he was named as one of the most extraordinary Christian leaders of the early twentieth century West. He earned this honor for his achievements in a life of contradictions—in scarcely churched Seattle, he pastored the largest Presbyterian church in the country, and he pioneered social action programs while holding decidedly fundamentalist theological views.
These contradictions helped draw Soden, a professor of history at Whitworth College in Spokane, Washington, to his subject. But Soden was also interested in Matthews’s era—the span between Reconstruction and World War II that saw the fundamentalist/modernist controversy, the rise of Communism, rapid western urbanization, the Great Depression, and many other challenges to Christians and their worldview.
Matthews’s colorful career gives Soden plenty of great material to work with. The long-haired pastor in a Victorian waistcoat would do nearly anything to “redeem Seattle and make it a righteous community.” He preached “The Gospel of Soup, Soap, Salve, and Salvation.” He railed against women’s suffrage, union strikes, and the game of bridge. In one of his many battles with city fathers, he actually financed a phony gambling operation in order to uncover police corruption. No wonder he attracted so much attention from the Seattle press (as well as local cartoonists, samples of whose work Soden delightfully includes.)
Soden does a better job of telling these stories than of describing what impact Matthews really had. Soden also gets a little redundant with his thesis that Matthews was a product of his time and an agent of some positive change, not just an anachronism. Even so, the book aids readers’ understanding of a dizzying period in American history by examining its issues through the experiences of a truly fascinating character.
Bible Time Line, from Genesis to Revelation
(Rose) This is actually a pamphlet rather than a book. But all of you fans of the Christian History timelines know how much chronological information can be packed into a small space.
This accordion-fold timeline, which would fit easily inside a Bible, lines up major biblical books, people, and events with world and Middle Eastern landmarks. Grid lines mark off 10-year periods, but the superimposed dates and images appropriately reflect fuzziness and scholarly disagreements. The goal is breadth, not depth, making the timeline a quick but handy resource for Sunday school teachers and other students of the Bible.
By the way, Richard J. Mouw’s The Smell of Sawdust (Zondervan) won the award in Christianity Today‘s history/biography category. For Christian History‘s review, see “This Is Your Life.”
Elesha can be reached at cheditor@ChristianityToday.com.
The online issue archive for Christian History goes as far back as Issue 51 (Heresy in the Early Church). Prior issues are available for purchase in the Christian History Store.
Copyright © 2001 by the author or Christianity Today/Christian History magazine.Click here for reprint information on Christian History.