“Companions for the Soul: A Yearlong Journey of Miracles, Prayers, and Epiphanies,” edited by Robert Hudson and Shelley Townsend-Hudson (Zondervan, 392pp.; $17.99, hardcover). Reviewed by Diane Komp, professor of pediatrics at Yale University School of Medicine and author of “Breakfast for the Heart: Meditations to Nourish Your Soul.”
Saints come in all stripes,” remark Robert Hudson and Shelley Townsend-Hudson in their preface to “Companions for the Soul” as they prepare to dish up the Venerable Bede and Dwight L. Moody on the same plate. As the Hudsons note, some of the famous divines they quote would not have agreed in their lifetimes to stand together shoulder to shoulder. Happily for us, Celtic saints and gospel-song writers share pages in an elegant devotional book that delivers on the editors’ promise to provide a “breathtaking variety of spiritual expression.”
The Hudsons introduce us to their collection with an early twentieth-century speech to pastors by W. W. Staley at “A Seaside Chautauqua and School of Methods”: “A mighty host surrounds me in my library. . . . They speak to me; they kindle the fires of my imagination; they quicken my faith, humble my pride, rebuke my wrong-doing and wrong-thinking, warn me against sin, and point my soul to the living Christ.” So it is with this anthology. Some of the readings included in this Evangelical Christian Publishers Association Gold Medallion finalist are old friends–John Wesley, for instance, and his case of holy heartburn–but others are new treasures, such as this quote from one of my physician heroes, Sir William Osler: “Begin the day with Christ and prayer–you need no other. Creedless, with it you have religion; creed-stuffed, it will leaven any theological dough in which you stick.” I jotted that one down to share with my medical students, who know Sir William only for his contributions to medical education. And in this sad season of church burnings, I was encouraged to read a hymn culled from the autobiography of Bishop Richard Allen, founder of the African Methodist Episcopal Church and pastor of Bethel Church in Philadelphia:
Bethel surrounded by her foes,
But not yet in despair,
Christ heard her supplicating cries,
The God of Bethel heard.
The handsome design of this book is crowned by a cover that reproduces The Annunciation by the fifteenth-century Flemish artist Robert Campin. In this richly incarnational depiction of the hailing angel and the blessed virgin–the setting is a domestic interior, full of the stuff of everyday life–I was intrigued to see Mary engrossed in a book. In a sense, this image summarizes the strength of the Hudsons’ anthology, in which we see familar figures and old truths in a new light.
I have a long list of personal friends who will be pointed to the living Christ by “Companions for the Soul” this Christmas. It would not at all surprise me if this lovely work resurfaces in future seasons to refresh faithful Christians of diverse traditions.
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