This book is trilingual: MacDonald is fluent in the languages of philosophy, systematic theology, and biblical studies. He takes up one meaty topic after anotherthe doctrine of Creation, God in history, the Atonement, and morealways with insight and drawing on a stunning range of interlocutors. MacDonald doesn't waste wordsyou'll need to read some pages several timesbut the effort is worth it. May his tribe increase.
"Expert" assessments of Iran vary widely. They range from those which see the current regime as so dangerous that some sort of preemptive military action is called for (even after Iraq) to those that blame the United States for isolating and demonizing Iran. Takeyha scholar born in Iran and educated in the United States, where he is a senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relationsproposes a pragmatic alternative. He wants U.S. policymakers to tone down the rhetoric with a view toward long-range engagement. Is he right? I don't know, but his case is worth careful consideration.
My wife, like Owens, experienced the pain of a long goodbye to a mother whose mind and spirit were crippled by dementia. Yet there were moments of connection as well, and blessed laughter. Whether as caregiver or cared-for or both, more and more of us will take our places in the story Owens tells: unsparing, yet resting on the hope we share in Christ. We'll be giving copies of Owens's book to friends. (Portions first appeared in CT and Books & Culture.)
Portions of Caring for Mother that appeared in Christianity Today and Books & Culture include:
Thanksgiving at Fair Acres | A meal with my mother and other nursing-home residents opened a small crack in their stony detachment, and gave a brief glimpse of the kingdom of heaven. (November 13, 2000)
What Shall We Do With Mother? | Poll your friends over fifty. Most of them are already wrestling with this question. (Books & Culture, July 1, 1999)
Grave Matters | I shouldn't have let my parents talk to those funeral salesmen unchaperoned. (March 1, 1999)