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The Triumph of Life: A Narrative Theology of Judaism

Irving Greenberg. Jewish Publication Society, $34.95 trade paper (400p) ISBN 978-0-827615-21-2

Judaism may be based in the notion of a divine-human partnership, but people must now take the lead in forging a more perfect world, according to this ambitious treatise from rabbi Greenberg (For the Sake of Heaven and Earth). Anchoring his argument in the “classic Judaic model of the covenant,” Greenberg tracks the partnership between God and the Jewish people from the biblical era, when God communicated through “heavenly revelation and prophetic messages,” to the rabbinic period, when God increased humans’ responsibility for shaping the world. In the current era of “lay Judaism,” Greenberg writes, God has become “totally hidden in natural laws and material processes,” shifting the responsibility for creating a world where “all human beings will be treated with dignity, equality, and respect” almost fully to people. For Greenberg, that transfer explains such horrific events as the Holocaust, where “growing human power” was harnessed for ill rather than good. Nonetheless, he delivers an optimistic message that humanity can “reach for greatness” through such initiatives as reforming workplaces with fair labor conditions and curtailing environmentally destructive farming practices. Greenberg’s reminder to “start where you are” in creating a freer, more just society is wise, even if his vision for an ideal world sometimes seems out of reach. Readers will be inspired. (Aug.)

Reviewed on 05/24/2024 | Details & Permalink

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The Light Work: Reclaim Your Feminine Power, Live Your Cosmic Truth, Illuminate the World

Jessica Zweig. St. Martin’s Essentials, $30 (272p) ISBN 978-1-250-33296-7

Entrepreneur Zweig (Net Worth by Simply Being Yourself) aims in this eccentric and meandering guide to help readers access their inner “Light” to “embody authenticity... and empowerment.” During a 2022 trip to Egypt, the author visited the temple of Dendera, where the Seven Sisters of the Pleiades, “extraterrestrial beings that come from the Pleiades constellation,” instructed her to activate “the Light that belongs to you” and help other women do the same to return the planet “to its natural state.” Drawing from transcribed Pleiadan “transmissions,” she encourages readers to unlock their “Inner Light” through ecstatic dancing, which involves moving the body “with physical liberation and joy,” and “primal growling” (a “somatic practice that connects you to sacred rage”), and their “Outer Light” by investing in relationships and “owning our worthiness.” Despite the author’s good intentions in promoting physical and spiritual empowerment, her advice is crowded out by long-winded retellings of her otherwordly epiphanies, and the awkwardly intimate tone distracts (“How incredible it is to know that you are a member of the Family of Light, here to recall your DNA and live in the path of a Lightworker.... Okayyyy, co-creator of the New Earth, I see you!”). Only the most spiritually adventurous will want to take a look. (Aug.)

Reviewed on 05/24/2024 | Details & Permalink

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It Wasn’t Roaring, It Was Weeping: Interpreting the Language of Our Fathers Without Repeating Their Stories

Lisa-Jo Baker. Convergent, $27 (272p) ISBN 978-0-525-65286-1

Baker (Never Unfriended) sets her painful family history against the backdrop of apartheid in this powerful memoir. Anchoring the narrative in her father’s South African upbringing, she describes how he grew up on a sheep farm in Karoo, where he witnessed racist family members abusing Black farmhands. After he became a doctor, his faith led him to treat Black patients despite a lack of funding and government pressures. Yet he frequently lashed out at his children, and after Baker’s mother died of cancer, she was left at the mercy of his temper, his tempestuous second marriage, and her violent stepbrother. Baker eventually escaped to the U.S., where she attended college and law school, and settled in Washington, D.C.—where the city’s racial stratification opened her eyes to the “willful ignorance” that had insulated her from the struggles of Black South Africans: “[I was] a daughter of White privilege and teenage pain who ran away before she ever clearly saw the world beyond her bedroom window.” Tracing the “apartheid roots” of her father’s family, she concludes by expressing hope for renewal that begins with acknowledging the difficult truths of the past and “the parts of history that put us on the wrong side of the equation.” Poignant and searching, this leaves a mark. (May)

Reviewed on 05/24/2024 | Details & Permalink

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Prophet of Reason: Science, Religion and the Origins of the Modern Middle East

Peter Hill. OneWorld Academic, $30 mass market (368p) ISBN 978-0-86154-736-4

Hill (Utopia and Civilisation in the Arab Nahda), an assistant professor of Middle Eastern Studies at Northumbria University, centers this accomplished study of religious change in 19th-century Syria on diplomat Mikha’il Mishaqa (1800–1888), who served as vice-consul for the United States in Damascus from 1859 to 1870. As Hill points out, Mishaqa lived through nearly a century of upheaval in Syria that included the Ottoman government’s efforts to “centralize and rationalize rule,” Egypt’s occupation, and the increased influence of Western powers. Against this backdrop, Mishaqa abandoned the Greek Catholicism into which he was born for Enlightenment-inspired skepticism at age 18, and converted to evangelical Protestantism at age 48, swayed by American missionaries and religious texts that used “rationalist” approaches—arguing, for example, that certain biblical prophecies had come to pass by citing archaeological evidence. Hill places Mishaqa’s faith journey in the context of a “new religiosity” emerging in Syria that was marked by a burgeoning “public sphere” of newspapers and periodicals in which “controvers[ies] between religious and intellectual standpoints” were discussed, as well as the growing acceptance of faith as a matter of individual choice. Rigorous research buttresses the portrayals of Syria’s sociopolitical climate and Mishaqa’s intellectual life, and Hill includes illuminating excerpts from Mishaqa’s own religious tracts and the texts he was influenced by. Historians of the Middle East have plenty to gain from this. (June)

Reviewed on 05/24/2024 | Details & Permalink

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Budding Lotus in the West: Buddhism from an Immigrant’s Feminist Perspective

Nhi Yến Đỗ Trần. Broadleaf, $25.99 (240p) ISBN 978-1-5064-9514-9

The male-centric nature of modern Buddhism—including the exclusion of women from sanghas and central texts—contradicts the Buddha’s core belief that the genders are spiritually equal, according to this fiery if scattered debut. Combing through Early Buddhist Texts (dating approximately from the first- to fourth-centuries BCE) Trần, cofounder of Cherry Blossom Sangha, a mindfulness community, paints a portrait of a Buddha who believed enlightenment was achievable for men and women. Subsequent male “redactors and authors”reinterpreted the Buddha’s teachings, claiming that only men could reach enlightenment, and requiring nuns to prostrate themselves before newly ordained monks.The author calls on Buddhist institutions, particularly in the Mahāyāna tradition—the most widespread school of Buddhism—to “take a good, hard look” at their beliefs and practices, and work to root out sexist laws and texts. While the author attempts to cover too much ground (she spends several chapters imagining what the Buddha might have to say about gun rights and abortion, for instance), her perceptive textual criticism and willingness to call out bias are refreshing. It’s a valuable contribution to the literature on Buddhism. (Sept.)

Reviewed on 05/17/2024 | Details & Permalink

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30 Rights of Muslim Women: A Trusted Guide

Daisy Khan. Monkfish, $29.99 (318p) ISBN 978-1-95897-233-5

Khan (The Spiritual Journey of a Muslim Woman), founder of the Women’s Islamic Initiative in Spirituality and Equality, an organization dedicated to empowering female Muslim leaders, establishes Muslim women’s religious and moral equality as the foundation for this comprehensive overview. Drawing on the Quran, textual commentaries, and historical examples of Muslim women ranging from the Queen of Sheba to lesser-known Chinese imams, Khan covers free expression (the Quran requires all Muslims to “speak openly about the truth and denounce injustice,” and the prophet Muhammad instructed women to debate with leaders to help build a strong society) and abortion (most Quranic interpretations agree that the practice is permitted to ensure the mother’s health), as well as property ownership, secular education, political leadership, and hygiene. While the personal anecdotes Khan weaves into the account sometimes feel out of place (illustrating how the Quran permits women to own and acquire property, she explains that her own portfolio of rental properties has allowed her to “generate consistent monthly cash flow”), Khan’s methodical textual analysis buttresses her case that Muslim women’s religious equality is enshrined in the Quran, which has been misinterpreted by leaders of oppressive societies to subjugate women. This solid theological guide is worth a look. (May)

Reviewed on 05/17/2024 | Details & Permalink

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The End of the World According to Jesus of Nazareth

Jeff Kinley. Harvest Prophecy, $17.99 trade paper (272p) ISBN 978-0-7369-8868-1

Prophecy Pros Podcast host Kinley (God’s Grand Finale) unpacks in this strident treatise the “prophetic plan for the end of days” that Jesus is said to have laid out on the Mount of Olives before his crucifixion. Dissecting the biblical text, Kinley covers, among other topics, the chaos prophesied to unfold during the “tribulation,” including Jerusalem’s destruction and an influx of “false prophets” seeking to “captivate the minds and hearts of a panic-stricken populace.” Elsewhere, Kinley characterizes the second coming of Christ as the “most-celebrated, game-changing touchdown in all history,” and contemplates the timing of the end days, describing the war in Ukraine and other ongoing conflicts as the “Braxton-Hicks contractions” rather than the “birth pangs” preceding the end of the world. Unfortunately, tirades against the “demonically driven transgender and drag queen movements of the LGBTQ+ crowd” take things offtrack, as does Kinley’s oddly flippant tone—Jerusalem’s destruction is discussed in a section titled “It’s All Gonna Burn.” All but Kinley’s most devoted fans should skip this. (July)

Reviewed on 05/10/2024 | Details & Permalink

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Circle of Hope: A Reckoning with Love, Power, and Justice in an American Church

Eliza Griswold. Farrar, Straus and Giroux, $30 (352p) ISBN 978-0-374-60168-3

Pulitzer winner Griswold (Amity and Prosperity) delivers a riveting chronicle of the fracturing of a progressive Christian church during a period of social and political turmoil. In 1996, “hippie church planters” Rod and Gwen White founded the Circle of Hope church in Philadelphia as an alternative to “hypocrisy, GOP politics, and rote Bible learning.” By the 2010s, they’d expanded into four congregations in Pennsylvania and New Jersey. But fissures that developed after the Whites stepped back from day-to-day operations in the 2010s deepened in 2020 as the church’s four pastors grappled with Covid lockdown policies; the disconnect between the church’s antiracism efforts and its struggles to interrogate its own biases; and questions over whether social justice efforts should be linked to political activism. Focusing on each of the four pastors in turn, Griswold artfully teases out the challenges that eventually led to the church’s closure at the end of 2023, including the gap between its utopian vision and its ability to enact it and growing tensions with the Whites, who wanted to keep the institution largely out of politics. It’s a fascinating inquest into the death of a church that doubles as a compassionate case study on the insufficiency of good intentions. (Aug.)

Reviewed on 05/10/2024 | Details & Permalink

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Pinnacle: The Lost Paradise of Rasta

Bill Howell, with Hélène Lee. Akashic, $22.95 (200p) ISBN 978-1-63614-172-5

Howell debuts with an erratic portrait of his father, Rasta movement founder Leonard Percival Howell (1898–1981), and the Rastafarian community he led near Kingston, Jamaica, from 1940 until it was disbanded in the late ’50s. Howell frames his childhood in the Pinnacle compound as idyllic, and the residents there as good citizens, claiming that the friction between Howell’s followers and other Jamaicans stemmed largely from harassment by colonial authorities who sought to undercut Howell’s influence. Interwoven with the story of the commune is valuable background on Rastafarianism’s origins in Marcus Garvey’s movement for African independence, from which it broke in the early 1930s when Howell designated Ethiopian emperor Haile Selassie I as “the Living God.” Unfortunately, the author’s alternately defensive and worshipful attitude toward his father yields some questionable conclusions, as when Howell writes of his father’s many romantic relationships, “one could argue Dada loved women too much to respect them, but he was a man of his times.... He was a Victorian gentleman and a lion all in one.” This falls short. (Aug.)

Reviewed on 05/03/2024 | Details & Permalink

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A Mission Without Borders: Why a Father and Son Risked It All for the People of Ukraine

Chad Robichaux with Craig Borlase. Thomas Nelson, $29.99 (224p) ISBN 978-1-4002-4775-2

Former marine Robichaux (Fight for Us) delivers an uneven account of his aid efforts in Ukraine. Following Russia’s 2022 invasion, Robichaux and his son Hunter headed to Ukraine with Save Our Allies, an organization that aids Americans and allies in war-torn countries. The conflict was “like nothing I’d ever experienced before,” Robichaux writes, describing how he dodged Russian attacks, procured communications supplies, and saw evidence of war crimes, “from mass graves filled with the bodies of women and children to... the use of chemical weapons on civilians.” The author’s harrowing recollections of these atrocities and how he held onto his faith in the face of them are the most resonant parts of the book (“Pain and even death are not permanent,” he writes. “Bad things do happen to good people.... But it’s not the end of the story”). Unfortunately, the impact is undercut by the author’s digressions into such political issues as America’s withdrawal from Afghanistan, and by his naive policy suggestions, as when he asserts that “the president of the United States does have the power and ability to swiftly end this war” by demanding a ceasefire and leading NATO humanitarian forces into Ukraine. Despite some moving moments, this misses the mark. (Aug.)

Reviewed on 05/03/2024 | Details & Permalink

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