In Galatians, we meet Paul at his most passionate, most personal, and
his most political. For him, the heart of the Gospel is:
The Son of God who loved me and gave himself for me.
But for some of his colleagues, faith in Christ is not enough. They want
something that will give more of a sense
of achievement; they yearn for the more exclusive insignia of the Jewish
law. Senior church leaders are confused and compromised. Paul faces this
crisis with two further essentials of the Gospel, our unity in Christ
and our freedom in Christ. The book shows how, in our own day, the same
testing of faith happens, with issues of race, gender, poverty,
equality, in a culture which values the achievements of some while
treating others with disdain.
Written geographically from a Welsh context, this is the Archbishop of
Wales’s recommended Lent book for 2016; but it speaks to the wider
motivations of our present culture. For the author, Galatians was a
primary weapon in the theological struggle against the ideology of
apartheid in South Africa; it has a similar relevance for today’s
Britain and beyond.
I am
delighted to commend this as my Lent book for 2016, knowing full well
that it is a book that will repay pondering at any time.
†Barry Cambrensis
Bishop John Dudley Davies
(MA 1963, Trinity College, Cambridge), formerly Church of England Bishop
of Shrewsbury, 1987-94, is Honorary Assistant Bishop of St. Asaph,
Church in Wales. He was mission priest and university chaplain in South
Africa 1956-70 and Principal of the College of the Ascension, Selly Oak,
Birmingham 1976-82. His many publications include
Good News in Galatians,
Creed and Conflict,
The Faith Abroad,
World on Loan,
The Crisis of the Cross
and
God at Work.
In the present series he is a contributor to:
Stilling the Storm
2011,
Acts in Practice
2012 and
Leviticus in Practice
2014. He is married to Shirley, and they have 3 children, 5
grandchildren and 2 great-grandchildren.