
Christian History Home > 2000 > History for History-Phobes

History for History-Phobes
For anyone who gets a headache just thinking about the church's past, Christian History Made Easy may be the cure.
Reviewed by Elesha Coffman | posted 8/08/2008 12:33PM
 1 of 1

History for History-Phobes
By Elesha Coffman, associate editor of CHRISTIAN HISTORY
Hard as this is to believe, some people just do not like history. You may have experienced
it yourself: A friend from church, or even your own 13-year-old daughter, spies
a copy of Christian History on your coffee table and either ignores it
completely or—horror of horrors—asks, "Why do you read that boring stuff?"
Shocking, yes, but the all-too-common response from anyone inoculated against
good history by years of bad social studies classes.
Timothy Paul Jones, a pastor
and author with several educational titles to his name, has attempted to rectify
this situation with Christian History Made Easy (Rose Publishing, 1999).
In 12 short chapters he traces church history from AD 64 to the present, highlighting
significant people, events, and ideas in a primarily narrative (and frequently
humorous) style. His favorite history book is Dave Barry Slept Here,
if that helps you get a handle on the tone.
While Jones's book is entertaining,
its primary objective is to educate history-phobes and neophytes. The cover
promises "13 Weeks to a Better Understanding of Church History" (12 chapters
plus an introductory session), and the book contains many familiar elements
of Sunday-school curriculum: a leader's guide, puzzles and worksheets, discussion
questions, and review activities. Youth Sunday school or home school is probably
the book's best usage, but the material could be adapted for an adult class
or for very structured individual study.
On the one hand, the book's
quick pace is one of its main strengths. For church history novices, one page
on Nikolaus Zinzendorf is likely sufficient, and reading his story in a context
including Jonathan Edwards, John Wesley, and George Whitfield fights the habit
of picturing historical figures as separate exhibits in a vast museum. On the
other hand, sweeping overviews tend to display a sometimes disturbing lack of
nuance, and this one is no exception.
Because we just finished
editing our forthcoming issue on Augustine (you subscribers should receive your
copy in about three weeks), I read Jones' page on Augustine with particular
interest. I was a little disappointed. Augustine is called the "finest early
medieval theologian," even though he's considered an early church figure, and
he's also called an "overseer" rather than a "bishop"—a choice I hope was made
as an attempt at clarity instead of as a quiet attack on churches that use the
title (Jones's background, incidentally, is Baptist). An off-hand comment about
Ambrose's Alexandrian approach to preaching being "flawed" also threw me; this
judgment comes out of nowhere, adds nothing to my understanding of Ambrose or
Augustine, and reads as a high-handed criticism of something the author has
made scant effort to explain.
There's a bit too much
editorializing and spiritualizing throughout the book for my taste, but, that
said, it's generally quite good. The Augustine section, for example, gives a
lively account of his conversion, shows how his doctrine of original sin arose
in response to Paul and Pelagius, and summarizes his main argument in City
of God. Not bad for nine paragraphs.
* To find out more about
the book and some companion curriculum resources, see http://chmadeeasy.homepage.com
Elesha can be reached at
cheditor@ChristianityToday.com.
Copyright © 2000 by the author or Christianity Today International/Christian History magazine. Click here for reprint information on Christian History.
Browse More ChristianHistory.net Home | Browse by Topic | Browse by Period | The Past in the Present | Books & Resources
|