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The Pursuit of Safety - (Studies in Christian Doctrine and Scripture) by Jeremy Lundgren (Paperback)
About this item
Highlights
- In this constructive theological analysis of safety, theologian Jeremy Lundgren addresses the conceptual development of safety through premodern, early modern, and late modern settings and gives practical guidance on how to faithfully engage the pursuit of safety in the present day.
- Author(s): Jeremy Lundgren
- 312 Pages
- Religion + Beliefs, Christian Theology
- Series Name: Studies in Christian Doctrine and Scripture
Description
About the Book
In this constructive theological analysis of safety, theologian Jeremy Lundgren addresses the conceptual development of safety through premodern, early modern, and late modern settings and gives practical guidance on how to faithfully engage the pursuit of safety in the present day.
Book Synopsis
In this constructive theological analysis of safety, theologian Jeremy Lundgren addresses the conceptual development of safety through premodern, early modern, and late modern settings and gives practical guidance on how to faithfully engage the pursuit of safety in the present day.
Review Quotes
"Jeremy Lundgren has produced the right kind of theology book: insightful theory with an eye toward helping the life of the church. The Pursuit of Safety has uncomfortably confronted how I might be idolizing safety due to a misguided doctrine of creation, lopsided theological anthropology, or distorted view of God. Take a risk and read this book!"
"Jeremy Lundgren's remarkably rich theology of safety offers Christians today a gateway into true Christian freedom. It is often hard to decide whether the modern world is safer than ever before or saturated with frightening risks earlier generations could never have imagined. Helpfully locating our experiences by tracing their historical genesis, Lundgren shows us how we came to be constantly bombarded by safety messages and risk warnings. What might it look like to live with confidence in Christ in such a cultural context? Christians living in developed nations today cannot afford to ignore the ways in which safety has become the idol of our time. Lundgren's work offers a long-overdue account of what true Christian freedom looks like in a world where we are constantly told that we are at risk."
"Modern society is littered with 'signposts of safety.' From delivery packages and children's toys to roadways and hallways, there are inevitably warning signs looming nearby designed to keep us 'safe.' In this volume, Lundgren provides the reader with both apt descriptions of our supposedly ordered modern lives and biblically rich, theologically deep instructions on wisely navigating them as disciples of Jesus. May we all attend to the signpost of the cross-the best indicator of true safety-and find wholeness, soundness, and health (i.e., safety) in Jesus."
"Socrates noted that it's impossible to avoid all risk, even in an ideal city, and especially in raising children. Our loss of such ancient wisdom has left us fearful, obsessed with safety, and cut off from the benefits that responsible risk can bring. In this deeply researched and expertly written book, Lundgren tells the story of this loss and outlines a courageous and hopeful theology of safety for all who confess themselves to be upheld by the fatherly hand of God."
"This is the book I didn't know I needed about a topic that proves to be immensely practical and applicable at the end of a global pandemic. It goes below the surface to help Christians seeking to figure out why people and governments reacted the way they did during those disorienting days. It's astonishing how easily Dr. Lundgren moves from a historical understanding of the theology of safety, through a biblical survey of risk, to why it is beneficial for leaders in the church to grasp these ideas today."
"What difference does the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ as well as Christians' conformation to this pattern of life play in our pursuit of safety? We often order our lives around the desire to maintain a sense of security, loading it with moral weight. In this book, Jeremy Lundgren deftly situates concepts of safety, risk, and harm within the redemptive narrative and the call to pursue a life ordered to the cross. Paying careful attention to the text of Holy Writ and offering numerous helpful conceptual distinctions along the way, this book is a theological masterclass well worth reading."