Many Christians know this Bible-verse by heart: "[B]e ready to give an
answer to every man that asketh you [for] a reason [for] the hope that
is in you" (I Peter 3:15). As the title of this anthology suggests, this
book is an effort to illuminate ("give an answer to") how various
prominent Christians (from Augustine and Luther to Bonhoeffer and C.S.
Lewis) found Christian hope in the face of vexing experiences and
emotions: Anger, Obsession, Despair, Anxiety, Disappointment and Pain.
Does this book succeed in its effort? Well, it depends on what you're looking for. In most of the essays in The Consolations of Theology
I found a lot more (abstract) theology than (practical) consolation.
Readers who are facing real-life challenges, and looking for real-life
solace and consolation, will find most of this anthology's essays too
abstract to fit the bill. (Then again, readers who are interested in
Christian theological conceptualizations of Anger, Obsession, Despair,
etc., and the issue of how these human experiences fit into a Christian
world-view, will find this book's essays to be well-researched,
well-written and thought-provoking.)
The shining exception to the
book's abstract academic tone is Brian S. Rosner's chapter, "Bonhoeffer
on Disappointment" (pages 107-129). Rosner sticks close to the details
of Dietrich Bonhoeffer's pain in the midst of Nazi persecution. Rosner
offers a list of specific coping-attitudes Bonhoeffer possessed (e.g.,
"4. Don't Pretend or Minimize the Failure--Look Disappointment in the
Face" (pages 120-121)). Rosner draws from Bonhoeffer's letters and diary
to illustrate how he employed these attitudes in his daily life in a
Nazi prison. And Rosner highlights how Bonhoeffer's Christian faith
played a role in his coping with tribulation (e.g., the solace
Bonhoeffer finds in meditating on Ecclesiastes 3:15: "I suspect these
words mean that nothing that is past is lost..., that God gathers up
again...our past....So when we are seized by a longing for the past...we
may be sure that it is only one of the many 'hours' that God is always
holding ready for us" (page 122)). Rosner's essay, both sensitive in
tone and learned in scope, was exactly the kind of essay I was expecting
when I picked up this book. Robert Banks' essay, "C.S. Lewis on Pain"
(pages 131-157) is similar in spirit to Rosner's essay.
So I
think this book contains a bit of something for everyone. Those reading
in a scholarly spirit will find theology; those reading in a sensitive
spirit will find a little consolation. The book also contains ample
reading-lists to follow up on any of the topics.
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show/1786196045