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Book Review: Reformed Sacramentality

Book Review: Reformed Sacramentality ATR/102.1 146 Anglican Theological Review In 2019, with the next election right around the corner, it is time for evangelicals to listen to Haynes, to recognize the deep-seated corruption of Donald Trump (as Haynes puts it, “Honestly, Hitler was better at pretending to be a Christian,” p. 145), and seize the next Bonhoeffer Moment by not al- lowing him a second term in office. If God did not hold us guiltless the first time, he definitely will not the second time. Javier A. Garcia George Fox University Newberg, Oregon Reformed Sacramentality. By Graham R. Hughes. Edited and intro- duced by Steffen Lösel. Foreword by Gordon W. Lathrop. Col- legeville, MN: Liturgical Press, 2017. li + 212. $34.95 (pb). Graham R. Hughes, who died in 2015, was a Reformed liturgical theo- logian in Australia known primarily for Worship as Meaning: A Liturgical Theology for Late Modernity (reviewed in ATR Spring 2005). In Reformed Sacramentality, Hughes builds on the concerns of the earlier book, focusing here on the vulnerability of worship in the Reformed tradition to certain hazards of modernity. The Reformed churches, he says, long suspicious of “condensed sacramentality”—particular rites, places, things we call “sacra- mental” in which God is http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Anglican Theological Review SAGE

Book Review: Reformed Sacramentality

Anglican Theological Review , Volume 102 (1): 1 – Aug 25, 2021

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Publisher
SAGE
Copyright
© 2020 Anglican Theological Review Corporation
ISSN
0003-3286
eISSN
2163-6214
DOI
10.1177/000332862010200123
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

ATR/102.1 146 Anglican Theological Review In 2019, with the next election right around the corner, it is time for evangelicals to listen to Haynes, to recognize the deep-seated corruption of Donald Trump (as Haynes puts it, “Honestly, Hitler was better at pretending to be a Christian,” p. 145), and seize the next Bonhoeffer Moment by not al- lowing him a second term in office. If God did not hold us guiltless the first time, he definitely will not the second time. Javier A. Garcia George Fox University Newberg, Oregon Reformed Sacramentality. By Graham R. Hughes. Edited and intro- duced by Steffen Lösel. Foreword by Gordon W. Lathrop. Col- legeville, MN: Liturgical Press, 2017. li + 212. $34.95 (pb). Graham R. Hughes, who died in 2015, was a Reformed liturgical theo- logian in Australia known primarily for Worship as Meaning: A Liturgical Theology for Late Modernity (reviewed in ATR Spring 2005). In Reformed Sacramentality, Hughes builds on the concerns of the earlier book, focusing here on the vulnerability of worship in the Reformed tradition to certain hazards of modernity. The Reformed churches, he says, long suspicious of “condensed sacramentality”—particular rites, places, things we call “sacra- mental” in which God is

Journal

Anglican Theological ReviewSAGE

Published: Aug 25, 2021

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