This was the second book that we received this week, not so much because it fit the theme as because it contains chapters and by three of our speakers and two of the other attendees.
The book on the whole is excellent, and the first thing I would put into the hands of someone who wishes to learn about true manliness.
Like all anthology style books, there's a great diversity in the quality of the contributions. So I have organized my review not according to the sequential order of the book but by grouping the contributions according to their level of helpfulness.
This first grouping are what I would call superlative contributions. Any one of them would have made the book worthwhile. The fact that there are eight of them ought to strongly commend the book to you. For the sake of brevity, the less helpful a contribution, the more I will say about why. So do not let that mislead you into thinking that my view of the book is negative at all. So I will say nothing more about these contributions than for you to take up and read:
- The Redeemed Man Knowing His God (Conrad Mbewe)
- The Redeemed Man Growing in Grace (Sinclair Ferguson)
- The Redeemed Man Honoring His Parents (Terry Johnson)
- The Redeemed Man Loving His Wife (Joel Beeke)
- The Redeemed Man Witnessing to Unbelievers (David Strain)
- The Redeemed Man Viewing Work Rightly (Richard Phillips)
- The Redeemed Man Persevering in His Faith (Geoff Thomas)
- The Redeemed Man Preparing for His Death (Ian Hamilton)
- The Redeemed Man Repenting and Believing (Beeke and Smalley)
- The Redeemed Man Committed to God's Word (Paul Smalley)
- The Redeemed Man Leading His Family (Jason Helopoulos)
- The Redeemed Man Growing in Family Worship (Joel Beeke)
- The Redeemed Man Serving in His Church (Kevin De Young). This would have been in the superlative category, but in my opinion, it is missing some important detail in application. Also, the section on magnanimity doesn't naturally belong to this subject, even though I think it is an important contribution on the idea of ambition (which was not well defined in other chapters, so that approving of it without defining it was potentially harmful without this contribution).
- The Redeemed Man Sustaining His Health (Joseph Pipa). My only note would be that, in the section on medical care, to heed his caution that non-traditional types of care would be supplemental only, and guided by the counsel and evaluation of your M.D. Good internal medicine doctors are hard to find. But they are increasingly holistic, and availing yourself of their understanding that covers from biochemistry, to microbiology, to all of the interconnecting systems of the body, may well spare you for much that passes itself off as wisdom but lacks genuine biological knowledge and is often based in dangerously pseudobiblical philosophy and spirituality.
- The Redeemed Man Discipling His Children (Rick Phillips). Just not specific or detailed enough.
- The Redeemed Man Cultivating Friendships (Michael Haykin). Misses a wealth of biblical material that could have more strongly grounded the chapter and more richly supplied application.
- The Redeemed Man Laboring at His Work (Daniel Doriani). Covers the same ground as the chapter that immediately precedes it, but not as well. Also commends ambition without carefully defining it, which would have been more dangerous without the chapter that immediately follows this one.
- The Redeemed Man Enjoying His Recreations (Gerard Hemmings). Doesn't at all cover a biblical theology of mornings and evenings, which is one of the most essential components of understanding and employing recreation in our lives, particularly in our finding God Himself to be recreational in the truest sense of that word. A man who lays hold of this will find himself much recreated in the ordinary course of life.
- The Redeemed Man Living in Singleness (Curt Daniel). Very helpful for sympathizing with the lonely, and includes good counsel for what to do with that loneliness. Comes close to a good doctrine of singleness, and employing that condition unto God's glory, but uses the unfortunate language of the gift of singleness. To his credit, he even defines it as something that may be temporary, which comes close to the truth: if you are single, then you presently have the gift of singleness, meaning that you are to employ it for the glory of God in the service of His church. However, women under 60, and all men, should be seeking to marry, as implied by Genesis 2 and 1Timothy 5 and really the whole of the biblical witness about marriage. Misuses the eunuch text in Matthew 19, whose context is choosing celibacy rather than adulterous remarriage. Does not do enough to emphasize that the epidemic of singleness is due to the rise of many different forms of sinfulness, together with poor theology of marriage in the churches. For dealing with this subject well, it would be helpful to say something about how contemporarily romanticized notions of attraction and compatibility artificially and harmfully narrow the proportion of potential matches among the godly.
- The Redeemed Man Governing as a Citizen (David Innes). Much to be commended, but missing an important emphasis upon Christ's reign already upon the earth, even from His seat on the throne of heaven. The chapter ends up too dependent upon the hypothetical reign of the first Adam, if he had kept the Covenant of Works. The chapter does a good job of arguing that only a Christian properly governs himself, and that for the governing of others, a Christian is best suited, which ought to motivate him to do so out of love for his neighbor. But after reasoning that a redeemed man should, the chapter is too light on details of how a redeemed man could.
- The Redeemed Man Entering Retirement (Derek Thomas). Asserts that retirement is inevitable, then acknowledges that it is unbiblical. Much more helpful when giving counsel to retirees, which counsel consists largely of advising them not to be retired. On the whole, a helpful exhortation to serve God as well as possible for as long as possible. Might have been helpful to present Ecclesiastes 12 not as the arrival of retirement, but the beginning of the intrusion of death into the life of the redeemed man. After reading this chapter, my thought was that if I was counseling, someone who is coming into a season of no longer being able to do what had been his primary vocation for decades, I would probably recommend following chapter 13 all over again (The Redeemed Man Viewing Work Rightly).

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