Josh’s book is finally here! Well, the copies he ordered are on the way to our house and it’s available on Amazon.com. Here’s what the publisher, Wipf and Stock, has to say about it:As an explicitly christological witness, martyrdom offers a limited but vital description of the present within the various and unpredictable arenas of living, suffering, and dying. That is to say, martyrdom is not the tragic conclusion of some fatal ideological conflict but a momentary truthful glimpse of present circumstances. Martyrdom reveals, clarifies, and illumines what we take for the real. Martyrs are therefore significant for the church today because they exhibit the sort of truthful living that refuses the claims of history and power without Christ; they show the sort of living and dying that returns forgiveness upon murder, and patience beyond domination. Meditating primarily on the second-century martyrdoms in Lyons and Vienne, France, Pilgrim Holiness offers a view of Christian martyrdom that challenges prevalent misunderstandings about what martyrs are doing in sacrificing their lives. Joshua J. Whitfield argues that martyrdom is a moment of truthful disclosure and thus a moment of forgiveness and peace—gifts for which we are in desperate need.
Way to go, Sweetie!!!



4 comments:
That is such an amazing accomplishment! Congratulations, Fr. Josh! I continue to be amazed and inspired by both of you.
I'm not sure if you have heard about the FBI list (http://spreadsheets.google.com/pub?key=ppHBvDAxQ8m6D9u0lLFvNIA&gid=0) that my sister (http://allthesereasons.blogspot.com) created but it is a great way to get in contact with others adopting from Ethiopia through Gladney.
You might already have plenty of resources for the adoption process, but I just came across this blog by another couple who recently adopted...
http://adoptethiopia.blogspot.com/
Hope you both are doing well!
Josh,
I just picked up the book, along with TO SHARE IN THE BODY. I'm working on an essay on Norman Morrision and Quang Duc, the main purpose of which is to give an account of the ethics and politics of martyrdom. Though I've not read it yet, skimming and reading the blurbs suggests that you've already done much of the work and that my intuitions are in sympathy with your account. This will figure prominently in the dissertation a few years from now.
Congrats on the baby and greetings from Princeton. I hope to hear from you as you are able.
Best,
DWL
dwoodardlehman@gmail.com
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