Book Reviewed
by Bill Coates,
Gainesville, GA

The Disturbing Galilean
By Malcolm Tolbert
Smyth & Helwys, 2009.

The greatest faith of all is the faith  we have even when the hoped for and prayed-for miracle does not  occur.” This is vintage Tolbert. In this  case the reference is to Jesus’ own faith  as he cried out in utter loneliness from  the cross, and Tolbert is doing what  he does best: connecting us with the  biblical text. This is what he does for  one hundred twenty-four pages in  The Disturbing Galilean, a collection  of essays about Jesus. Ever the master  teacher, and sometimes the provocateur, Tolbert helps us see Jesus beneath  all the layers of cultural and ecclesiastical condition. These essays are his  own personal and passionate reactions  to twenty-three vignettes about Jesus  selected from the four Gospels and covering a wide variety of topics and questions we often find ourselves discussing.

What about the unforgivable sin?  Faith healing? Marriage and divorce?  Whose side is God on? What about  those texts and predictions regarding  the second coming? Tolbert, never one  to shy away from a hard subject or a  theological problem, wades thoughtfully and confidently into these matters  and causes the reader to ask himself,  “Why wasn’t this already apparent to  me?” This is Malcolm Tolbert’s genius,  to create a tapestry of rationality and  faith, of common sense about life and  uncommon trust in the inspiration of  Scripture.

This is Tolbert’s ninth book, and  the obvious fact in this one, as in the  previous works, is that he writes as  both scholar and pastor. As I read each  essay in this collection, I heard the  voice of Tolbert, my Professor of New  Testament Interpretation when I was a  student at Southeastern Seminary thirty  years ago. I could also hear Tolbert, the  pastor who preceded me at First Baptist  Church, Gainesville, Georgia, even  before that. Each essay on a specific  teaching or episode on the life of Jesus  reveals the Greek academician who  masterfully relates Jesus’ words to the  issues believers engage here and now. At  eighty-five, Tolbert has done it again.  Read this book for enlightenment and  enjoyment, but prepare to be disturbed  and challenged by the Galilean most  insightfully revealed in its pages.   

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