Cross Focused Reviews
Promoting Cross-Centered Books
Like what you see?
Sign up for more Christian book news and reviews!
                                         
  • Home
  • About
  • Extras
    • Blogger Book Review Programs
    • Listing of Christian Publishers on Twitter
    • Listing of Christian Publisher Blogs
    • Other Christian Book Review Sites
  • Contact
  • Reviews
  • Meet the Reviewers

Lost in Transmission? by Nicholas Perrin

Posted by Shaun Tabatt on
November 20th, 2009
Lost in Transmission? by Nicholas Perrin

Book Details:

  • Author: Nicholas Perrin
  • Category: Textual Criticism
  • Publisher: Thomas Nelson (2008)
  • Binding: Paperback
  • Page count: 224
  • ISBN#: 9780849929427

Recommendation:

  • Review Date: 11/20/09 by Shaun Tabatt
  • Rating: Highly recommended

Review:
One can hardly watch or read the news without hearing about the latest research on the Gnostic gospels of Thomas or Judas and how Christianity as we know it will be shaken to its very core. It is a very unique time we live in, where the Gnostic gospels and New Testament textual criticism have gained such prominence in the popular media. The work of Bart Ehrman and others has ignited a heightened interest on these topics within the public square. This book engages and examines certain claims made by Ehrman in his widely popular book, Misquoting Jesus (New York: HarperOne, 2007).

Based on the subject matter alone, you might expect this book to be highly technical, stuffy, and boring. It is not any of these things. The audience the author has in mind for this work is the uninformed non-Christian and the church. As such, it is written in a manner that makes it very accessible to the reader who has a limited background on this subject matter. The themes of the chapters are as follows:

  1. Lost in Transmission?
  2. Did Jesus Live?
  3. History, Faith, and Certitude
  4. Lord of the Ring
  5. Jesus the Jew
  6. Can You Hear Me Now?
  7. The Evangelist’s Hand
  8. Gospel Truth or Gospel Truths?
  9. Mistaking Matters
  10. Misleading Pens
  11. Translation Wars

With the intended audience in mind, the catchy, yet somewhat cliché chapter titles seem to be an attempt to keep a light-hearted feel within subject matter that is often anything but. Each chapter of the book has a specific three-part structure. First, there is a short excerpt from Ehrman’s book Misquoting Jesus. Second, there is a related, personal story from the author. Third, the topic of the chapter is engaged and examined. Throughout the first eight chapters, Perrin engages Ehrman’s points in an indirect manner. This trend changes in the final three chapters as Perrin’s refutations become more passionate and direct. My conjecture is that this change can be attributed to the subject matter in chapters nine through eleven more closely aligning to Perrin’s areas of expertise and personal interest.

All things considered, I found this to be an enjoyable book. It is a quick read at a mere 224 pages. Perrin does a good job of keeping the subject matter at the level of his intended audience. This work is by no means exhaustive nor is it overly technical. In light of this, it would make a great introduction for the layperson with little to no exposure to modern Jesus scholarship and New Testament textual criticism. The other real value in this book is found in the author’s personal stories. I appreciated the honesty with which Perrin shared the many challenges and struggles he experienced on his journey to faith in Jesus Christ. Each reader will be able to find certain points of commonality between Perrin’s faith journey and their own. As the reader sees him or herself in the author’s story, their experience of reading this book will hopefully be more personal, meaningful, and ultimately beneficial both intellectually and spiritually.

Author Info:
Nicholas Perrin is Assistant Professor of New Testament at Wheaton College in Wheaton, IL. His areas of research include the Gospel of Thomas, Jesus’ identity as the temple, Paul and Jewish self-definition, and the Gospels. Two of his more recent publications are Thomas: The Other Gospel (London, SPCK; Louisville, KY: Westminster John Knox, 2007) and The Judas Gospel (Downers Grove: InterVarsity Press, 2006).

Disclaimer:
This book was provided by Thomas Nelson for review. The reviewer was under no obligation to offer a favorable review.

Additional Resources:

  • Book Excerpt: Available here
  • Other Book Reviews: Available here
  • Purchase Links: Westminster Bookstore, Christianbook.com, Amazon.com or direct from Thomas Nelson.
Categories : Book Reviews, Textual Criticism, Thomas Nelson
Tags : Bible, book review, canonization, Christian book, Christian book review, Christianity, Greek, intro, languages, lost gospel, Nicholas Perrin, NT, reception, review, textual criticism, Thomas Nelson, translations, transmission

Leave a Reply

Click here to cancel reply.

Sponsors

Find Good Books

Shop at Monergismbooks.com (& support my site) Shop at wtsbooks.com (& support my site)

Recent Posts

  • Free Fiction Friday at Bible Geek Gone Wild
  • Interview with Bill Foster at Bible Geek Gone Wild
  • Free Audiobook – A Tale of Three Kings: A Study in Brokenness by Gene Edwards
  • Book Review – A Life of Gospel Peace: A Biography of Jeremiah Burroughs by Phillip L. Simpson
  • Free Webcast Today (2/16) on The Dark Side Of Darwin with Author Dr. Jerry Bergman

Recent Comments

  • clickme on Special 72 Hour Sale on The Gospel Story Bible
  • clickme on Book Review: 365 Great Bible Stories by Carine Mackenzie
  • antivirus software on Enter The Constantine Codex Book Giveaway at Bible Geek Gone Wild
  • http://andcarinsurancequotes.com on Mail Call: The Soul of C.S. Lewis
  • AbuddyInhaday on Raven’s Ladder (The Auralia Thread series) by Jeffrey Overstreet

Categories

Archives

Partner Sites

  • Bible Geek Gone Wild
  • Books and Theology Podcast
  • Cross Focused Media
  • Fundamentally Reformed

Other Christian Book Reviewers

  • Andy Naselli
  • Beginning with Moses
  • Bible Geek Gone Wild
  • Books and Culture
  • Christian Book Notes
  • Credo Magazine
  • Discerning Reader
  • Englewood Review of Books
  • Eskypades
  • Fundamentally Reformed
  • Justin Taylor
  • Nine Marks Ministries – Books
  • One Book Per Week
  • Pastoral Musings
  • Rabbit Room
  • ReformedBooks.net
  • Rightly Dividing the Word of Truth
  • Seth McBee
  • Sharper Iron
  • The Book Blog
  • The Gospel Coalition Reviews
  • The Quest – Books
  • The Vessel Project
  • Trevin Wax
  • Tim Challies

Christian Publisher Blogs

  • One Mission Blog (Augsburg Fortress)
  • Relligent (Baker Books)
  • The Brazos Blog (Brazos Press)
  • Christian Focus BookNotes (Christian Focus Publications)
  • CPH Social Media NewsRoom (Concordia Publishing House)
  • Crossway Blog (Crossway Books)
  • David C. Cook Blog (David C. Cook Publishing)
  • EerdWord (Eerdmans Publishing)
  • Harvest House Blog (Harvest House Publishers)
  • Kregel Publications News (Kregel Publications)
  • Addenda & Errata (InterVarsity Press)
  • Behind the Books (InterVarsity Press)
  • Inside Pages (Moody Publishers)
  • River North Fiction (Moody Publishers)
  • NavPress Blog Network (NavPress)
  • P & R Publishing Blog (P & R Publishing)
  • Heritage BookTalk (Reformation Heritage Books)
  • Shepherd Press Blog (Shepherd Press)
  • Tyndale Blog (Tyndale House Publishers)
  • WaterBrook Multnomah News (WaterBrook Multnomah Press)
  • Engaging Church (Zondervan)
  • Koinonia (Zondervan Academic)
  • Zondervan Blog (Zondervan)

Meta

  • Log in
  • Entries RSS
  • Comments RSS
  • WordPress.org
Cross Focused Reviews
Copyright © 2012 All Rights Reserved
iThemes Builder by iThemes
Powered by WordPress