Book Reviews -- By: Anonymous

Journal: Journal of the Evangelical Theological Society
Volume: JETS 50:1 (Mar 2007)
Article: Book Reviews
Author: Anonymous


Book Reviews

God, Marriage, and Family: Rebuilding the Biblical Foundation. By Andreas J. Köstenberger (with David W. Jones). Wheaton: Crossway, 2005, 448 pp., $20.00 paper.

“For the first time in its history, Western civilization is confronted with the need to define the meaning of the terms ‘marriage’ and ‘family’”(p. 25). So states author Andreas J. Kstenberger, who, with the assistance of David W. Jones, has written God, Marriage, and Family: Rebuilding the Biblical Foundation. This sense of crisis and the need for definition sets the stage for this book and its central thesis—that the only way out of our present cultural confusion is a return to a biblical vision of marriage and family.

As Kstenberger observes, “What until now has been considered a ‘normal’ family, made up of a father, a mother, and a number of children, has in recent years increasingly begun to be viewed as one among several options, which can no longer claim to be the only or even superior form of ordering human relationships. The Judeo-Christian view of marriage and the family with its roots in the Hebrew Scriptures has to a certain extent been replaced with a set of values that prizes human rights, self-fulfillment, and pragmatic utility on an individual and societal level. It can rightly be said that marriage and the family are institutions under seize in our world today, and that with marriage and the family, our very civilization is in crisis” (p. 25).

In one sense, the statistics tell the story. The great social transformation of the last two hundred years has led to an erosion of the family and the franchising of its responsibilities. The authority of the family, especially that of the parents, has been compromised through the intrusion of state authorities, cultural influences, and social pressure. Furthermore, the loss of a biblical understanding of marriage and family has led to a general weakening of the institution, even among those who would identify themselves as believing Christians.

At the cultural level, Kstenberger suggests that the rise of a libertarian ideology explains the elevation of human freedom and a right to self-determination above all other principles and values. The quest for autonomy becomes the central purpose of human life, and any imposition of structure, accountability, boundaries, or restriction is dismissed as repressive and backward.

Within the Christian church, Kstenberger discerns what he identifies as a “lack of commitment to seriously engage the Bible as a whole” (p. 28). As he correctly observes, evangelical Christianity has no shortage of Bible studies, media production, para-church ministries, and the like. Yet, most Christians are woefully unaware of the...

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