Gerald Bray shares with his subject, John Chrysostom, the enviable ability to communicate profound truth simply and to a wide group of people. His treatment of Chrysostom, his life, and his preaching of Genesis, Matthew, John, and Romans is remarkably accessible and shows us how Chrysostom understood the outworking of the principle of accommodation in the Creator's communication with his creation. This introduction to Chrysostom will whet the appetite of those who want to see how one of the greatest preachers in the Christian church served the people God had given him to love. -Mark D. Thompson, Moore College
John Chrysostom is a name too little known by Christians today, especially by Protestants. But this pastor from the late fourth and early fifth century is worth getting acquainted with and learning from. Thankfully, Gerald Bray has written an accessible volume that doesn't overwhelm us but instead helps us see how John interprets Scripture and applies it to life. Over his life John produced about six hundred sermons that we still have, but Bray wisely concentrates on four sections of Scripture (early Genesis, Matthew, John, and Romans) to give contemporary readers a real taste of wisdom from this ancient source. We may not agree with every move Chrysostom makes, but he certainly has a great deal to teach us. -Kelly M. Kapic, Covenant College
John Chrysostom is one of those ancient Christian writers we think we know perhaps better than we do. Gerald Bray serves as a trustworthy guide to the essential Chrysostom, pointing the reader to key elements of the reluctant bishop's background as well as exploring the texts that will best introduce twenty-first-century readers to the "golden-mouthed" interpreter of Jesus, Matthew, John the Evangelist, and Paul. -Joel Elowsky, Concordia Seminary, St. Louis
Today, so few Christians know the church fathers, let alone have read their writings. So I am ecstatic to see Gerald Bray retrieve a father like John Chrysostom, that golden-mouth preacher. Chrysostom not only defended the deity of Christ against Arianism but he also modeled sound biblical interpretation. Read Bray on Chrysostom, and then go read Chrysostom for yourself! -Matthew Barrett, Midwestern Baptist Theological Seminary