Glowing Reviews from Pastors and Professors Alike for Church from Age to Age
Our newly released book on the history of the Christian Church, The Church from Age to Age, is getting rave reviews from pastors and professors alike. The book is available in Kindle format as well as in print. Check out these comments:
• From Dale Coulter, Associate Professor of Historical Theology, Regent University School of Divinity: “I received my copy of The Church from Age to Age today and have already adopted it for my Church History 1 course in the spring. I think it is a very good text, and was glad to be asked to endorse it.”
• From a phone conversation with Robert Clouse, professor emeritus of history at Indiana State University: Dr. Clouse called and raved about the book, saying “I don’t think there’s anything like it on the market.” He feels that our book is the best choice among the other older church history books currently on the market. He feels it is comprehensive, yet accessible to every reader. He just couldn’t say enough good things about it. He ordered several copies to pass on to his colleagues in the hopes that they will promote or adopt the book.
• From Robin Lovin, Dean of Ethics at Southern Methodist University’s Perkins School of Theology: “This is pretty impressive! This will sell a lot of copies for seminary and college classes.”
From Pastor Larry Peters, via his blog:
A penny if you can recall who said on the writing of many books there is no end. If you cannot recall, save your pennies and use them to purchase a new book very worth the many pennies it takes. From Ed Engelbrecht comes word that the presses have stopped and the book is done:
The Church from Age to Age: A History from Galilee to Global Christianity. You can see a sample of the book on our product page or its Amazon Kindle page. I invite you to compare the price for our book with other general church histories out there. For a comprehensive work (1,000+ pages deep) at $36.99, it has the sweetest price on the market.
I believe that as much as our good people may be short on doctrinal and Biblical knowledge and understanding, they also suffer from the very severe lack of any perspective on church history. It is remarkable to me how ignorant we Lutherans are of our own history, how we look at the muddle of the Christian world today without any grasp of history that has led us to this moment, and how we march into the future making the same mistakes as those before us — yet oblivious to the lessons which should have been already learned. Many of our questions could well be answered by a good church history text. Don’t wait until you head to Seminary to read one and because most of you may not get there, CPH is to be commended for bringing out this one — a thoroughly accessible and complete book on Church History.
Now some of you may think a thousand pages a bit much. I suppose you could look at one of the shorter histories of the Christian Church. Martin Marty has a brief one that has been well used. So does Owen Chadwick. That is all well and good, but a larger work is not without its own benefits. For one, a bit more direct source material. For another, a more in depth review of the events and their meaning. For another, more footnotes and sources for additional study.
I know that CPH publishes a ton of material that is not really marketable — that is they do not make CPH much or any money. Let us turn that tide by addressing our lack with the fine resources that Concordia has brought to bear. This is but one of the many fine works that they have brought out. I know that they have to sell a lot of little widgets to cover the cost of endeavors like this but I wish they could count on us instead of the widgets to make a comprehensive work like this a marketing success. See what you can do, eh?!


Hey Paul, on the CPH website there is a review that struck me as rather odd: “Though produced by confessional Lutherans from a Protestant point of view, it is accurate, reliable, and much broader in scope than most traditional Protestant histories….”
—Douglas A. Sweeney
Trinity Evangelical Divinity School
Not to be snarky, but I’m curious about those remarks, the writer seems almost surprised, and you would know better than me, you being in the publishing vocation, but are Confessional Lutheran publications normally viewed as inaccurate, unreliable, and narrow?
I read it simply to mean that often when Protestants do church history it is mostly a sort of quick overview of the Early Church, a somewhat dismissive treatment of the Medieval Church and then much time spent talking about the evils of the Roman Church, the glories of the Protestant Reformation, and then on to present day. I think the reviewer is praising the book for its comprehensive, fair and balanced treatment of all eras in the Church’s history. That’s how I took the comment.
That is charitable, and I agree, but still a bit odd in wording, though perhaps the reviewer hasn’t run into many Confessional Lutherans as we do not dismiss the Medieval Church as somehow completely unChristian. I ordered two copies, and cannot wait to get my hands on them!
Looks like a great book, just finished perusing the index. I stopped by the IC ealier today to see if I could grab a copy at the bookstore, which is closed as I found out. Not to worry, online is easier for me anyway.
Just received my copy… by scanning the TOC and index, I can tell that this book has a LOT of information and from the bits I’ve read in it, it seems amazing!!
Marla, glad you like what you are seeing!!
No mention of Walther, Nevin, Krauth, and others. (?) I love what is there; and especially the readings from primary sources in each unit; but I’m left to wonder whether a similarly formatted “History of Lutheranism” is forthcoming. (?) I further wonder if the aim/goal of this volume was to have a text that would be marketable to protestant colleges/universities in general. (?) Although I realize the volume is already well over 1,000 pages (and I would in no way suggest dropping anything that’s there) … but no Walther, Nevin, Krauth?! …really?!?!