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Clarke Morledge's avatar

I will just say this: I really like Josh Butler. Others have told me that he has written really helpful other books, and he has some great interviews about those books. I only briefly saw the excerpt at TGC before it was taken down, and I was left with scratching my head. But I am more scratching my head over the glowing endorsements of the book. Yet since the rest of the book is not publicly available, there is a contextual issue that we are all missing, until more people actually read the book. But then I am even MORE scratching my head over endorsements that were withdrawn by people who never bothered to read the book. Why make an endorsement if you've never read the book?? Anyway, Dani, your critique of the article is spot on. Who knows if it is too late, but it would probably be better for Josh to rewrite those chapters, and re-release the book with the appropriate corrections. That will not satisfy everyone in the Twitter mob, but it might salvage his reputation.

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Paul Smith's avatar

This is excellent, thank you. I’ve read a lot of very bad, eisegetical analyses of Butler’s book, by scholars that I otherwise greatly respect, who’s arguments are very unsound. Basically just

takedowns of the great enemies complementarianism and misogyny, neither of which are present at all in the first chapter of his book. I actually really enjoyed his material, mostly because I could see the “vision” behind it - I believe Butler is genuinely trying to lead people towards a “beautiful union” with Christ. But you’ve made me rethink it. Not because I don’t see his vision, but because you’ve hit the nail right on the head, his whole premise doesn’t actually rely on marriage. I didn’t see it before. I can’t fault your analysis. Excellent.

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