Throughout the 1960s and 1970s, Arthur McGill had numerous opportunities to air his rich theological musings outside of the classroom. We are now fortunate, some twenty-five years after his death, to have seventeen sermons brought to us by the aid of his wife Lucille McGill and editor David Cain (University of Mary Washington). These homilies reveal the core themes that distinguish his theological writings: relaxing in our neediness before God, participating in the death-to-life pattern of...
"McGill has the power to make ideas, concepts, differing perspectives vivid–to 'in-flesh' them. . . .Then comes the «switch» or reversal or inversion empowered by the very confrontation McGill has arranged. . . . McGill leaves only the demonic as the object of our worship. Just when we supposed that he was about to come to the defense of this «world-governing, background God,» he dismisses such a God, leaving us with the demonic, leaving us room to affirm our own doubts and...