Community Reviews

Rating(4.1 / 5.0, 13 votes)
5 stars
5(38%)
4 stars
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4(31%)
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13 reviews
April 26,2025
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William Stacey Johnson is a gay-affirming theology professor at Princeton Theological Seminary (PCUSA) and also happens to be a lawyer. This is his look at the gay marriage issue from both the theological and legal perspective. It's an interesting read but I'd say definitely more on the academic end of things. The text is sometimes dry, in that academic sort of way. The book does contain a lot of interesting information, though.

The first part deals with the continuum of theological perspectives on gay marriage, ranging from completely unaccepting to affirming. The second part deals with the legal, and particularly judicial, aspects of gay marriage. I'm not particularly knowledgable about legal stuff so I learned a lot about the levels of scrutiny that are applied by judges. I think the legal chapters definitely were the strong part for me.
April 26,2025
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I'm still in the middle of this book, but I want to recommend it because it tries to take all perspectives into account. I know the author, he was a professor at Princeton while I was there. I was privilidged to sit down and have dinner with him one night and talk a little about his approach. He wanted this book to be something that all christians could read and gain perspective from whether they agreed with him or not. He also doesn't just look at one area, such as what it means for the church, but wanted this to come at the issue from several angles. He used his knowledge as a lawyer, theologian and pastor to come from three angles: religion, law, and politics. It is a very timely book if you ask me. You can get it on amazon.
April 26,2025
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This book is written for a theologian, not a lay person. As a lay person, I could not get through the first section. Had to give it up.
April 26,2025
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This book is very well written and covers the same-sex marriage debate from several useful perspectives that aren't often addressed in conversation with one another. As a lawyer and theologian (I believe...), Johnson does a great job with scriptural exegesis and boils the law down into distilled and easily understandable points. From a religious perspective, I found this book very refreshing. I'm not entirely on board with Johnson's recommendations for political change but this is a thoughtful and well-crafted tome. Highly recommended for anyone who wants to do some theological/legal geeking out on a hot-button issue.
April 26,2025
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I read the second edition (2012) as part of a study group at my local United Methodist Church. The writing style is straight forward and easy to follow without a deep knowledge of law. It does help if you are fairly familiar with the Bible (preferably RSV). The author breaks down the topic from a religious, legal and political POV.
I would recommend this book to anyone interested in thinking through the gay marriage in America issue and how it plays out in a Christian context. Although written before the Supreme Court decision legalizing gay marriage in the USA (Obergefell v. Hodges) , it is still well worth reading.
April 26,2025
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Changed my opinion on gay marriage. See my full review here: http://andthewordsbecamebooks.wordpre...
April 26,2025
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Johnson's approach is thorough, pastoral, and deeply engaged with texts (scriptures, legal cases, and legislative work). Not only is context readably presented but engaged in a measured and thoughtful tone.
April 26,2025
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In the ever-shifting, constantly changing world of LGBT politics, this book, only 6 years old, already shows its age. If I had read it when it was first published in 2006, then I would have been blown away by incredibly new knowledge and insight. In 2012, however, I found myself saying, "well, duh" too many times.

Well written and well researched. I suppose my 3-stars are my personal reaction to the book. I value the ultimate call of this book: a call to higher dialogue and the embracing of LGBT people as our fully human friends, neighbors, and families.
April 26,2025
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There has been a plethora of great books written of late on the question of same-gender relationships -- both in society and the church. Some like those of Jeff Chu and Justin Lee are wonderfully written conversations that speak from experience. William Stacy Johnson's book, now in its second edition, is perhaps the most helpful book of all. He writes of theology, scripture, and the law. He shares with us the spectrum of views and offers an alternative -- consecration -- that I believe holds the key to the future of the church's understanding of marriage, sexuality, and covenant relationship. To top all of this off, he adds in his legal interpretation based on his own legal training.

It's a deep book -- not a fast read. It covers a lot of ground. But how I wish I'd read the 1st edition when it came to me years ago and the second edition when it arrived about a year ago. In any case -- this is a powerful book and a must read for all who desire to live out the gospel in this age!
April 26,2025
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This books looks at same-sex relationships and different ways that churches deal with those relationships. Also explores the legal implications of those relationships. An interesting and informative read from cover to cover.
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