I very much enjoyed this book. Gonzalez is mostly known for his two volume survey of Church history, but I wish even more people read this shorter and more focussed work. Gonzales surveys Christian history with theological education in view, primarily of how leaders have been trained through the centuries. A number of threads remain consistent through the ages, and there are some clear focal points that have led to modern day seminaries, which seems to be the focus of his consideration. One thread is that theological education has been a concern for the whole church as an act of worship, not only specialized training for leaders. One focal point is the post reformational era of the Pietists who sought to balance the scholastic schools of thought while combatting rationalism with a more robustly devotional approach to their educational model. This book is based off of a single lecture he gave at two seminaries, one in Mexico and one in America. He brings together those presentations and his analysis of the modern reality and challenge of theological education for today and the future. Pragmatically he hammers home the changing demographics and the failure of most seminaries and accreditors to adapt properly. He cites a number of case studies, most interesting to me being Union Theological Seminary and New York Theological Seminary, and how the latter slowly got higher enrollment over the years by focusing on immigrant churches and their needs. Theological education from cradle to grave, formal and informal, is a high calling and a supreme joy. Each era brings unique challenges and opportunities which God has gifted his people to handle. 155 pages of the church taking seriously the command to love God with all their mind.