As a transplanted Southerner living in an excruciatingly white part of the Pacific Northwest, I was delighted to receive this book and read the stories of these faithful African-American men whom God has called to Himself, and given the gift of coming to a knowledge of Reformed Theology. Having been blessed by the preaching of several of these men, I was glad to be made aware of others like them.
Editor Carter quickly and rightly prioritizes Christianity over either lineage or particular confession, but the focus and unique contribution of this book is the intersection of the three attributes, an all too rare combination in today's church.
Most if not all of these men are preachers, and it quickly comes through in their writing: their own personal history with the gospel becomes a short and very welcome sermon presenting the gospel to the reader. Usually, a short summation of reformed particulars follows, and by the end a number of tulips lie strewn about.
The majority of these men began in nominal Christian homes, and came to robust faith later in life. While speaking charitably of their previous Christian traditions, the authors often build off of a specific problem caused by a deficiency in the theology they had grown up with. Assurance of salvation, synergistic salvation, works-righteousness, discouragement caused by the false hopes of the prosperity gospel are some of the problems addressed in these pages, problems assuaged by the riches of the Reformed expression of Christianity.
Essays I particularly enjoyed were those of Thabiti Anyabwile and Lance Lewis. Pastor Anyabwile's journey through Islam stuck out as one of the clearest demonstrations of the power of the gospel, moving him not simply from a weaker form of Christianity to a more developed one, but from a position of hating Christianity to one of loving the gospel of grace. Pastor Lewis' disarming honesty and the joy with which recounts his growth in understanding were delightful, and the same honesty applied to the struggle to “fit in” in a predominantly white church and denomination should prove very helpful to men in similar situations.
Weakening the book's usefulness, however, was the lack of pastoral wisdom and experience in dealing with the large differences in the manner of worship between the historically black and historically reformed churches. Luther and especially Calvin would describe the Reformation largely in terms of a reformation of worship, rather than laying the foundation for TULIP, although both were certainly present. The sacramental theology of the Reformers is neglected, resulting in a book that more accurately details journeys into preaching Reformed soteriology, rather than embracing the fullness of the Reformed heritage. Admittedly, Calvin would recognize little enough from much modern Reformed worship, but, as the authors themselves mention without developing, the worship of the black church would make even less sense to the Reformers. This is not to say that African-American worship should change to make Calvin happy, but simply that the authors of the present volume give no help either way in addressing this difficult and pressing issue.
Also, I was surprised to find much mention of the European reformers but scarcely a name-drop of the African bishop who gave them such inspiration. It seems to me that if Augustine was better known in the black community, many barriers could be broken down, and the charge that these men were accepting a “white man's theology” cut off at the knees.
But despite these minor points, Glory Road is a very encouraging collection of stories, small steps toward the day when men from every tribe and nation, people and tongue confess Jesus as Lord. May God call many more such men to serve Him in spreading the biblical truth expressed in the Reformed faith.