Slave of Christ: A New Testament Metaphor for Total Devotion to Christ

AdvancedAdvanced students / scholars, Pastors-in-trainingUseful supplement

Evaluation

Overall Score: 7.8/10

A careful and technical study that clarifies a challenging metaphor, best for those who want precision and pastoral sensitivity.

Publication Date(s): 2001
Pages: 224
ISBN: 9780830826087
Faithfulness to Scripture: 8.6/10
The argument stays close to the text and attends to context. We valued the refusal to overstate conclusions beyond the evidence.
Doctrinal Clarity: 8.1/10
The lordship of Christ is central, framed by redemption and grace. The book keeps devotion anchored in what Christ has done.
Depth of Theological Insight: 8.2/10
It offers strong insight into how language works across the New Testament. The focus is narrow, but the depth within that focus is substantial.
Clarity of Writing: 7.3/10
Clear for specialists, though technical in parts. Pastors will need to slow down and track definitions carefully.
Usefulness for Preaching & Teaching: 7.5/10
It is most useful for preventing sloppy handling of a sensitive theme. Direct application is present but secondary.
Accessibility for the Intended Audience: 7/10
Readable with effort, especially for those comfortable with technical discussion. Best used in targeted consultation rather than quick reading.

Summary

At a Glance

Length
224 pages
Type
Theological
Theo. Perspective
Broadly Evangelical
Overall score
7.8 / 10

The New Testament does not hesitate to describe believers as slaves of Christ, a metaphor that can jar modern ears. This volume sets out to explain the meaning, range, and theological force of that language. We are helped to see that the metaphor is not a licence for harshness, but a way of expressing rightful ownership, joyful allegiance, and costly devotion to the Lord who has redeemed His people.

The author works carefully through key vocabulary and passages, especially in Paul, and asks how the metaphor functions within early Christian identity. The focus is not to win a culture war, but to understand what the text actually says and why it says it. That is particularly useful when the church is tempted either to soften the metaphor until it disappears, or to press it in ways the New Testament does not.

Strengths

The strength lies in linguistic and exegetical precision. The discussion is careful, and the conclusions are drawn with restraint. We appreciated the attention to nuance, especially where the metaphor intersects with themes of freedom, adoption, and service.

It also helps pastors speak about obedience as belonging to grace. The metaphor is set within the gospel, not detached from it.

Limitations

The topic requires technical work, and the book at times reads like specialist scholarship. Those looking for immediate sermon illustrations may find it more analytical than devotional.

It also needs thoughtful pastoral translation, because modern associations with slavery can overwhelm the biblical point if handled clumsily.

How We Would Use It

We would use this when preaching through letters where the language of servanthood and lordship is prominent. It is also a good resource for training preachers to handle difficult metaphors with both honesty and sensitivity.

To test the volume, read the chapters on the key Pauline texts and then check the author’s summary of implications. That will show how usable the conclusions will be for your ministry context.

Closing Recommendation

We recommend this as a careful study that repays pastors who want to handle the New Testament’s language with precision and pastoral wisdom.

Where to buy
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Classification

  • Level: Advanced
  • Best For: Advanced students / scholars, Pastors-in-training
  • Priority: Useful supplement

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Commentary

Puritans

Bible Atlas

Reviewed by

An Expositor

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