The God Who Became Human: A Biblical Theology of Incarnation

Mid-levelBusy pastors, Pastors-in-trainingTop choice

Evaluation

Overall Score: 8.5/10

A compact and thoughtful guide that strengthens Christ centred preaching and guards the essentials with calm biblical clarity.

Publication Date(s): 2013
Pages: 202
ISBN: 9780830826315
Faithfulness to Scripture: 8.7/10
Close engagement with key passages keeps the argument anchored. It encourages pastors to let Scripture set the categories and limits.
Doctrinal Clarity: 9.2/10
Christ is central in every chapter, not as a slogan but as the biblical centre of redemption. It helps preachers keep Christology tied to gospel proclamation.
Depth of Theological Insight: 8.3/10
It offers genuine theological depth in a short compass. The insights are most fruitful when you pause and trace the biblical threads carefully.
Clarity of Writing: 8.4/10
The prose is clear and disciplined, with good definition of terms. The pace is brisk, so careful reading is rewarded.
Usefulness for Preaching & Teaching: 8.6/10
It translates doctrine into preaching instinct and church application. It is especially useful for sermon preparation around Christological texts.
Accessibility for the Intended Audience: 7.9/10
Readable for trained readers, though not casual. A Bible open beside you will make it far more accessible.

Summary

At a Glance

Length
202 pages
Type
Theological
Theo. Perspective
Broadly Evangelical
Overall score
8.5 / 10

This volume offers a focused biblical theology of the incarnation, tracing how Scripture prepares for, explains, and safeguards the claim that the eternal Son became truly human. The author moves through key Old Testament patterns and promises, then shows how the New Testament speaks with both wonder and precision about the person and work of Christ. The argument stays close to the Bible while also helping readers see why the church has laboured to speak carefully about Christ, not to satisfy curiosity but to protect the gospel. The tone is devotional in the best sense, reverent, doxological, and alert to pastoral consequences. Readers will come away with a clearer grasp of why the incarnation is not a decorative doctrine but the hinge of redemption, and why faithful preaching of Christmas, cross, and resurrection depends on getting Christ right.

Strengths

The strongest feature is its disciplined attention to the whole canon. The author handles typology and promise fulfilment with restraint, offering enough guidance to sharpen preaching without forcing connections. The book also models theological clarity, defining terms, avoiding muddle, and showing how biblical language rules out common errors. It is especially helpful on the necessity of real humanity, not as sentiment, but as the means by which Christ truly represents, obeys, suffers, and sympathises. The writing is compact, yet it gives the reader a dependable set of biblical waypoints, key passages, recurring themes, and a coherent storyline. It serves ministers well by linking the doctrine of the incarnation to preaching, assurance, and worship, so that Christology becomes fuel for church life rather than a merely academic exercise.

Limitations

Because the book aims for breadth within a short space, some debates are treated briefly. Readers looking for detailed engagement with modern critical proposals, or a long excursus on historical theology, may wish for more. At points the pace is brisk, and the argument assumes a reader who is willing to read carefully and keep track of several biblical threads at once. It also focuses on the incarnation as a doctrine within the storyline of redemption, so it does less on the practical questions that sometimes dominate popular discussion, such as the mechanics of miracles or speculative questions about what Christ could or could not do.

How We Would Use It

This is best used in sermon preparation when preaching through the Gospels, Christmas texts, or any passage where the humanity and deity of Christ matter for interpretation. It would serve well in a staff reading group, a theology reading class for emerging leaders, or personal study for a preacher wanting to tighten Christological instincts. We would not use it as a first introduction for brand new believers, but we would gladly place it in the hands of anyone who has a basic grasp of Scripture and wants to grow in doctrinal confidence. Read it slowly, keep an open Bible, and use the chapter flow as a map for constructing Christ centred exposition.

Closing Recommendation

If you want biblical theology that strengthens your grip on the heart of the gospel, this book is a wise purchase, it will steady preaching and deepen worship through clearer sight of Christ.

Where to buy
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Classification

  • Level: Mid-level
  • Best For: Busy pastors, Pastors-in-training
  • Priority: Top choice

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Commentary

Puritans

Bible Atlas

Reviewed by

An Expositor

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