Summary
Questions of race and ethnicity are often addressed with more heat than light. This volume aims to bring Scripture to bear with careful biblical theology, tracing how the Bible speaks about peoples, nations, and the unity of God’s redeemed community. The author seeks to ground conviction not in slogans, but in the storyline of redemption and the creation of one new humanity in Christ.
The book surveys key passages across both Testaments, paying attention to creation, the call of Abraham, the place of Israel, the inclusion of the nations, and the church’s life together. We are helped to see both the dignity of human diversity and the sinfulness of prejudice, partiality, and pride. The aim is to form a church shaped by the gospel rather than by cultural tribes.
Strengths
The strength is its determined effort to let Scripture set the categories. We appreciated the insistence that unity is not achieved by ignoring difference, but by submitting all identities to Christ. The book also highlights important texts that churches can overlook, especially where the Bible confronts partiality and commends justice.
It can help pastors teach on unity, hospitality, and reconciliation without drifting into vague moralism. The gospel centre remains visible throughout.
Limitations
Because the topic is complex, readers may wish for more detailed engagement with historical and sociological questions. The book aims to be a biblical theology study, so it does not attempt to address every modern debate.
Application will require wisdom in local contexts. Some congregations will need careful pastoral pacing when approaching sensitive matters.
How We Would Use It
We would use this as a guide when preparing teaching on the church as a multi ethnic people, and when addressing partiality and exclusion. It is also helpful for leadership teams seeking a common biblical framework.
To test it, read the chapters that treat key New Testament passages and then consider how the author connects theology to church practice. That will show whether the approach is suitable for your setting.
Closing Recommendation
We recommend this as a useful supplement that helps churches think biblically about race and the nations. It should be paired with careful pastoral wisdom and close exposition of the relevant texts.
J. Daniel Hays
J. Daniel Hays is an American Old Testament scholar of the late twentieth and early twenty first centuries, known for evangelical convictions and a gift for teaching Scripture clearly.
He has written and taught extensively on Old Testament interpretation, biblical backgrounds, and the movement from text to faithful application. His work is often used in classrooms and by pastors because it explains method as well as meaning, helping readers handle the Bible with care rather than shortcuts.
Hays is valued for clarity, practical wisdom, and a steady emphasis on reading passages in context. He helps preachers ask the right questions of a text and avoid forced applications. The result is often more faithful exposition, and a warmer, more confident delivery shaped by the Bible itself.
Theological Perspective: Broadly Evangelical