Drawing from personal experience and those who have long carved out theologies far from power, Swan and Wilson show how Solus Jesus can open a portal to the divine communion that is possible between all people
Deborah Jian Lee, author of Rescuing Jesus: How People of Color, Women and Queer Christians are Reclaiming Evangelicalism
Born in a cauldron of faith and pain, Solus Jesus: A Theology of Resistance is a highly original, deeply provocative first stab at a post-evangelical, post-“gay debate” pastoral theology.
David P. Gushee, author of Changing Our Mind
Solus Jesus: A Theology of Resistance challenges us to see the authoritative Jesus in a fresh light, so that his life, message, death, and rising summon us to live in a new way as individuals and congregations.
Brian D. McLaren, author of The Great Spiritual Migration
Dietrich Bonhoeffer described a church striving for its own preservation, a critique that reverberates as people struggle not so much to love Jesus as to tolerate the church. Instead, Emily Swan and Ken Wilson invite us into a communal encounter with the living Jesus. A victim of violence himself, Jesus calls us into encounters of healing, freedom, dignity, and life.
Greg Carey, Professor of the New Testament at Lancaster Theological Seminary
This book is loving and courageous, compelling and convicting, scholarly and personal, all at once. Solus Jesus invites us to know the living Jesus by standing with him beside the victimized. It held a mirror to my heart, asking me to forsake my anxious need for certainty, to repent of the rivalries that cripple me, and to rest again like a child, at the breast of a God in whose fearless love there is a home for us all.
The Rev. Susan K. Bock, Grace Episcopal Church, Mount Clemens, author of Liturgy for the Whole Church
Solus Jesus offers a wonderful new way to think about and live the truth of Christian faith. Guided by the work of René Girard and in dialogue with their own evangelical and Pentecostal/charismatic traditions as well as an exciting and eclectic variety of other inspirations, the authors articulate an uncompromising theology of non-violent love that finds the Gospel to be manifest especially in the witness of the marginalized, oppressed, and outcast. It is a welcome approach especially for those on whom the authority of sola Scriptura has fallen hard—such as women and LGBTQ+ persons—and shows, with power and promise, what the church has to gain from their full inclusion.
Curtis Gruenler, Professor of English at Hope College and Editor of the Colloquium on Violence and Religion
Solus Jesus is a bold, powerful account of the need for a Christianity that is both Bible-centered and yet breaks free of the sola Scriptura that has marginalized so many people of faith—the illiterate, the poor and (in the current Christian climate) the homosexual and non-heteronormative.
Tanya Luhrmann, Howard H. and Jessie T. Watskins University Professor of Anthropology at Stanford University