Logo

 

Banner Image:   Baptist-Times-banner-2000x370-
Template Mode:   Baptist Times
Icon
    Post     Tweet


Here is Love by Paul Beasley Murray

 

Paul Beasley-Murray deals with preaching love and marriage; the bulk of the book, and its richness, consists of sermons emphasising the importance of scriptural preaching at weddings


 

Here is Love by Paul Beasley MHere is Love
By Paul Beasley Murray
College of Baptist Ministers
ISBN: 9781916503588
Reviewed by Geoff Colmer 
 

https://www.thegreatbritishbookshop.co.uk/products/here-is-love-preaching-at-weddings


It is a pleasure reviewing this book but a slightly strange pleasure: I have preached at a wedding only twice in the last 20 years, on both occasions at the weddings of my sons. Maybe I’m not well placed to write about Paul’s latest book. However, wedding services were very much part of my life previously, and it’s always good to taste the fruit of another’s reflective practice over many years.

When marrying people in the early years of my ministry, I benefitted from Paul’s wisdom as my previous theological college principal. I used his Happy Ever After as the basis of marriage preparation. However, there was nothing like Here is Love at that time, save a Grove booklet by Ian Bunting. It would have been a valuable resource.

Paul has conducted numerous and varied weddings and what comes over is he really likes a wedding! The book begins with some reflection on weddings in general, how weddings have changed, and the statistics around marriage, weddings and church weddings in particular. After sharing his personal experience of many years, a section includes the creation of a number of policies concerning weddings, something particularly useful for those not in Anglican churches.

Helpfully, there is an examination of some of the challenges of preaching: the dilemma of knowing who to preach to, and the mixed nature of the congregation, among others. However, the bulk of the book, and its richness, consists of sermons, each with a preceding commentary, emphasising the importance of scriptural preaching at weddings.

There are 16 sermons, six from the Old Testament, four from the Gospels, five from the New Testament Letters, and a concluding sermon. Within this expanse, the sermons are varied, addressing the different circumstances of the couples. All of them are quintessentially Paul, drawing extensively on the wisdom of others as well as his own experience and knowledge. They have a lightness of touch while speaking with serious honesty and realistic expectation. There is creativity, compassion, poignancy and challenge. Above all, without being explicitly evangelistic, save one, these sermons are abundant with gospel, good news.

The commentaries do not simply touch upon the passages but excavate them thoroughly. And, in the process address issues such as divorce, remarriage, the marriage of non-believers, cohabitation, what the apostle Paul means by submission.  Both the commentary and the sermons make for good reading. The sermons, while specifically preached at a wedding, would not be out of place, with some small adaptation, in any service of worship.

Of all of them, I most enjoyed the sermon on the Song of Songs where Paul goes for a specifically erotic rather than allegorical approach, with which I would concur. I sense that he particularly enjoyed preaching this! A final sermon is a celebration of God’s love and, appropriately, ends on a high note.

This is a book to read and enjoy, though maybe not in one go, but perhaps devotionally, for there is much to feed the soul.  If I was preaching at a wedding I would find it tempting to pick out one of the sermons and put it into my own voice. Used judiciously, Here I Love would definitely enhance any preaching. 
 

Geoff Colmer is a former President of the Baptist Union of Great Britain

 

Baptist Times, 09/08/2024
    Post     Tweet
God or Mammon, by David Smith
​'Anyone seeking to dwell upon the roots of our culture and needing resources for an alternative vision, particularly those involved in church leadership, should read it, and act'
What God can do with a little oil, by John Funnell
'The story of how a poor Welsh chapel facing closure has been transformed into a thriving community'
Heavenly Heights + Beyond the Holy of Holies by Doug Hollidge
'A remarkable book focusing on heaven from a long-serving Baptist minister - is sure to ignite the spiritual imagination'
Finding God by Joseph Haward
'A fascinating, if demanding, challenge to look again at some of the Bible's troubling scriptures through a new set of lenses'
How Real is Hell? by Steve Barber
'Covers a lot of ground in a mere 80 pages. Barber considers the evidence for and against the three principle views of hell - a concise primer on this difficult and complex doctrine'
Unmaking Mary, by Chine McDonald
'Fascinating book' which deconstructs the myth of perfect motherhood and shines a light on the dark side of parenting
    Posted: 24/10/2025
    Posted: 10/10/2025
    Posted: 18/07/2025
    Posted: 21/03/2025
     
    Text Size:  
    Small (Default)
    Medium
    Large
    Contrast:  
    Normal
    High Contrast