Member Reviews

W. David O. Taylor invites the reader to a rich exploration of our understanding of faith and the human body in the book, A Body of Praise.
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Reading Level: Easy to Moderate
This book is written for adults seeking to better understand how our bodies intertwine with our experiences of faith in God.

Faith Engagement Level: Easy/Moderate to Digest
There are certainly aspects of this book that will challenge us as readers in our understanding of the role of the human body in worship, but this is a necessary and wonderful challenge to embrace.

Reader Age Recommended: Ages 13+
The contents of this book are safe for younger readers to explore and absorb. In fact, some aspects of this book may even be a healthy choice to invite younger readers to engage.


WHY SHOULD I READ THIS BOOK?
How often have we stopped to consider how our bodies engage in worship of God? Do we consider how our aches and pains, our joint inflammation, our injuries, differences of ability, and our experiences of the physical world impact and enrich our journeys of faith? This book is a call to meaningful engagement of our bodies – and not just our minds or spirit within the context of worship.

As a note for those who might not feel incredibly comfortable with charismatic embodied worship – do not fear. This is not a book that is trying to say that one method or practice of worship is superior. This book is simply calling us to embrace a holistic experience of the body, mind, and soul in relation to one another. Liturgy and the body are as equally intertwined as the charisma of the Spirit and the body.
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WHAT DID THIS BOOK CHALLENGE ME TO DO?
Don’t sleep on this opportunity to challenge your view of the interconnectedness that exists within your own experience of faith and life. I was deeply challenged by this book to explore my own understanding of worship and the connectedness of my own body. In fact, I also found myself challenged theologically – does my practice of worship reflect the truth of Scripture or a gnostic separation of body and soul?

This book was a critical call to reflection on my practices as a believer, and one that I encourage other readers to immerse themselves in as a means of enriching your faith in a world that is increasingly moving to a disembodied metaverse. As a pastor whose responsibilities include creating points of connections for our online congregation, I was also challenged to consider the ways in which I can encourage those who cannot gather in the physical assembly of believers to embrace the importance of hands and feet beyond the seemingly intangible body of Christ.

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A thorough examination of why our bodies should be part of a collective worship experience. I've long noted that certain church traditions have a better focus on incorporating the body and senses. Im all for it. I especially appreciated the footnotes included in this book, allowing for further study.

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This book was thought-provoking at times, frustrating at others, but all-around not of particular use to me. My highest praise for the book is also the source of my consternation: The author is clearly very well-read. He cites early church fathers like Irenaeus and Chrysostom, Reformers like John Calvin and Martin Luther, 20th century theologians like Karl Barth and T. F. Torrance, Catholic theologians like Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger, contemporary theologians like John Kleinig, biblical scholars like Walter Brueggemann and David Toshio Tsumura, pastors like Eugene Peterson, and the list goes on. It feels at times like there's nothing he hasn't read!

But this caused two problems for me: First, for as often as he cites Calvin, he does not interact at all with Calvin's doctrine of worship. He never considers the question of the regulative principle, even to dismiss it. Unfortunately, for all it's thought-provoking points, that makes this book pretty much useless for any traditional Reformed pastor.

Second, his doctrine of worship seems entirely too close to a principle of "anything goes." He cites positively the worship practices of Anglicans, Roman Catholics, contemporary nondenoms, Eastern Orthodox, Charismatics, and even Quakers! There is little to no consideration of what might be out-of-bounds. That seems to me like it would hamper the book's usefulness for non-Reformed pastors as well.

It's not all bad. I could heartily agree with much of the anthropology here. His principles for evaluating and appropriating Patristic sources were spot-on. His reflections on how various practices might teach and train the worshiper were interesting. He raised the issue of disabled persons in corporate worship, which was a subject I had thought little about until now. But still, ultimately, the book ended up having hardly anything I felt I could take and use myself.

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A solid primer on the importance of the body, especially in corporate worship. The notes and bibliography offer plenty of further reading on a deeply vital subject.

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A Body of Praise: Understanding the Role of Our Physical Bodies in Worship by W. David O. Taylor is an important work that needs further attention in the church. All bodies matter and bodies are an integral part of corporate worship. The author of this book goes into detail why this is the case and looks deeply into the way the body in worship has been viewed in history. This book is very informative and scholarly. Great book overall. I received a digital copy of this book from the publisher with no obligations. These opinions are entirely my own.

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I grew up wanting all of this to not be true. I didn't want to believe that my physical body had some sort of role in worship, though at least part of this wanting came out of my deeply ingrained childhood messaging that my body was disabled, my body was less, and my body was not worthy.

I wouldn't say that I ever bought into the idea that my body was useless, but I would say that I saw my body as more functional than worthy.

Over the years, this viewpoint began to change. I grew up a Jehovah's Witness, so I started out life with a rather twisted theology. As I moved through years of trauma associated with disability, family issues, and sexual assault, my relationship with my body ranged from self-abusive to wildly disconnected to gently moving toward healing. By the time I entered my mid-20s, I began really exploring the role of my body in my healing, in my faith, in my relationship with God, and eventually in the various ministry roles I've served over the years including children's minister, interim pastor, pastoral care, chaplain, and others.

Understanding the role of my body in physical worship really began to take shape when I was in seminary and doing a ministry placement helping to plant a Disciples of Christ web-based congregation. It seemed ideal for me - accessible, less physically taxing, and even practically perfect for a hardcore introvert for whom socialization is downright exhausting.

We planted the church, but as we came to life I began to realize that for something was missing.

That "something" is brought vividly to life in W. David O. Taylor's "A Body of Praise: Understanding the Role of Our Physical Bodies in Worship," an insightful and well-informed book that argues that there is something for our physical bodies to do that decisively forms Christlikeness in us within the context of corporate worship. Taylor, an associate professor of theology and culture at Fuller Theological Seminary and an Anglican priest, writes that what we do with our postures, gestures, and movements in worship matter. How our senses of sight, scent, sound, taste, and touch are involved in worship matter. How our spontaneous and prescriptive activities form us in worship matter.

In short, our bodies matter. However, what's really refreshing with "A Body of Praise" is how Taylor approaches the subject matter broadly and without the usual limiting and labeling language. As someone who has been disabled since birth, I would not have been surprised had Taylor taken the usual route of language that embraced the nondisabled body and became dismissive of disabled bodies and those with other limitations.

Much to my delight, Taylor writes beautifully about the role of disabled bodies in worship and the necessity of churches in empowering this. I do wish, perhaps, there had been stronger emphasis on giftedness of pastors and church leaders with disabilities, but I will confess that every time I started to think we were going to head toward an ableist direction Taylor would pleasantly surprise me.

Taylor draws upon the wisdom of the Bible, church history, and theology, and by taking advantage of the unique insights of the arts and sciences, ethics, and spiritual formation. As a disabled creative, I was particularly excited by Taylor's exploration of the role of arts and sciences. I also appreciated discussions around Imago Dei, a theological discussion that has long been of interest to me, and explorations of trauma, culture, and ritual.

Taylor begins my mapping out the discussion to unfold before taking us on a journey through historical, Biblical, theological, arts, scientific, and ethical perspectives on the physical body in worship. While the latter chapters begin to feel just a touch repetitive, I found myself deeply engaged and quite moved by "A Body of Praise."

While Taylor doesn't necessarily come out "against" streaming worship, it's clear that he embraces in-person worship and the vitality of the body's experience in worship that does often get lost in non-communal experiences. I can't help but feel myself that far too many congregations have been content to say "We have a streaming worship" and yet never enfold into that a communal experience that is absolutely vital and necessary in praise, worship, and living the Christian life.

In what is likely to be my last book of 2022, I've found one of my favorites and 2023 readers will experience similar delight when it's released in March 2023.

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