Logo

 

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


Have a Little Faith by Kate Bottley


In this wise and evangelistic book Kate Bottley seeks to welcome and gently explain the faith to those who have a desire for the spiritual 



Have a Little Faith by Kate BoHave a Little Faith - Life Lessons on Love, Death and How Lasagne Always Helps
By Kate Bottley                
Penguin Life 
ISBN 978-0-241-60566-0
Reviewed by Robert Draycott



Kate Bottley is well known from various TV and radio programmes including Songs of Praise, and as such is a media personality as well as a Church of England vicar in Nottinghamshire.

In this book I felt she demonstrated understanding of the Christian faith and of human life, and more importantly could relate one to the other.

One aspect of how this came across was through the vulnerability she described experiencing in various aspects of her life.

This led to what I felt were words of wisdom about faith, life, and being vulnerable. One example: 'for me the Bible isn't a rule book, it's much more important than that.'

Another, 'it's called faith, it's not called certainty'.

This is an evangelistic book aimed at those 'at the frayed edge of faith'. The Church of England has a much more natural way into this group through christenings (yes, I do know), weddings, and funerals, and much of the book reflects on those contacts. My impression is that Baptists now have  a reduced 'penumbra' of those who rarely, if ever, attend, but have the idea that their tenuous church connection is with Baptists. Kate Bottley certainly seeks to welcome and gently explain the faith to 'those who have a desire for the spiritual'. 

After her introduction her book has seven chapters entitled Success, Love, Strength, Conflict, Confidence, Loneliness and Grief. Each chapter concludes with 'Three good things' for example: 1 Take a breath. 2 Make amends. 3 Absolve yourself. As you might guess these came at the end of the chapter on Conflict.

The chapter on Loneliness would be well worth reading in isolation and sheds an oblique light on our ongoing denominational consultation process. The second of her 'Three good things' caught my attention: 'Try a new greeting'. Avoid the predictable - which can be painful. Instead, 'ask what their passions are, which groups they are part of, and what interests them'. 

In recommending this book, the question becomes: to whom? Those in pastoral practice would be one group. It would also serve as a gentle introduction for those who have some sort of interest in what is the best news of all, for all. 
 

Robert Draycott is a retired Baptist minister (various pastorates here and in Brazil), and a former chaplain of Eltham College



 
Baptist Times, 24/11/2023
    Post     Tweet
365 Truths for Every Woman's Heart, by Holley Gerth
'A really useful resource that when everything gets too much in the day (or night), can provide a calming reminder of how God never leaves us or forsakes us'
Dwell, by Anne Le Tissier
'A good and helpful book encouraging readers to dwell consciously and without hurry in God’s Word'
The Art of Giving by Matthew Porter
Unpacks how practising the art of giving brings us closer to God in an accessible and practical way
Wild Bright Hope: The Big Church Read Lent Book 2025
Twelve voices each contribute a chapter on hope, to create a 'thought-provoking anthology... a good read across Lent and beyond for anyone seeking to deepen their faith and find hope in a complex world'
The Desert Shall Blossom, by Janet Killeen
​'A beautiful collection of poems for Lent and Eastertide that will actually far outlast the season'
Lower Than The Angels by Diarmaid McCulloch
'Readers with time and stamina will be rewarded with a comprehensive view of the history of sex and Christianity, but the book could have been shorter'
    Posted: 21/03/2025
    Posted: 04/10/2024
     
    Text Size:  
    Small (Default)
    Medium
    Large
    Contrast:  
    Normal
    High Contrast