News, Theology

Ten Theology Books to Watch For – March 2026

Theology Books March 2026

We’re running behind on getting this posted, but here are some excellent new theology books * that were released in March 2026 :

* broadly interpreted, including ethics, church history, biblical studies, and other areas that intersect with theology

*** Love Theology Books?
Sign up for our FREE weekly newsletter
featuring all the latest news, deals, and reviews!

Make Your Home in This Luminous Dark: Mysticism, Art, and the Path of Unknowing

James K.A. Smith

(Yale UP)

A philosopher journeys back to the mystics to learn how to live with uncertainty in the twenty-first century

How do we live when we don’t know what to believe, or who to believe, or how we could even know? In this deeply felt book, philosopher James K. A. Smith explores how radical uncertainty can be liberating, opening us to another way of being. The pain of his own profound uncertainty led Smith to a surprising source for modern consolation: the mystical experiences of St. Teresa of Ávila, St. John of the Cross, and the author of The Cloud of Unknowing. These mystics testify to a deeper truth beneath distraction, anxiety, and fear: love.

Drawing on ancient traditions of contemplation as well as on contemporary novels, poetry, film, and paintings, Smith speaks to the fundamental yearnings that persist in late modernity, including the philosophical quest for knowledge and certainty. He shows us how the gifts of the Christian contemplative tradition and the riches of creative works embody a liberating spirituality that recovers the fullness of being human.

In bringing a philosopher’s questions to the mystics, Smith brings a mystical heart back to philosophy.
 

ADVERTISEMENT:

Theology Books March 2026

Sabbath and Culture: A Theology for Humans in Tension

Abigail Woolley Cutter

( Baylor UP )

How can we be “in the world though not of it”? Christians are humans like anyone else; we must eat, drink, find shelter, and sustain ties with other people. The Jewish people have preserved their identity and faith amidst diaspora for millennia in the tension between living in one place but belonging somewhere else. The chief gift that has sustained the Jews is the Sabbath; the distinctive behavior of ceasing work every seventh day made them easily recognizable to outsiders. And as it drew them together and set them apart, it safeguarded a sacred place in time for being present with God.

This book proposes the Sabbath as a strategy for living in tension between this world and the next. It steers a careful path between assimilation with the temporal culture and a response to a divine calling to be set apart. Abigail Cutter resources the Sabbath tradition for a Christian ethic of culture―a concept often paired with the word “war.” To think about human culture theologically, however, we must consider it apart from political battles and come to a deeper understanding of why Christians’ relationship to culture has proven so difficult to discern. This consideration of what culture means―specifically in our contested age―lays the groundwork for a renewed cultural theology.

Sabbath and Culture centers on two broad, related questions: Who are humans before God? and Who are humans within culture? Engaging the work of H. Richard Niebuhr, Abraham Joshua Heschel, and Charles Taylor, Cutter advocates for a social pattern of “tensions in equilibrium” that allows inhabitants of a complex society to imagine the transcendent. The Sabbath has multiple meanings for both Judaism and Christianity; with clarity and candor, Cutter offers a metaphysical-realist vision of how Christians can thoughtfully receive this essentially Jewish practice. Ultimately she shows what the Sabbath means for those of us who wish to live peaceably in a time of deep divisions. The Sabbath, a gift from God, reveals God’s concern for justice and peace among all his creatures. What would it look like for us to heed this call and keep the Sabbath holy?

 

NEXT PAGE >>>>>
PAGE 1 of 5


 
RFTCG
FREE EBOOK!
Reading for the Common Good
From ERB Editor Christopher Smith


"This book will inspire, motivate and challenge anyone who cares a whit about the written word, the world of ideas, the shape of our communities and the life of the church."
-Karen Swallow Prior


Enter your email below to sign up for our weekly newsletter & download your FREE copy of this ebook!
We respect your email privacy


In the News...
Christian Nationalism Understanding Christian Nationalism [A Reading Guide]
Most AnticipatedMost Anticipated Books of the Fall for Christian Readers!
Funny Bible ReviewsHilarious One-Star Customer Reviews of Bibles


Comments are closed.