News, Theology

Ten Theology Books to Watch For – June 2026

Here are some excellent new theology books * that were released in June 2026 :

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

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Theology Books June 2026

Theologians in Conversation: Formation and Vision in Continental Philosophical Theology

Judith Wolfe

( T&T Clark )

In this astounding collection of interviews, the leading philosophical theologians of our time answer questions about their own formation and their vision of the field. They focus particularly on the philosophical voices that contributed most to their own development, and on how these voices shaped their understanding of what philosophical theology can achieve and how. They suggest important research questions that philosophical theologians should engage over the next few years, and describe significant methods or approaches that might support such engagement.

The book is both a moving collection of personal memoirs and a crisp snapshot of philosophical theology in the early 21st century. The interviewees muse on the typical failure modes in philosophical theology and divulge who the most important philosophical voices to them were. This work will help theologians, philosophers, and intellectual historians understand how we got here and where we might be heading.
  

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Theology Books June 2026

The World’s Reformation: How Protestantism Became a Global Religion
Alec Ryrie

( Yale UP)

A vivid history of how Protestantism was spread across the globe, from the sixteenth to the eighteenth century

Protestantism revolutionised early modern Europe. Radical theologians transformed the lives of thousands across the continent, irrevocably changing politics and society. But what about beyond Europe’s borders? Was global Christianity just a Catholic endeavour?

Alec Ryrie explores the untold history of how Protestants tried to spread their religion abroad, from Lapland to Chile and Barbados to Taiwan. At the story’s heart are the non-Christian people whom Protestants met more often than any others during this period: those they had enslaved in the Americas, Africa, and eastern Asia. We see how Protestants dealt with, or evaded, the moral failure of the slave trade, and how their missionary efforts were disappointments at best, utter fiascos at worst.

Their world Reformation, its failures, and its consequences for both good and ill, has largely been forgotten. This fascinating history makes the case for why it is worth remembering.
 

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