James Packer is one of the best known names in modern Christianity. McGrath's biography, which was written with the full co-operation of James Packer, tells the story of this great thinker and, by doing so, casts light on the remarkable growth of evangelicalism in the last generation.
Alister Edgar McGrath is a Northern Irish theologian, priest, intellectual historian, scientist, and Christian apologist. He currently holds the Andreas Idreos Professorship in Science and Religion in the Faculty of Theology and Religion at the University of Oxford, and is Professor of Divinity at Gresham College. He was previously Professor of Theology, Ministry, and Education at King's College London and Head of the Centre for Theology, Religion and Culture, Professor of Historical Theology at the University of Oxford, and was principal of Wycliffe Hall, Oxford, until 2005. He is an Anglican priest and is ordained within the Church of England.
Aside from being a faculty member at Oxford, McGrath has also taught at Cambridge University and is a Teaching Fellow at Regent College. McGrath holds three doctorates from the University of Oxford, a DPhil in Molecular Biophysics, a Doctor of Divinity in Theology and a Doctor of Letters in Intellectual History.
Well-written, albeit reverential account of Packer's career and thought - although the private man tends to drop from view once he's married. There's lots of background on how Packer was influenced by the Puritans, and the book also serves as a chronicle of changes within evangelical theological education over the years. Of particular interest is the account of how "Knowing God" came to be written and published.
However, while McGrath may persuade us that Packer is a somewhat more subtle figure than those outside evangelicalism might take him for, I was not dissuaded away from Martyn Percy's critical appraisal, that "Giant he may be, but surely only within the kraal of conservative evangelicalism?...Here is a theology that produces nothing new, practically prides itself on its social abrogation, and is in dialogue with no one but itself". Despite this, I liked Packer's own introduction to the book, where he shows the good humour to recount how a lady once told him "You are strange".