Tuesday, March 17, 2026

A Sure Way: Following Truth in a World on Fire by Edith Stein, with editorial notes by Carolyn Beard

 Edith Stein was born to a Jewish family in Poland in 1891.  She was very bright and was able to study philosophy in Poland in a time when very few women were in the field. While in college she for a time became an atheist, but was later introduced to some Christian students and professors and eventually converted to Catholicism. When Hitler rose to power and invaded Poland, Stein lost her teaching position at a public university because she was born Jewish, and decided to enter a monastic order and become a nun.  She continued to write essays and poems about the Catholic faith. As conditions for Jews worsened, her friends urged her to leave Poland and join a different monastery in the Netherlands.  Eventually, however, she was captured and taken to Auschwitz, where she died in 1942. This book is a collection of excepts from talks, essays, and poems that Stein wrote after her conversion. The book starts with a long biographical introduction, and then each except has a short paragraph by Beard explaining the context and importance of the passage. 

I was asked to review this book as a galley by Plough, a small Christian publisher.  I have not read many theological philosophy books outside of my own faith tradition and I found this one very interesting and inspiring. Stein's main premise that we should seek communion with Christ by contemplating the Cross. As we take upon ourselves the burden of the Cross by obedience and total submission to God's will, we find joy the transcends anything that we might be called on to suffer. I think in much of modern Christianity, God is often seen as an overindulgent parent that is eager to send blessing regardless of our own worthiness or obedience.  It is refreshing to read of a Christian who focuses more on total submission and complete devotion as a way of finding joy and peace in Christ. The introduction to the book and of each short chapter are well written and informative. Beard has done a good job choosing excepts that are self-contained and fairly short (most are less than four pages). Like a rich food, you have to take in this book one small bite at a time to really savor it. I would recommend  it to anyone (especially any woman) who is looking for a thought provoking and inspirational devotional reading. (Coming out April 2026, 108 p.)

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