Research
for the Academy and the Church: Tyndale House and Fellowship the First
Sixty Years
Thomas A. Noble
Inter-Varsity Press, 2006, Hdbk, 336 pp, £19.99
ISBN 9781844740956
The author, Thomas Noble, Professor of Theology at Nazarene
Theological Seminary Kansas City was guest preacher at LCF’s Service
of Thanksgiving in 1993.
As the title makes plain, this book charts the history of one of the
United Kingdom’s leading evangelical institutions along with its
associated fellowship of scholars, from its foundation in 1944 to 2004.
Sixty years on, it is hard to imagine the struggles undergone by conservative
evangelicals to set up a centre to promote biblical research but we can
read about it in this book.
Having been secretary of the Tyndale Fellowship in the early 1990s and
with access to primary sources i.e. minute books T.A. Noble is able to
chronicle meticulously the debates, setbacks, changes in focus and, of
course, the success and achievements of Tyndale House and Fellowship
over the years. The role of the Inter-Varsity Fellowship is mentioned
and there are insights into the characters of the founding fathers such
as F.F. Bruce and D. Martyn Lloyd-Jones.
Useful appendices give details of officers and staff, computing facilities
and Tyndale lectures and monographs. The informative chapter describing
Tyndale House library was written by LCF member and ABTAPL colleague
Dr. Elizabeth Magba.
This book will be a great resource for academicians, theological librarians
and scholars researching church history of the 20th century, especially
the history of conservative evangelicalism. There is perhaps too much
detail at times for the casual reader.
As a librarian and former cataloguer I have a minor complaint – the
ambiguity regarding the title of the book. I am still not sure if the
main title is Research for the academy and the church or Tyndale House
and Fellowship the first sixty years. This is because the wording of
the title on the title page and dust jacket has no punctuation. I suspect
the book will be known by its sub-title Tyndale House and Fellowship:
the first sixty years as the main title is set in smaller type.
However, I do not want to end on a negative note. I learnt a great deal
through reading this book, and as one who benefited greatly from exceptional
biblical teaching at University in the 1970s through a Christian Union
affiliated to the IVF, I now realise how much I owe to the visionaries
who set up Tyndale House and Fellowship.
Contributed by Shirley Shire, BSc (Hons), DipLib., MCLIP
who is the Librarian of the Bristol Baptist College.
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