"In this book, the mutual implication of death and life is demonstrated from an astronomical level, in the emergence of human life from the death of stars, to the molecular level where death enables the emergence of cellular life, through anthropological, philosophical, and theological insights, to the realm of medical care for the dying, where it is claimed that 'only theology can save medicine.' A profound and challenging book."
-Andrew Louth, Professor Emeritus of Patristic and Byzantine Studies, Durham University
"How can Christians defend the place of natural death and the death consequent upon sin, while continuing to insist upon the undying character of true life as such and so the reality of resurrection? These penetrating essays by several of the leading theological thinkers of our times will powerfully help the reader to ponder these crucial matters of our contemporary mortality."
-John Milbank, Research Professor and Director of the Centre of Theology and Philosophy, University of Nottingham
"For once, it is not a polite exaggeration to say this is a 'unique' book. The breadth of disciplines represented and the originality of the analysis offered make it an exceptional contribution to current debates. Anyone who thinks the dialogue between theology and the natural sciences is, at best, an exchange of uncomprehending platitudes, will have to think again in the face of these expert, challenging essays, which show that an orthodox theology of our embodied condition can be culturally transformative."
-Rowan Williams, Master of Magdalene College, Cambridge, and former Archbishop of Canterbury
"A substantive, important, and provocative volume. The insights of the essays it encompasses will richly reward the reader."
-H. Tristram Engelhardt Jr, Professor of Philosophy, Rice University, Professor Emeritus, Baylor College of Medicine
'The book is especially valuable for its engagement with both Catholic and Orthodox theology, the latter often underrepresented in dialog with science and medicine. Theologians will be particularly drawn to this book because it offers fresh prospectives on incarnation and resurrection and overcoming of death with life. Those with interest in death and dying will also find it stimulating for offering constructive proposals and multidisciplinary perspectives.'
-Sarah K. Pinnock, Reviews in Religion and Theology, Volume 25, Issue 1, January 2018
"At a time when we are seeking to bring discussions of death into the open in many areas of life, personal, organizational, local and societal, it is encouraging to find a book which tackles this are in some depth from a variety of academic perspectives."
Nell Cockell, Health and Social Care Chaplaincy, Issue 5, Volume 2, 2017