'It matters that the work we do is meaningful, excellent, and beautiful. Jeremy Kidwell's biblically informed theology of craft and analyses of the negative impact of modern labour practices on human well-being invite re-examination of the very foundations of our conceptions of work. Drawing attention to how, in the ancient world, the place of worship was the place of craft-work par excellence, Kidwell revisits creatively the notion of consecration for describing the relationship between work and worship. Innovative and wide-ranging, this is an important new contribution to the theology of work, and wider questions of what's entailed in being human.' Esther D. Reed, University of Exeter, UK
'Jeremy Kidwell has offered us an exemplary performance of Christian ethics done in an exegetical key. Going far beyond most of what passes as business ethics or theologies of work, Kidwell delves deep and sensitively into both the problems and promise of work in an information age.' Brian Brock, University of Aberdeen, UK
' with its depth, its clarity, and its superb craftsmanship, Kidwells book fulfills his hope that encounters with "the strange worshiping world" of Scripture "might provide a context in which to sing the ethos of God for our workplaces and industries in fresh and creative ways."' Brian Dijkema, Cardus, Ontario, Canada in Journal of Markets & Morality