God of All Things
Andrew Wilson's "God of All Things" emerges from a cultural moment when many Christians feel caught between secular materialism and sacred spirituality, unsure how to integrate their faith with daily experience. Writing as an Anglican theologian and pastor, Wilson addresses believers who struggle to see God's presence in mundane activities like work, family life, and leisure, having absorbed assumptions that separate the sacred from the secular.
Wilson argues that every aspect of creation bears the imprint of God's character and invites recognition of divine presence. He demonstrates how ordinary experiences like eating, sleeping, working, and playing can become means of encountering God when approached with proper theological understanding. Rather than proposing a mystical overlay on secular activities, Wilson grounds his argument in creation theology, showing how God's nature is reflected in the structure of reality itself. He traces connections between human experiences and divine attributes, arguing that gratitude, wonder, and attention can transform routine activities into acts of worship and spiritual formation.
The book has found resonance among Christians seeking to overcome the sacred-secular divide without abandoning either rigorous theology or engagement with contemporary life. Wilson's approach offers a middle way between withdrawal from the world and uncritical embrace of secular values, providing theological foundations for finding God in ordinary experience while maintaining doctrinal clarity.
Who should read this: Christians struggling to integrate faith with daily life will find Wilson's theological framework helpful, particularly those in professional or family contexts who resist purely pietistic approaches to spirituality. Readers seeking mystical or contemplative practices may find the approach too cerebral and systematic.