Rebecca Konyndyk DeYoung is professor of philosophy at Calvin College. Her previous books include GlitteringVices: A New Look at the Seven Deadly Sins and Their Remedies. She has published and lectured on many other vices and virtues, including sloth, despair, envy, gluttony, fear, magnanimity, and hope.
Richard J. Foster
-- author of Celebration of Discipline: The Path to Spiritual
Growth
"At last a book that takes head-on what is perhaps the
capital vice of modern culture. Rebecca Konyndyk DeYoung draws from
the classical tradition of Christian moral thinking to introduce us
to the life-giving virtues, which alone can free us from the plague
of narcissism that is the cultural zeitgeist of our day. I
recommend this book highly." Jennifer Herdt
-- author of Putting on Virtue: The Legacy of the Splendid
Vices
"In disarmingly conversational prose, DeYoung deftly unravels the
twisting paths traced by the desire for glory as it roots itself
ever more deeply in our characters. But she does not simply leave
us in vainglory's clutches. In conversation with Augustine,
Aquinas, and the Desert Fathers, she canvasses traditional
spiritual practices that re-open possibilities for truthful
self-communication, and she points us to our call to become
transparent to God's glory as vessels of God's self-giving love."
Robert C. Roberts
-- author of Spiritual Emotions: A Psychology of Christian
Virtues
"DeYoung's Vainglory is the best thing out there on the
vices of pride. It's profound, readable, witty, telling,
historically informative, and pastorally helpful." Gregg Ten
Elshof
-- author of I Told Me So: Self-Deception and the Christian
Life
"A much-needed book. DeYoung moves seamlessly between
fourth-century thought and last week's new iPhone release in her
lucid descriptions of vainglory. . . . Read this book and discover
unexplored and unnamed dimensions of your character crying out for
growth and redemption." William C. Mattison
-- author of Introducing Moral Theology: True Happiness and the
Virtues
"Lucidly portrays what exactly the oft-forgotten vice of vainglory
is, how it is born and develops, and how it can be resisted. . . .
DeYoung writes with the wisdom and expertise of a theologian or
psychologist, yet with the accessibility of a college roommate
discussing life over a meal in the dining hall." Christianity
Today
"Exceedingly relevant and fascinating. . . . This book is
goodness made manifest and should be widely read."
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