"The essays collected in The Arts and the Christian Imagination make reference to a broad, at times surprising, swath of thinkers, including French mathematician Henri Poincaré. Such breadth strengthens Kilby's call for evangelical Christians to take the arts more seriously. He returns repeatedly to two concepts: metaphor's importance to aesthetics, and the centrality of the imagination for the individual and for Christianity.... Taken as a whole, Kilby's writings are jarring for the contemporary reader accustomed to relativism. Kilby is confident that truth exists and that we can go some way in finding it, starting from our acceptance of the Gospel. From this foundation, we set out into an expanded world. That journey needs to include the aesthetic in all its forms. Be bold, he tells us." --Brian Welter, New Oxford Review