Coogan, Thomas A. Deadheads and Christians: You Will Know Them by Their Love. Resource Publications, 2025. 132 pp. Pb. $18.00 Link to Wipf & Stock
Thomas A. Coogan graduated from Washington University in St. Louis and the University of Wisconsin–Madison. For more than twenty years, he has been a member of Nassau Presbyterian Church in Princeton, New Jersey, serving as elder and deacon. Coogan says he is equal parts Deadhead and Bible student. For some readers, it might be impossible to think of a “Christian Deadhead,” but yes, they exist (there are dozens of us). I listened to the Grateful Dead since high school. And I am not one of those new fans who got their t-shirt at Target. I own all their studio albums (several times over), traded cassettes (and later CDRs), and accumulated a massive library of live music from “America’s greatest cover band.”
Most Christians have a muddled view of what a fan of the Grateful Dead is, and most Deadheads have an equally muddled view of Christians. This is expected from two communities on opposite ends of the social spectrum, at least in various media presentations. After all, they had a song called “Friend of the Devil” and “Hell in a Bucket.” Neither song is actually satanic (or about Satan, for that matter), but people like Bob Larson still condemned the band as “demonically inspired.” Certainly, the skeleton-based Deadhead art looks scary, and the glorification of drug use does not help. The media often portrays Christians as terrible people, ultra-puritanical, narrow-minded, and judgmental, never having any fun whatsoever.
Setting aside those stereotypes, I agree with the book’s central thesis: the Deadhead community is not unlike the community of believers described in the Book of Acts. Coogan does not engage with the lyrics of Grateful Dead songs for their spiritual potential. Instead, he draws parallels between the earliest Christian community as described in the book of Acts and the Grateful Dead fanbase (and hippie culture in general).
The connection between Deadheads and Christians comes from Coogan’s subtitle: “They will know we are them by their love.” This line riffs on John 13:35, Jesus says, “By this all people will know that you are my disciples, if you have love for one another.” But if you are of a certain age, you might remember signing “They will know we are Christians by our love” around the campfire in the mid-70s. The song was actually “We are one in the Spirit” and was first published in 1966 by Roman Catholic Peter Scholtes, who obviously knew nothing about Deadheads at the time.
Conclusion: When a representative from Wipf & Stock reached out to me to write a review of this book, I was intrigued. As a long-time Grateful Dead fan and a biblical scholar interested in the Book of Acts, I started thinking about what I might write in a book entitled Deadheads and Christians. I will admit this is not the book I would have written, but I did enjoy reading it. The book is praised by George Hunsinger (a very significant recommendation) and Mark James Edwards, the author of Christ Is Time: The Gospel According to Karl Barth (and the Red Hot Chili Peppers). Barth and RHCP? Who knew?
NB: There is a Logos version of this book for those interested. Both the Kindle and Logos versions are about $10. Thanks to Wipf & Stock for kindly providing me with a review copy of this book. This did not influence my thoughts regarding the work.





