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Home/Lifestyle/Books

He Is Not Ashamed – A Review

A review of “He IS Not Ashamed” by Erik Raymond.

Written by Tim Challies | Monday, July 25, 2022

In the next two chapters Raymond focuses on those who have nothing to give and those who are weak before turning to those who still sin, people like you and me who have been saved by his grace but who still commit deeds that are so very rebellious and so very dark. “Run your finger... Continue Reading

From Everlasting to Everlasting

Book Review: Will Dobbie’s From Everlasting to Everlasting: Every Believer’s Biography 

Written by Tim Challies | Friday, July 22, 2022

I found From Everlasting to Everlasting a particular pleasure to read, almost like the pleasure of reading a novel that was especially meaningful in my childhood. It was a joy to be reminded of the wonder of how God saves his people and to reaffirm how so much depends upon rightly ordering these steps. It was a... Continue Reading

Book Review: “The Madness of Crowds,” by Douglas Murray

Douglas Murray dives headlong into the contemporary “social justice” orthodoxy.

Written by Samuel D. James | Tuesday, July 19, 2022

Evangelicals will have much to appreciate about Murray’s work. Most of us will find the book self-recommending and friendly to our priors. But this means that it’s all the more important to be distinctly Christian in these conversations. Christians are not content merely to pop politically correct bubbles (though we often must). We are obligated... Continue Reading

The Godless Bible

Robert Alter’s Hebrew Bible: A Translation with Commentary is a massive achievement—literally. The three-volume box set weighs 11 pounds.

Written by James Bruce | Monday, July 18, 2022

The reader should keep in mind that, for Alter, the Hebrew Bible is not one seamless book but a haphazard collection of texts. Biblical authors do not offer the same view of the one true God but different—indeed, rival—versions of God.   Robert Alter’s Hebrew Bible: A Translation with Commentary is a massive achievement—literally. The three-volume box... Continue Reading

Time to be Brave

I wrote Brave in the Making to help young people to stand for Christ no matter what is going on in the world. It’s a teenage-friendly, action-packed exploration of Christian courage in all its fullness.

Written by Travis Barnes | Sunday, July 17, 2022

As in the days of Nebuchadnezzar, young people find themselves under pressure to bow to the statues of our times – navigating the idols of sexuality, identity, and tolerance for all ideas. Young people are told they can believe whatever they want, so long as they don’t dare put their ideas onto others. They can... Continue Reading

Physicians, Heal Thyselves

Book Review: Paracelsus treads on sacred ground when criticizing modern medicine.

Written by Scott Yenor | Friday, July 15, 2022

Paracelsus, the pseudonymous author of First Do No Harm, argues that the American medical system is profoundly and perhaps irretrievably broken. The original Paracelsus, who also used that pseudonym, was a contemporary of Machiavelli and an acquaintance of Erasmus and Luther. He helped revolutionize medicine with modern methods, something that made him a critic of the... Continue Reading

What is Heaven? Welcome to the Feast

Critique: But wait, will there be meat? In his book, Heaven, Randy Alcorn takes up the question of whether we will eat meat in heaven.

Written by John Beeson | Thursday, July 14, 2022

He argues that there will be no meat at this feast. This question, of course, is a minor one, and yet is a disagreement I have with Alcorn’s theological approach in Heaven that I think is worth discussing. This disagreement ought not diminish how grateful I am for Alcorn and his wonderful book. Throughout his book,... Continue Reading

The Divine Purpose for Education

Book Review: "On Education," by Abraham Kuyper

Written by Gary Steward | Monday, July 11, 2022

Kuyper has been much talked about in recent years, but too seldom read.  He understood the threat that secular ideology posed to Christian ways of thinking and viewing the world.  He understood how the ideological conflict was working itself out in the debates over politics and society.   The latest issue of Credo Magazine focuses... Continue Reading

On Worship

Book Review: H.B. Charles offers "A Short Guide to Understanding, Participating in, and Leading Corporate Worship

Written by Tim Challies | Tuesday, July 5, 2022

This is a book that will benefit every Christian, for whether or not we have been called to take a leadership role in worship, it most certainly falls to each one of us to understand it and participate in it.   Though we are 2,000 years past the founding of the New Testament church, we... Continue Reading

Theology and the Peace of the PCA: Lessons from John Webster

God is the God of peace: give attention to him and his work above our own, trusting him to resolve our controversies by listening to his Word alone in conducting them.

Written by Albert D. Taglieri | Monday, July 4, 2022

Scripture is the source of the church’s life.  The church does not precede Scripture but arises in response to Scripture.  The church obeys and preaches the Scriptures, not judges them.  While the church hears Scripture, Scripture stands in judgment over the church.  If controversy is churchly, then it must be characterized by Scripture, for attention... Continue Reading

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