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Home/Lifestyle/Books

An Exhaustive Exegetical Extravaganza

This new book exhibits that same kind of comprehensive and precise approach to the two opening chapters of Scripture. 

Written by Wes Bredenhof | Friday, August 27, 2021

In the Beginning was a delight to read – personally it brought me back to many of the OT lectures I enjoyed from Dr. Van Dam in my seminary years.  While I found it enjoyable, there may be others who will find it tough-going at times.  It’s not highly technical, but in places Van Dam does... Continue Reading

Finding the Right Hills to Die On: A Book Review

Avoiding sectarianism and minimalism is not about avoiding disagreements altogether—it’s about understanding when and how we ought to disagree.

Written by Cody Barnhart | Friday, August 27, 2021

A bulk of the book is dedicated to “performing” theological triage—particularly in the chapters dedicated to second-and-third-rank issues. Drawing on his journey through various theological positions, Ortlund models what it means to define the faith from a posture of humility.   Gavin Ortlund wants to make you a better boxer—or at least help you pick... Continue Reading

Three Questions for Discerning Our Motives in Prayer

Discerning our motives in prayer isn’t always cut-and-dried. As justified sinners, we should always be suspicious of our sinful hearts.

Written by Kevin Halloran | Wednesday, August 25, 2021

Praying for God’s glory means letting His sovereign wisdom decide what to do with your prayers and your life. It means keeping our focus on Him and on His glory over our own. “Prayer is not a convenient device for imposing our will upon God, or for bending his will to ours, but the prescribed... Continue Reading

Examining America’s Political Pulpit

Book Review—When Sorrow Comes: The Power of Sermons from Pearl Harbor to Black Lives Matter

Written by Joseph Prud'homme | Wednesday, August 25, 2021

Matthes argues for the power of the pulpit—or what she labels “sermonic influence” on political and cultural life. Such an influence, she demonstrates, has proven especially notable during times of national crisis: it is here that Protestant sermons have resonated with the greatest force.   In her new book, When Sorrow Comes: The Power of Sermons... Continue Reading

Robin DiAngelo’s Fragile Narrative

This summer, DiAngelo released her newest work, "Nice Racism." It didn’t sell.

Written by Rachel Lu | Tuesday, August 24, 2021

The deep irony of DiAngelo’s work is that she demands exquisite sensitivity from everyone in all social interactions, but her own gross insensitivity is displayed on virtually every page.   For many people, 2020 was a nightmare that refused to end. For Robin DiAngelo, it was a very good year. In the aftermath of the George... Continue Reading

American Protestants and Conservative Politics: A Q&A with Dr. Gillis J. Harp

Some will be surprised at how Christian conservatives in early American history look very different from conservatives of the past 20 years.

Written by Institute for Faith & Freedom | Monday, August 23, 2021

One is a major change in the understanding of what constituted authentic conservatism. This transformation occurred during the final couple decades of the 19th century. Political scientist Clinton Rossiter referred to it as the “Great Train Robbery” of American intellectual history wherein leading conservatives switched to embrace classical liberal ideas of economic laissez-faire.   Editor’s... Continue Reading

Is “White Fragility” a Helpful Resource for Christians?

Those who want to see the end of racism and to experience true reconciliation will find themselves farther from it if they heed DiAngelo.

Written by Tim Challies | Wednesday, August 18, 2021

It is ultimately hopeless. DiAngelo’s book ends with a vision for a better world, but it’s actually not much of an improvement. The world she would lead us into would still be defined by race, still be broken by white supremacy, still be scarred by whiteness, still see the deepest divisions between black and white.... Continue Reading

Review: ‘Our Comfort in Dying: Civil War Sermons by R. L. Dabney’

12 manuscript of unpublished Dabney sermons were found, apparently undisturbed since the 1880s or 1890s, by which time Dabney had completed the writing out of the sermon texts.

Written by Forrest L. Marion | Wednesday, August 4, 2021

Realizing these sermons were of great value especially to students of Dabney’s preaching, Union seminary digitized the 12 sermons and placed them on their website. In early 2020, Jonathan Peters, an administrative assistant at Harford Christian School, in Darlington, Maryland – and a costumed Gettysburg tour guide – encountered the army sermons while studying the... Continue Reading

The Making of Biblical Womanhood: A Review

Does Barr deal fairly and accurately with the proponents of “biblical womanhood” and with the historical evidence she cites in opposition to “biblical womanhood”?

Written by Kevin DeYoung | Tuesday, August 3, 2021

If Barr simply wanted to demonstrate that “biblical womanhood,” as some conservative Christians understand and practice it, has been shaped over the centuries by ideas and forces other than the Bible, that would likely be a convincing argument. But this would require Barr to admit that the current fervor against “biblical womanhood” is culturally situated as... Continue Reading

“The First One Hundred Years of Christianity,” by Udo Schnelle

Book Review: An introduction to Christianity’s history, literature, and development that cites original sources and significant scholarship.

Written by Wyatt Graham | Tuesday, August 3, 2021

Schnelle uncovers historical writings and the material culture of early Christianity so that readers can better understand what we can know. Readers can follow Schnelle’s reasoning of the sources; or they may not. That is the genius, as I see it, of Schnelle’s work.    I am fascinated by the question: why did a small number of... Continue Reading

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