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Home/Lifestyle/Books

The Shepherd of Hermas: A Literary, Historical, and Theological Handbook

Book Review: Jonathan Lookadoo's handbook is specifically designed to help the new reader of "The Shepherd."

Written by Brent Niedergall | Friday, July 30, 2021

Lookadoo is to be commended for this organized look at the Shepherd of Hermas. Particularly for those unfamiliar with this writing, the section-by-section overview provided by chapter one will be useful for quickly coming to terms with the whole of the writing.   The Shepherd of Hermas is usually described as one of the more popular writings of... Continue Reading

J. I. Packer on the Hub of Christian Life

There can be no genuine or transformative holiness in life until a person has for his primary and ultimate aim the glory of God alone.

Written by Sam Storms | Thursday, July 29, 2021

There can be no genuine or transformative holiness in life until a person has for his primary and ultimate aim the glory of God alone. This is not optional, as if some who claim to know him in a saving way might choose to move in a different direction, with a different goal or aim.... Continue Reading

My Covid Year Reading: Knowing the Times

In order to bring the Word of God to bear on one’s hearers, it’s important to understand the perspective of the hearers.

Written by Keith Kauffman | Sunday, July 25, 2021

Perhaps the most astounding aspect of this book to me is that in a book about knowing the times in which one lives, and the 1940s-70s were very different times than my own, I found myself constantly making a note in the margins of my book that a statement or a comment he had just... Continue Reading

Christian Nationalism In The United States

Their information is probably trustworthy—their analysis isn’t.

Written by Samuel Sey | Thursday, July 15, 2021

Throughout the book, the authors repeatedly claim they are not condemning Christianity. However, that’s inconsistent with most of what they suggest in the book. It’s difficult to hide bias and deception in a 268 page book. In a sense, Taking America Back for God isn’t a book by social scientists—it’s a book by social justice advocates masquerading... Continue Reading

Book Review of When Disability Hits Home by Paul Tautges with Joni Eareckson Tada

Tautges challenges able-bodied readers to consider the allegory of physical disability and the truths it communicates about our spiritual disability.

Written by Jared Poulton | Tuesday, July 6, 2021

This book is not the work of a man who has analyzed the topic of disability from an ivory tower, but the work of one who has wrestled with the pressing realities and daily battles of living with the presence of a disability. If that person is you, maybe you too will read this book... Continue Reading

What the Bible Teaches About Anger and Peace

It will not benefit a sick man to merely read his physician’s prescription or carry the medicine in his pocket.

Written by Grant Van Leuven | Monday, July 5, 2021

As we heed Paul’s example to practice such therapy by Christ’s strength in Philippians 4, we can trust we will have His peace that is not of this angry world and transforms us like the man called Legion: clothed, unchained, sitting still, quiet, and in our right mind.[15]   To understand anger and its peaceful... Continue Reading

Gun Lap

Equipping men to run their race well, all the way to the finish line.

Written by Tim Challies | Wednesday, June 30, 2021

All-in-all, Gun Lap is exactly the book I hoped it would be. It features a man who is running his final lap engaging in conversation with the people beside him and the people not too far behind him. He is passing along the lessons the Lord has taught him.   Would it be strange to say... Continue Reading

Bavinck on Historical Criticism: The Search for the Essence of Christianity

Bavinck presses home the devastating critique that historical criticism is philosophical dogma disguised as neutral method.

Written by Craig A. Carter | Tuesday, June 29, 2021

Bavinck does not say that the divinity of Jesus the Messiah can be arrived at by means of neutral, historical research. Bavinck only says that such research can uncover the fact that the earliest Christians believed this to be so. But faith is required in order to accept Jesus as the Christ: “whoever wants to acknowledge Jesus... Continue Reading

What We Can Learn About Biblical Ethics from the Storyline of Scripture

John Murray models a robust, biblical, and theological foundation especially in regard to the relationships of law and grace,

Written by Jason Thacker | Tuesday, June 29, 2021

Overall, Murray’s volume on the biblical ethic is a classic text within the Reformed moral and ethical tradition for good reason. While he doesn’t address every particular issue of Christian ethics, he lays a solid foundation, grounded in God’s unchanging word and a deep knowledge of the Scriptures unlike many modern treatments of Christian ethics... Continue Reading

Preachers Gotta Preach

Preaching is an immense privilege and preaching is supernaturally powerful.

Written by Kevin DeYoung | Monday, June 28, 2021

If there is a crisis of confidence in preaching, it is a crisis in the pulpit as much as in the pew. “Who is going to believe,” asks Stewart, “that the tidings brought by the preacher matter literally more than anything else on earth if they are presented with no sort of verve or fire... Continue Reading

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