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Home/Lifestyle

Book Review: The Ruthless Elimination of Hurry

The truth is, busyness and hurry has infected our lives like a plague.

Written by Daniel Seabaugh | Sunday, March 6, 2022

In the book, Comer claims “the mind is the portal to the soul, and what you fill your mind with will shape the trajectory of your character. In the end, your life is no more than the sum of what you gave your attention to.” I’ve also heard it said “you become what you behold.”... Continue Reading

Actually, We Do Care (part 2): A Response To Greg Johnson’s ‘Still Time To Care’

Hetero-sexual desire is a natural, pre-fall gift of God; homo-sexual desire is unnatural and not a pre-fall gift of God.

Written by Stephen Spinnenweber | Thursday, February 24, 2022

Heterosexual lust and homosexual lust are not the same qualitatively. Though they are both fallen and fall short of the glory of God, they are not fallen in the same way or for the same reason, which distinction Johnson does not make clear in his writing. Here it becomes necessary to make a distinction between... Continue Reading

Jesus and John Wayne: A Review

Du Mez offers no proposed solutions, no path forward, and no appeal to the gospel.

Written by John D. Wilsey | Tuesday, February 22, 2022

Du Mez’s work reads less as history and more as ideology, and an ideology with little in the way of faith, hope, or charity. All we have before us as we reach the end of the book is a cliff edge, with no path forward to forgiveness and reconciliation. There is no apparent hope. But... Continue Reading

Actually, We Do Care (Part 1): A Response To Greg Johnson’s Still Time To Care

Johnson’s book muddies the already muddied terminology regarding human sexuality.

Written by Stephen Spinnenweber | Wednesday, February 16, 2022

It is my intention to demonstrate with these articles that Johnson’s book muddies the already muddied terminology regarding human sexuality and that he is not alone in using classic Reformed systematic-theological language in a novel manner to support his own conclusions.   Still Time to Care: Selective Quoting? Greg Johnson’s Still Time to Care has garnered no... Continue Reading

Fault Lines: The Social Justice Movement and Evangelicalism’s Looming Catastrophe

Book Review: Baucham’s thesis is that the current culture wars in the US over racism and Critical Race Theory are in danger of splitting the evangelical church and causing considerable harm.

Written by David Robertson | Tuesday, February 15, 2022

It seems as though the American church, having taken a disastrous turn into (largely but not exclusively) right wing politics, is now in danger of overcompensating and repenting in a progressive, rather than a biblical, direction. Fault Lines exposes this and thus is largely a book about American cultural wars and American church politics.    There are... Continue Reading

Book Review – Christian Counter-Attack: Europe’s Churches Against Nazism

The book was written in 1943 and so provides a unique perspective on the War since it was written during the War.

Written by Nathan Zekveld | Monday, February 14, 2022

The commitment of so many Christians to suffer for righteousness sake is astonishing and puts a contemporary pastor like myself to shame. The book is a fair data based over view of the conflict with Nazism up until 1943. The intent is not to emphasize the persecution but the spiritual resistance and it achieves this goal.... Continue Reading

Puritans and Theonomy, Reconsidered

Book Review: The Mission of God: A Manifesto of Hope for Society

Written by Ian Clary | Friday, February 4, 2022

In respect to what is on display in The Mission of God, Boot lacks the requisite skills of an historian, which concerns me as my own academic interests have addressed how evangelicals can use and abuse the past.[4] The purpose of this review is narrower than noting The Mission of God’s overall demerits.[5] Rather, I address one of Boot’s... Continue Reading

Don’t Look Up—Prophetic or Pathetic?

Hollywood is not-so-subtly preaching to us.

Written by David Robertson | Tuesday, January 25, 2022

Don’t Look Up is a good old fashioned, modernist film—with a clear moralistic message. The trouble is that it is the wrong message.   *Spoiler alert: This article contains details of the plot and ending to the movie “Don’t Look Up.” There was a time when comedians got lots of laughs mocking the religious eccentrics... Continue Reading

Distinctively Christian Retirement: A Biblical Call To Serve Jesus Well In Older Age: An Excerpt

If age and health issues are limiting factors for you, what might your service of Jesus look like?

Written by Simon van Bruchem | Monday, January 24, 2022

Perhaps you are convinced that those who are older or who have health issues should be active in serving God, but you find it hard to picture what that looks like. After all, you might not be able to preach or lead a congregation or head to the mission field. If age and health issues... Continue Reading

Post-Christian Christianity

Secularism has infected the church as a whole.

Written by Gene Veith | Thursday, January 20, 2022

In my book Post-Christian, I explore and critique post-Christian culture, but I also have a chapter entitled “Post-Christian Christianity.”   In that chapter, I discuss this phenomenon in much more detail and argue that one of the main reasons for the secularism of the broader society is that our churches have become so secularized.  This is especially evident in... Continue Reading

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