Become a Theological Myth Buster
Review: ‘Urban Legends of Theology’ by Michael Wittmer.
‘Urban Legends of Theology’ is a profoundly useful book for a wide audience. Pastors and seasoned saints can, like I have, become overconfident that they wouldn’t fall prey to urban legends, especially if they’ve spent years in theological study. This book can also serve the church well as an early introduction to theological thinking. Newer... Continue Reading
Coach to Return to High School Football Field After 7-Year Court Battle Over Prayer There
The Supreme Court, which heard arguments in the case, ruled in Kennedy’s favor in June 2022.
Now, Kennedy is inviting all Americans to join him Sept. 1 and take a knee to celebrate a national night of prayer. Kennedy’s story of faith and determination captured the attention of the nation and compelled the football coach to write a book sharing his story and explaining why he chose to spend years in and... Continue Reading
The Bible in the Trinity
Sanders’s work not only opens up promising possibilities for responsible Trinitarian exegesis of the Old and New Testaments but also offers an intriguing account of the unity of the Old and New Testaments.
Viewing the Bible within the domain of the Word also enables us to perceive its purpose as “part of a divinely administered economy of light by which the triune God establishes and administers covenantal relations with its readers” “Scripture is a means of God’s self-presentation.” Fred Sanders’s book The Triune God demonstrates the hermeneutical payoff of... Continue Reading
Russell Moore Loses His Religion
How did someone who climbed their way to the top of conservative Christianity find themselves on the fringes?
It is important to remember that three months before his departure, a Southern Baptist task force determined that Moore’s organization was “a source of significant distraction from the Great Commission work of Southern Baptists.” The report cited things like participating in the partially Soros-funded Evangelical Immigration Table, filing an amicus brief to support a mosque,... Continue Reading
Review: Losing Our Religion
Sturm and Drang with little substance.
Losing Our Religion is an autobiography disguised as an indictment of evangelicalism, and not a very ecumenical one at that. Moore is not interested in convincing the reader. He does not make arguments but rather opts for emotive reflections, flippant diagnostics. It is a self-indulgent project and others of Moore’s sentiment and experience indicate the... Continue Reading
Updating Foxe: The New Book of Christian Martyrs
In a time when our brothers and sisters face more persecution than ever, the stories from across times and cultures told in The New Book of Christian Martyrs will inform your faith and your prayers.
Dr. Pattengale joined Shane Morris on a recent Upstream podcast to talk about The New Book of Christian Martyrs. He covered a number of stories from the book in the episode and connected the ancient martyrs to modern victims of persecution. Perpetua and Felicita were two newly converted and young Christian mothers who were killed in... Continue Reading
“Mental Health and Your Church”: An In-Depth Review
Three reasons it’s worth reading this new book on helping people with mental health struggles.
It speaks to us as members of Christ’s body in local congregations. It’s not about how I as an individual can have my own pastoral care ministry as a lone ranger helping our most deeply troubled people, but about how whole church fellowships can work together. This is real love in action in true community in a... Continue Reading
God’s Good Design for Sex
A Review of Michael Clary’s God’s Good Design
Specific strengths I appreciate about the book: Clary explains how men and women flourish when they live according to God’s good design. This is insightful: “Men are prone to certain vices that are curbed by social relations with women. … Women have the power to help men become the best version of themselves. … Women... Continue Reading
Missionary, Explorer, Abolitionist
Book Review: "David Livingstone," by Vance Christie
Christie has provided this thorough new work that seeks to describe Livingstone not as we’ve imagined him or want him to be, but as he actually was. It describes him as neither a hero nor a villain, but as a man who was both sinful and sanctified, both tragically flawed and full-out committed to the... Continue Reading
A Godly Man Weeps
There is an assumption that real men are not supposed to cry.
In his short work, The Emotional Life of Our Lord, BB Warfield writes of the compassion, love, indignation, and sorrow that Jesus experienced during His earthly ministry. Jesus was “subject to all sinless human emotions.” [4] So, what were the occasions that caused the Lord to weep? Three moments in Jesus Christ’s earthly ministry stand... Continue Reading
- « Previous Page
- 1
- …
- 34
- 35
- 36
- 37
- 38
- …
- 238
- Next Page »