Books to Note
Prophetic Evangelicals:
Envisioning a Just and Peaceable KingdomEdited by Bruce Ellis Benson, Malinda Elizabeth Berry, and Peter Goodwin Heltzel (Eerdmans)
Evangelicals tend to reinvent themselves. The authors of this book are no exception. Unlike presumably Western, white, patriarchal, pietistic evangelicals, these "prophetic evangelicals" follow the shalom politics of Jewish prophet Jesus; emphasize deeds—"neighbor love, hospitality to the stranger, and the ministry of peace and justice"—over creeds; conceive of the church as mission more than polis; and envision a new social order, inspired by the abolitionist and civil rights movements, that challenges empire. Their minority report may be commended for its improvisational interpretation of Scripture and confession of Christian culpability in historic cruelties, but it goes overboard in its activism, reducing the biblical religion to a justice movement.—Christopher Benson
The Explicit Gospel:
Matt Chandler with Jared Wilson (Crossway)Nicholas Holtam (National Gallery Company)
In his debut book, popular Dallas pastor Matt Chandler reaches out to those weaned on what Reformed theologian Michael Horton once called "Christless Christianity": the man-centered, semi-Pelagian, therapeutic pseudoreligion all too prevalent in contemporary evangelical churches. Shunning this false gospel of self-improvement starring Jesus as life coach, Chandler walks readers through the "gospel on the ground" (God's work to redeem sinners) and the "gospel in the air" (God's work to restore the entire cosmos).—Matt Reynolds
Winning the Food Fight:
Victory in the Physical and Spiritual Battle for Good Food and a Healthy LifestyleSteve Willis with Ken Walker (Regal)
Pastor Steve ...
La complejidad hispana: Todo cambió en el 2012
The Latest in Movie News, May 20, 2013

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