Theology

Behold Now ‘The Behemoth’

Introducing our new biweekly mix about a big God and his big world.

Christianity Today August 1, 2014

We're thrilled to finally introduce you to a project we've been working on for a while here at Christianity Today.

The Behemoth is a small magazine about a big God and his big world. Published biweekly (26 issues a year), it aims to help people behold the glory of God all around them, in the worlds of science, history, theology, medicine, sociology, Bible, and personal narrative.

You'll learn stuff. We'll explain stuff. But we're all overwhelmed with information already, so our aim isn't to make you smarter or to simply stave off another five minutes of boredom. We want to marvel and ponder.

We want it to be pleasing to read and reader-supported, so we're committed to making it ad free. That means you'll have to subscribe to get it. But we're making the first issue free so you can try it out.

I recommend starting with the article on the powerful beast we've named this new publication after. And I'd love to hear what you think about our plans. Email us at editor@behemothmag.com.

Our Latest

Excerpt

How the Lord’s Supper Heals Church Hurt

Communion makes us face our relational conflicts.

Review

We’ve Still Got Heaven Wrong

Claude Atcho

N.T. Wright’s Homecoming hits familiar notes, but they’re still needed.

Review

Emotions Don’t Just Happen to You

Our society tends to treat feelings as inevitable and authentic. A new book explores an older understanding in the Bible and the church.

The Bulletin

Rubio’s Speech, Nancy Guthrie Missing, and Summer of Our Discontent

Mike Cosper, Clarissa Moll

Marco Rubio’s message to Europe, NBC host’s mother is still missing, and Thomas Chatterton Williams on race and identity.

For the Forgiveness of Sins

Jared Kennedy

Through the blood of the new covenant, our slate has been wiped clean.

Confronting Christ

Rusty McKie

Repent, seek forgiveness, and walk with a limp—knowing it is the mark of God’s resurrecting grace.

Feasts Amid Fasting

Steve Bezner

Even in our deepest sadness, we experience deep breaths of grace.

Sometimes We Just Do the Next Thing

Dan Steel

Faith does not insist on a map. Faith asks only that we do the next thing.

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