New & Noteworthy Books

Compiled by Matt Reynolds.

Broken Planet: If There’s a God, Then Why Are There Natural Disasters and Diseases?

Sharon Dirckx (IVP)

We often refer to natural disasters as “acts of God,” a fact that helps explain why skeptics of Christian faith invoke them as stumbling blocks to belief. In Broken Planet, Sharon Dirckx of the Oxford Centre for Christian Apologetics explores how to defend God’s goodness in light of events like tsunamis, hurricanes, earthquakes, famines, and pandemics. The book also includes extensive firsthand testimonies from a range of believers, including rescue workers, local residents, and other eyewitnesses.

Amazing Grace: The Life of John Newton and the Surprising Story Behind His Song

Bruce Hindmarsh and Craig Borlase (Thomas Nelson)

This year marks the 250th anniversary of the writing of “Amazing Grace,” John Newton’s iconic hymn. To mark the occasion, historian Bruce Hindmarsh and writer Craig Borlase have teamed up to write what they call a “dramatized biography” of the former slave-ship captain, one “with the feel of a film or a life play.” Like the song that inspires it, Amazing Grace summons readers to consider the arc of redemption in their own lives.

Engaging the Old Testament: How to Read Biblical Narrative, Poetry, and Prophecy Well

Dominick S. Hernández (Baker Academic)

For many believers, the Old Testament seems bafflingly inconsistent with the picture of God we receive from the New Testament. This can tempt us to neglect it, downgrade it, or read it selectively. Dominick S. Hernández, a professor at Biola University’s Talbot School of Theology, wants to correct these tendencies in this survey of Old Testament interpretation. “If Christians … ignore or renounce attributes of the revealed character of God (in either the Old or the New Testament),” he writes, “then we necessarily disregard parts of the plan of redemption.”

Also in this issue

Our cover story this month delves into the intermingling of profits and praise, detailing how Sunday worship favorites (and their future royalties) have become popular investments in a multibillion-dollar industry. Also in this issue: the theological significance of singleness, a new video game in which players step into the sandals of the Savior, and the dangers of weaponizing forgiveness.

Cover Story

Our Worship Is Turning Praise into Secular Profit

God Didn’t Have to Do Anything for Us

Eve’s Legacy Is Both Sin and Redemption

News

Steven Curtis Chapman Ranked Alongside George Strait and Madonna

News

Poetry, Photography, and Fleming Rutledge Led One American to Volunteer in Ukraine

News

Pope Who Changed the Calendar Is Honored with an Asteroid

News

‘I Am Jesus Christ’ Invites Gamers to Play God

How One Family’s Faith Survived Three Generations in the Pulpit

Our May/June Issue: Ministry Across the Generations

Kelli B. Trujillo

Look Who’s Talking

The Danger of Forcing Forgiveness

Wilco de Vries

I Find Comfort in the Divine Warrior

Beth M. Stovell

When Politics Saved 25 Million Lives

Excerpt

Love, Joy, and Peace Are a Package Deal

Daniel J. Denk

News

Debate Flares Over the Meaning of ‘Indian Child Welfare’

The Authority of Scripture Is Not the Problem

May We Never Lose Sight

Christianity Is a Birth Story

Testimony

New Age Thinking Lured Me into Danger. Jesus Brought Relief.

Tina Kolniak

What Singleness Reveals about the World to Come

Interview by Barry Danylak

Review

The Power and Peril of Spiritual ‘Evolution’ Stories

Samuel D. James

Review

Conflict Between Science and Religion Is Always Possible but Never Inevitable

Edward J. Larson

View issue

Our Latest

Let There Be Hope

Chad Bird

God is still at work amidst darkness.

Christmas in Wartime

Daniel Darling

How can Christians possibly pause for Advent in a world so dark?

Hold On, Dear Pilgrim, Hold On

W. David O. Taylor

Isaiah speaks to the weary awaiting light in the darkness.

Dirty Frank

E.M. Welcher

Sometimes God sends prophets. God sent me a dog.

Living in the Dark Space

Heather Thompson Day

We can’t always see the light when we are in the dark. But the light can always see us.

Held Together by a Cornerstone

J.A. Medders

The validity of Christianity is not based on our experiences; it’s based on him and his Word.

These Dark Days

Jeremy Writebol

Left to our own ruminations, it is hard to see Jesus’ light.

So Shall It Be

Jonah Sage

Our waiting is never in vain.

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