Books

New & Noteworthy Books

Compiled by Matt Reynolds

God Loves Sex: An Honest Conversation about Sexual Desire and Holiness

Dan B. Allender and Tremper Longman III (Baker Books)

Sexual desire, corrupted by the Fall, has a nasty habit of veering off into strange and unhealthy territory. In God Loves Sex, Allender (a Christian therapist) and Longman (a biblical scholar) combine forthright discussion of sexual struggles among believers with insights from the Song of Songs, showing how our disordered desires can be redeemed and transformed. “God intends to purify our desire in the holy consumption of his love,” write Allender and Longman. “We must take the risk of bringing our desire—holy and impure before his eyes—to be caught up in what sex is meant to offer: the arousal of our deepest desire to be in union with him.”

American Apocalypse: A History of Modern Evangelicalism

Matthew Avery Sutton (Belknap Press)

American Apocalypse focuses attention on the network of “radical evangelicals—preachers, evangelists, broadcasters, businessmen, Bible-college professors, publishers, and laypeople”—who predicted the looming end of the world at the turn of the 20th century. In this sweeping history, Sutton (a historian and biographer of Pentecostal evangelist Aimee Semple McPherson) argues that apocalyptic fervor exercised an underappreciated influence on believers, churches, and institutions, helping to propel the evangelical resurgence after World War II and continuing to shape the movement ever since. The consequence has been a “distinct religious culture and a distinct form of Christian cultural engagement that has impacted the world in profound ways.”

Paradoxology: Why Christianity Was Never Meant to Be Simple

Krish Kandiah (Hodder & Stoughton)

Studying Scripture can often feel like wrestling with one contradiction after another. How can God be present in our lives yet wholly transcendent? Full of wrath yet abounding in mercy? Sovereign over everything yet granting people free will? Kandiah, executive director for Churches in Mission at the Evangelical Alliance UK, challenges us not to write off such questions as mere sources of confusion. In Paradoxology, he argues instead that “the paradoxes that seem to undermine belief are actually the heart of our vibrant faith, and that it is only by continually wrestling with them . . . that we can really worship God, individually and together.”

Also in this issue

The CT archives are a rich treasure of biblical wisdom and insight from our past. Some things we would say differently today, and some stances we've changed. But overall, we're amazed at how relevant so much of this content is. We trust that you'll find it a helpful resource.

Our Latest

The Christmas Cloud

Dave Harvey

Christmas feels decidedly unmerry when our emotions don’t align with truth.

Night Skies and Dark Paths

Scott James

God is our unwavering guide through incomprehensible darkness.

The Light of Life

Joni Eareckson Tada’s Advent reflection on this dark-become-light season.

Christmas Tears

Jonah Sage

Christmas reminds us that God took matters into and onto his own hands.

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.

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