Books

New & Noteworthy Books

Compiled by Matt Reynolds

Adventures in Saying Yes: A Journey from Fear to Faith

Carl Medearis with Chris Medearis (Bethany House Publishers)

Medearis, an expert in Muslim–Christian relations, moved his family to Beirut in 1992, when wounds from Lebanon’s long civil war were fresh. Adventures in Saying Yes recalls the many risks he has taken traveling across the Middle East to promote religious and political reconciliation between long-standing enemies. But Medearis avoids portraying himself as a hero. His book urges all believers to free themselves from the grip of comfort and take bold steps for the gospel. “Feeling safe and secure is a good thing,” he writes, “until . . . it isn’t. Stop for a moment and think of all the things that your need for security might actually stop you from doing.”

Rage to Redemption in the Sterilization Age: A Confrontation with American Genocide

John Railey (Cascade Books)

Railey, a veteran journalist, reported for North Carolina’s Winston-Salem Journal in 2002, when the paper shed new light on the state’s 20th-century sterilization program, one of the nation’s most aggressive and enduring. As editorial page editor, he has energetically sought out the program’s victims and lobbied the government to make amends. (In July 2013, state officials approved $10 million in victims’ compensation.) In Rage to Redemption, Railey centers this ugly history on the ordeal of Nial Cox Ramirez, who was diagnosed as “feeble-minded” and sterilized at age 18. “Nial,” he writes, “found her redemption through her fight for justice, roaring back against the system. . . . And she’d found it through her God, who had freed her of most of her hatred of the whites who had sterilized her.”

Talking with Catholics about the Gospel: A Guide for Evangelicals

Chris Castaldo (Zondervan)

As an evangelical pastor who regularly writes and speaks about his conversion from Catholicism, Castaldo often fields questions about whether Catholics truly have saving faith in Jesus. “Many Catholics,” he answers, “don’t seem to know Christ (of course, this is true of many Protestants). Such people may possess certain pieces of Christian tradition, but they have not personally appropriated the gospel. . . . Among such people, we are compelled to share the Good News.” How to do so, with grace and kindness, is the subject of this book. Castaldo (author of the memoir Holy Ground: Walking with Jesus as a Former Catholic) takes readers through Catholicism’s history and doctrines, addressing recurring questions and common misunderstandings.

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

Christian Athletes to Cheer on at the 2026 Milan Cortina Winter Olympics

Annie Meldrum

Competitors in speedskating, bobsledding, the biathlon, and hockey speak about their faith.

Review

This ‘Screwtape for Our Times’ Will Challenge and Confound You

The Body of This Death is difficult to classify, difficult to read, and absolutely worth your time.

Being Human

Andrew Arndt: The Hidden Struggles of Public Figures and Why Real Community Matters

How do we identify coping mechanisms and begin a journey to wholeness?

The Russell Moore Show

Should I Leave My Church Over Calvinism and Arminianism?

Russell answers a listener question about whether a church’s differences over Calvinism and Arminianism mean it’s time to leave his church.

Was Abraham Lincoln a Christian?

In his younger years, Lincoln was a skeptic. But as he aged, he turned toward biblical wisdom—and not only when in the public eye.

Killing People Is Not the Same as Allowing Them to Die

And the church of Jesus Christ has to offer people a better way of thinking about life and dependence if we want to push against the horrors of euthanasia.

News

How CT Editors Carl Henry and Nelson Bell Covered Civil Rights

Michael D. Hammond

Trying to stake out a sliver of space for the “moderate evangelical,” the magazine sometimes left readers confused and justice ignored.

CT Reports from Nixon’s Trip to Communist China

In 1972, American evangelicals were concerned about religious liberty around the world and moral decline at home.

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