Books

New & Noteworthy Books

Compiled by Matt Reynolds.

Assured: Discover Grace, Let Go of Guilt, and Rest in Your Salvation

Greg Gilbert (Baker)

Maybe it’s a theological puzzle you can’t resolve. Maybe it’s a sinful habit you can’t shake. Often enough, you can’t pinpoint an exact reason. But to one degree or another, even committed believers sometimes wonder, Am I really saved? In Assured, Louisville pastor Greg Gilbert shares the good news that “doubt can be tamed. It can be resisted. It can be brought to its knees. In fact, it may surprise you to find out that doubt can even become, ironically, one of the means God uses to deepen your faith in and dependence on Jesus, to drive you back to the cross and to a desperate trust in Christ.”

Unwanted: How Sexual Brokenness Reveals Our Way to Healing

Jay Stringer (Navpress)

If pornography, infidelity, or other besetting sexual sins have you in their grips, how can you escape? You can pray for deliverance, seek out accountability, and do your best to flee temptation. But as therapist and minster Jay Stringer suggests in this book, which draws on nearly 4,000 survey responses, the secret to progress lies in uncovering the “key drivers of unwanted sexual behavior”—the underlying tangle of psychological wounds and relational needs, often rooted in childhood experiences. “The sooner we assume a posture of curiosity for our sexual brokenness,” he writes, “the more we will prepare our hearts for the redemptive work ahead.”

Surprised by Jesus Again: Reading the Bible in Communion with the Saints

Jason Byassee (Eerdmans)

When you’ve read or studied the Bible for a long time, you can fall into trap of approaching God’s Word as if there were nothing unpredictable in store. “This is a mistake,” writes pastor and theologian Jason Byassee in Surprised by Jesus Again. What we need, he argues, is “to see how strange scripture is. Every Christian in every age has been tempted to paper over scripture’s cracks, explain away its oddities, show it’s no different or more demanding than what we hearers already think we know about God and the world.” Byassee helps us read the Bible with fresh eyes, enlisting insights from Origen, Augustine, and other great interpreters from church history.

Also in this issue

The May 2019 issue highlights an often-overlooked group in US border communities: binational students. Largely in the country legally, high school and college students in cities like El Paso, Texas, nonetheless feel the amplified tensions surrounding the immigration debate. They often face difficult choices as they try to meet the expectations of two cultures at once, Mexican and American.

Our Latest

Public Theology Project

Why Christians Ignore What the Bible Says About Immigrants

Believers can disagree on migration policies—but the Word of God should shape how we minister to vulnerable people.

Review

Apologetics Can Be a Balm—or Bludgeon

Daryn Henry

A new history of American apologetics from Daniel K. Williams offers careful detail, worthwhile lessons, and an ambitious, sprawling, rollicking narrative.

Hold the Phone?

Anna Mares

Faced with encouragement to lessen technology use, younger Christians with far-flung families wonder how to stay connected.

Norman Podhoretz Leaves a Legacy of Political Principle

Michael Cosper

The Jewish intellectual upheld the Judeo-Christian tradition.

The Russell Moore Show

Joseph Loconte on the War for Middle-Earth

What if the most decisive battles in our time aren’t fought with ballots or bombs—but with the imagination?

News

A House of Worship Without a Home

One year after the Palisades and Eaton fires, congregations meditate on what it means to be a church without a building.

‘The Image of God Was Always In My Mother’

Kate Lucky

Responses to our Sept-Oct issue.

Disintegration is the Church’s Greatest Threat

A note from Mission Advancement about the Big Tent Initiative and One Kingdom Campaign.

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