New & Noteworthy Books

Compiled by Matt Reynolds.

Work and Worship: Reconnecting Our Labor and Liturgy

Matthew Kaemingk and Cory B. Willson (Baker Academic)

Going to church and going to work each revolve around a particular set of rhythms: roles we perform instinctively and lines we know by heart. Yet the rhythms of Sunday and Monday morning “often feel as if they are a million miles apart,” say theologians Matthew Kaemingk and Cory B. Willson. Their book, Work and Worship, asks how believers beset by weekday pressures can experience Sunday as more than a welcome escape or an irrelevant sideshow. “Daily work,” they write, “should ‘show up’ in the community’s prayers and sermons, its songs and benedictions, its testimonies and sacraments. Theologies of work matter, but they need to be sung and prayed.”

Why Black Lives Matter: African American Thriving for the Twenty-First Century

Edited by Anthony B. Bradley (Cascade Books)

Under Martin Luther King Jr., the campaign for black civil rights took on an unmistakably Christian character. By contrast, today’s Black Lives Matter movement often feels alienated from organized religion. Why Black Lives Matter gathers black pastors, scholars, and theologians who bring their faith to bear on matters of black culture, church life, and political protest. As editor Anthony B. Bradley writes of the contributors, they differ on their “specific prescriptions for change,” but they “share a central conviction that there needs to be a resurgence of black religious leadership to properly form the Black Lives Matter movement.”

The Need for Creeds Today: Confessional Faith in a Faithless Age

J. V. Fesko (Baker Academic)

Many strains of American Christianity are skeptical of inherited tradition. They resist being bound to any faith statements they haven’t arrived at through their own biblical and spiritual reflection. In The Need for Creeds Today, theologian J. V. Fesko recovers the importance of the church’s historic confessions, showing how they proceed from the Bible’s own instructions and bring vitality, not bloodless conformity, to God’s people. “When we create, profess, and pass confessions down to future generations,” Fesko writes, “we do not propagate the dead faith of the living but the living faith of the dead.”

Also in this issue

This month’s issue features a collection of stories exploring how far America’s multiethnic church movement has come and how far it has yet to go. Ohio State University sociologist Korie Little Edwards, arguably today’s preeminent researcher of multiracial congregations, writes in a personal essay about the African American struggle to find “oneness” in diverse churches. While it takes different shapes, that struggle is shared by Christians in other ethnic communities, and it dates back to the early Corinthian church.

Cover Story

Paul’s Letter to a Prejudiced Church

Michael J. Rhodes

Cover Story

The Multiethnic Church Movement Hasn’t Lived up to Its Promise

Korie Little Edwards

Cover Story

Why the Children of Immigrants Are Returning to Their Religious Roots

Erin Chan Ding

Testimony

What the Heavens Declared to a Young Astronomer

David Block

Editorial

The Premature Victory of a Vacant Cross

Daniel Harrell

When Violent Nationalism Backfired for God’s People

Michael Bird

Pray to God for Protection. Then Praise Him for Your Mask.

News

Christian Lawyers Fight COVID-19 Home Evictions

Bekah McNeel

News

A World Vision Employee Is Still Awaiting Fair Trial in Israel

Did a Prophet Speak to You?

News

Indian Government Regulation Squeezes Christian Charities

Luke Scorziell 

News

Gleanings: March 2021

News

How Big and Small Nashville Churches Feed Hungry Families

Excerpt

Christian Parents: You Don’t Have to Protect Your Children from Divergent Opinions

Rebecca McLaughlin

Our March Issue: When Church Is Not ‘Home’

Scriptural Meditation Promises Something Better than Zen

Reply All

Ordinary Life Is Crammed with Heaven

Interview by Charlie Peacock

Review

Evangelical Thinking on the Trinity Is Often Remarkably Revisionist

Michael Allen

Review

The Problem with À La Carte Politics

David Henreckson

Replanting Can Work. A Church Just Has to Die and Rise Again.

View issue

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