Books

New & Noteworthy Books

Compiled by Matt Reynolds.

Imperfect Reflections: The Art of Christian Journaling

Kirsten Birkett (Christian Focus)

Before there were blogs, Substacks, or social media pages, people recorded their thoughts by hand, in journals. Lots still do, of course, and Kirsten Birkett, a writer and former lecturer at Oak Hill College in London, is among their number. In Imperfect Reflections, Birkett draws on the Puritan tradition to recommend journaling as a tool of spiritual growth. “I had … always been a little ashamed of my compulsive journaling,” she writes. “Having been awakened to the Puritan practice, however, I started to take [it] more seriously” and think “about the way in which it contributes to my growth in the Lord.”

The Gates of Hell: An Untold Story of Faith and Perseverance in the Early Soviet Union

Matthew Heise (Lexham Press)

The cover of Matthew Heise’s book features a grainy black-and-white photo commemorating the ordination of a Lutheran pastor in the summer after the Bolsheviks came to power in Russia. Heise, director of the Lutheran Heritage Foundation, notes that “within twelve years of this gathering,” both this pastor and his father, also a pastor, “would die in Soviet labor camps,” while “three of the other pastors in the photo … would walk the path to Golgotha that so many believers in Russia would travel.” The Gates of Hell recounts the faithfulness and fortitude of embattled Lutheran communities amid the terrors of Soviet persecution.

Necessary Christianity: What Jesus Shows We Must Be and Do

Claude R. Alexander Jr. (InterVarsity Press)

In the Gospels, Jesus tells us who, and what, he is: the Bread of Life, for instance, or the Light of the World. Statements like these capture the essence of the Good News. As Claude Alexander argues in Necessary Christianity, however, we’re apt to neglect the must statements that Scripture applies to Jesus or that Jesus applies to himself and, by extension, to his disciples. “The life to which the Christian is called is a life of necessity,” writes Alexander, senior pastor of The Park Church in Charlotte, North Carolina (and CT board member), whose chapters cover themes like focus, progress, direction, and diligence. “God calls the Christian to live with a sense of the necessary, the obliged, and the required.”

Also in this issue

Our cover story this month examines the dramatic increase in physician-assisted deaths in Canada and its growing public acceptance. How are Christian doctors navigating this shifting landscape? How can the church respond? Plus: What healing looks like in Buffalo six months after the Tops massacre, ancient images of women in ministry, Paul’s model for social media, and more.

Cover Story

Canada Euthanized 10,000 People in 2021. Has Death Lost Its Sting?

Ewan C. Goligher

Myanmar’s Christians Fight for Peace

News

Environmental Train Wreck: Houston’s Black Churches Fight Pollutants

Phoebe Suy Gibson in Houston

In a Sea of National Tragedies, Look to Buffalo’s Christians

Lament Is More Than a Country Song

What’s Wrong with Winsomeness?

The Collateral Damage of Sin

A New Solution to Gun Violence: Neighborly Care

Jen Pollock Michel

Conversation Is Hospitality—Even on Social Media

John Koessler

What Ancient Italian Churches Tell Us About Women in Ministry

Photo essay by Radha Vyas

Our November Issue: What Happens When We Testify

Kelli B. Trujillo

News

Why Should Pastors Get All the Good Theology Textbooks?

Excerpt

Don’t Let Missions Fall Prey to ‘Genericide’

Steve Richardson

Reply All

We See the Morning Star More Brightly Through the Ages

Testimony

I Untied My Noose and Took Up My Cross

Eduardo F. Rocha

News

‘Our Father Who Art in Heaven’ Evidence of Russian Torture

News

Billy Graham Gets State-of-the-Art Archive

News

More Evangelical Women Have Had Sex With Women Than You Might Think

Tell Me Your Beliefs on Sex Without Telling Me Your Beliefs on Sex

Interview by Rachel Gilson

Review

The World’s Logic Says Diversity Begets Division. Gospel Logic Says Otherwise.

Danny Slavich

Review

Christian Orthodoxy Is Your Ticket to a Land of Adventure

Michael F. Bird

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