Books

New & Noteworthy Books

Compiled by Matt Reynolds.

Blood and Fire: Revival Movements That Transformed Culture and Society

Nigel Scotland (Cascade Books)

From Northampton, Massachusetts, to Lowestoft, England, the locations where revivals erupt can feel as unpredictable as the Spirit who kindles them. In Blood and Fire, religion scholar Nigel Scotland explores 10 revivals that occurred in the United States and Great Britain, touching on familiar episodes and more obscure events alike. As Scotland explains, studying these spiritual outpourings can furnish us with a “deeper awareness of [God’s] concern and compassion for the world and its peoples.”

Theology That Sticks: The Life-Changing Power of Exceptional Hymns

Chris Anderson (Church Works media)

When it comes to varying styles of church music, Chris Anderson, a self-described “music junkie,” might check the box for “all of the above.” His great passion, though, is for hymns—he’s written dozens—and in Theology That Sticks, he unpacks their virtues. “Great Christian music,” writes Anderson, “is a means of grace. It helps you grow in your faith, delight in your God, and even combat your sin.”

Redeeming Vision: A Christian Guide to Looking at and Learning from Art

Elissa Yukiko Weichbrodt (Baker Academic)

Looking at art, for some, counts as a highbrow hobby. But even those who disclaim the artsy label are deeply shaped by an array of images, from the mundane to the sublime. Weichbrodt, an art history professor at Covenant College, writes Redeeming Vision “for the museumgoers, yes, but also for the Instagram scrollers, the meme gatherers, the magazine readers, the ad watchers, the graphic novel lovers, the coffee table book flippers, and the cell phone photo editors.” The book walks believers through various tools for seeing and grappling with the world of artwork around them.

Also in this issue

What does ministry look like when every day might be one’s last? Our cover story details the ongoing work of several Ukrainian pastors who’ve led scattered and traumatized congregations through a year of war. Also in this issue: ministry to moms and babies in post-Dobbs Mississippi, what the tower of Babel really means, and Chinese ministries that use tea to bridge generational divides.

Cover Story

Ministers in Ukraine Are ‘Ready to Meet God at Any Moment’

The Bono Interview: Plaudits and Problems

News

Church Planting After the Fall (of the Berlin Wall)

God’s Yoke for the Decision Fatigued

Let’s Rethink the Evangelical Gender Wars

Divine Abundance Is More Than a Charismatic Hobbyhorse

Testimony

I Was the Proverbial, Drug-Fueled Rock and Roller

Benjamin Budde

6 Ways to Parent Your Kids for the New Creation

The Stage or the Cross?

Our March Issue: Illumination and Illusion

Kelli B. Trujillo

‘Why Church?’ Is the Wrong Question

I Don’t Want to Be a Universalist

Richard Mouw

News

Mississippi Evangelicals Prepare to Welcome Dobbs Babies

News

Evangelicals Outgrow Catholics in Central America

News

Israeli Academics Question Archaeological Discoveries

News

With Gossip of the Gospel, the Church Grows in Nepal

Words Are Holy. So Why Don’t We Talk Like They Are?

Paul J. Pastor

Beware Our Tower of Babel

John Walton

Can Bubble Tea Bring Gen Z into the Chinese Church?

David Platt: We Take the Gospel to the Nations, as the Nations

Review

All the World’s Not a Stage

Benjamin Vrbicek

Review

What Women Miss When They Go Missing from Church

Megan Hill

Excerpt

The Bible Gives Investors Like Me a New Perspective on Risk

Henry Kaestner

View issue

Our Latest

‘Saint Nicholas Is Our Guy’

A conversation with printmaker Ned Bustard on what traditions teach about the joy of generosity.

Lord Over LinkedIn

Jacob Zerkle

As layoffs mount amid economic uncertainty, lots of us are looking for work. Here’s how to approach the process.

‘A Shot Came Out of Nowhere’

CT reported on the assassination of a president, a Supreme Court ban on Bible-reading in schools, and Martin Luther King Jr.’s “I Have a Dream” speech.

Review

Looking Back 100 Years

John Fea

Three history books to read this month.

The Bulletin

National Guard Shooting, a Bad Deal for Ukraine, and US War Crimes?

Mike Cosper, Russell Moore

Asylum-seeking paused after shooting tragedy, Russia rejects peace plan, and Hegseth scrutinized for Venezuelan boat attacks.

The 12 Neglected Movies of Christmas

Nathaniel Bell

The quest for a perfect fruitcake, a petty larcenist, and a sly Scottish dramedy should all grace your small screen this season.

News

Amid Peace Talks, Russian Drone Damages Christian School in Kyiv

Ukrainians are wary of any plan that gives Moscow its “Christmas wish list.”

Make Faith Plausible Again

Bryce Hales

A peculiar hospitality can awaken faith in our secular contexts.

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