BOOKS: Worth Mentioning

* The Martyr. Readers who were moved by Larry Woiwode’s essay in CT’s sister publication Books & Culture, “A Martyr Who Lives” (Mar./Apr. 1996), will want to find a copy of “Christianity for the Twenty-first Century: The Prophetic Writings of Alexander Men” (Continuum, 226 pp.; $19.95, paper), edited by Elizabeth Roberts and Ann Shukman. This anthology of writings by the martyred Russian priest includes the lecture he gave on the night before he was killed.

* The Female Impersonator. Gilbert Meilander is a bold man. In “Letters to Ellen” (Eerdmans, 93 pp.; $9, paper), he assumes the voice of a mother writing to her daughter in college. He accomplishes this audacious feat not by mimicry–not one real-life mother in a thousand writes letters like this–but by creating a charmingly stylized voice that invites suspension of disbelief. The letters (most of which first appeared in the “Christian Century”) come equipped with thematic titles; they range widely, from “Lenten Discipline” to “Passing Exams,” from “Uncompulsive” to “Neg-ative About Affirmation.” Warning! If you buy one copy, you’ll end up buying several more to give to friends.

* The Ironist. Martin Marty has completed the third volume of a projected four in his magisterial chronicle Modern American Religion. In this latest installment, “Under God, Indivisible: 1941-1960” (University of Chicago Press, 548 pp.; $34.95, hardcover), Marty continues to write history in the ironic mode (see, for example, his account of the founding of CHRISTIANITY TODAY). Here the governing irony is that even as the national mythology proclaimed an unprecedented consensus, America was about to fragment into the tribes of the ’60s. Look for a full review in a future issue of CT.

Copyright © 1996 Christianity Today. Click for reprint information.

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Faith Unto Death: The Suffering Church, Part 2: The challenge of modern martyrs

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Quashing Political Violence Requires We Tame Our Tongues

The manifesto of the WHCD shooting suspect was biblically superficial and wrong. It was also unsettlingly familiar.

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Trust in Higher Ed, Marijuana Status, NFL Draft, and West Bank Violence

Public confidence in universities, medical marijuana risk, NFL draft picks, and understanding the Israeli settler movement.

Review

God Didn’t Make a Zero-Sum World

Ian Shapiro argues that democracy depends on spreading the wealth. But Christians are equipped to live in love, not fear.

Excerpt

Competence Is Deeper Than Confidence

David Thomas

An excerpt from Capable: How to Teach Your Kids the Strengths, Skills, and Strategies to Build Resilience.

The Syllabus

In College, AI Is a Friend and Foe

Students discuss how the technology can serve as a learning tool but can also lead to dishonesty and laziness.

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