Books

New & Noteworthy Books

Compiled by Matt Reynolds.

The Minority Experience: Navigating Emotional and Organizational Realities

Adrian Pei (InterVarsity Press)

Even in workplaces that make a point of recruiting, hiring, and developing the gifts of ethnic minorities, cultural blind spots and power imbalances can lead to tension and frustration. In The Minority Experience, Adrian Pei, an organizational development consultant and leadership trainer with experience in Cru’s Asian American ministry, walks through the practical and emotional challenges faced by minorities working in organizations predominated by white leaders or white cultural norms. In sections on understanding and redeeming the minority experience, Pei shows how minority employees can thrive amid cross-cultural confusions and how organizations can do a better job making them feel welcome.

Atheist Overreach: What Atheism Can’t Deliver

Christian Smith (Oxford University Press)

Contemporary atheists are confident that secular values can furnish a society’s moral foundations, that science can disprove God’s existence, and that there is nothing inherent in human nature that inclines most people to seek truth or solace in religion. In each instance, according to sociologist Christian Smith in Atheist Overreach, this confidence is misplaced. Without making any claims as to whether “atheism as a worldview is fundamentally right or wrong,” Smith argues that “many contemporary atheist activists are trying to claim too much, attempting to establish positions that are unwarranted,” and “going overboard in confidence and enthusiasm.”

Why I Love the Apostle Paul: 30 Reasons

John Piper (Crossway)

As John Piper explains in the opening lines of this book, a series of short meditations on the apostle Paul, “I have lived with [him] for over sixty years—admired him, envied him, feared him, pounded on him, memorized him, written poems about him, wept over his sufferings, soared with him, sunk to the brink of death with him, spent eight years preaching through his longest letter, imitated him. Ha—imitated him! In ten lives, I would not come close to his sufferings—or what he saw.” Through Piper’s “highly personal,” impressionistic strokes, the book articulates why the apostle is emphatically worthy of our admiration and trust.

Also in this issue

The still-young experiment of retirement as vacation, birthed in the second half of the 20th century, is not working out for millions who are approaching or already are well into their 60s. Are there new ways of thinking about retirement for those who fear financial ruin at the end of their so-called working years?

Our Latest

Latino Churchesโ€™ Vibrant Testimony

Hispanic American congregations tend to be young, vibrant, and intergenerational. The wider church has much to learn with and from them.

Review

Modern โ€˜Technocultureโ€™ Makes the World Feel Unnaturally Godless

By changing our experience of reality, it tempts those who donโ€™t perceive God to conclude that he doesnโ€™t exist.

The Bulletin

A Brief Word from Our Sponsor

The Bulletin recaps the 2024 vice presidential debate, discusses global religious persecution, and explores the dynamics of celebrity Christianity.

News

Evangelicals Struggle to Preach Life in the Top Country for Assisted Death

Canadian pastors are lagging behind a national push to expand MAID to those with disabilities and mental health conditions.

Excerpt

The Chinese Christian Who Helped Overcome Illiteracy in Asia

Yan Yangchu taught thousands of peasants to read and write in the early 20th century.

What Would Lecrae Do?

Why Kendrick Lamarโ€™s question matters.

No More Sundays on the Couch

COVID got us used to staying home. But itโ€™s the work of Godโ€™s people to lift up the name of Christ and receive Godโ€™s Wordโ€”together.

Review

Safety Shouldnโ€™t Come First

A theologian questions our habit of elevating this goal above all others.

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