By: Rhonda Davis on January 16, 2020
I am grateful to James K. A. Smith for writing How (Not) to Be Secular. Frankly, I am not sure I would have made it through Charles Taylor’s A Secular Age without him. Smith, an evangelical professor of philosophy at Calvin College; and Taylor, a Roman Catholic professor emeritus at McGill University, are great partners…
By: Rev Jacob Bolton on January 15, 2020
“Charles Taylor’s A Secular Age is one of the most important books of the new millennium,”[1] proclaims The Christian Century, describing the massive tome as imperative reading. The good people at Theos describe it as, “long, dense, academic, and often obscured by Taylor’s idiosyncratic terminology, it is not for the faint-hearted. Nevertheless, it is original,…
By: Sean Dean on January 15, 2020
A scream of abject fear rang out around our house. It was two in the morning, within seconds we were all awake and within a couple more minutes we had all gathered on my parents bed. My sister, the source of the scream, told us how she had awoken to a demon dancing in her…
By: Shawn Cramer on January 14, 2020
Building from a rich history and tradition, Evangelicals have the opportunity to innovate towards the next adjacent possible. Duke Divinity School proposes that traditioned innovation is “a way of thinking and being that holds the past and future in tension, not in opposition, [and] is crucial to the growth and vitality of Christian institutions” (Faith…
By: Joe Castillo on January 14, 2020
I want to reflect on chapter 5 from the book “Evangelicalism in Modern Britain” because it resonates with my own Methodist experience. I want to focus primarily on “The Methodist Holiness Tradition.” as I perceive it. There are two points that I come to mind as I read the chapter; WE ARE MADE HOLY IN…
By: Greg Reich on January 13, 2020
“Listen to me, you who pursue righteousness, You who seek the LORD: Look to the rock from which you were hewn And to the quarry from which you were dug.” (Isaiah 51:1 NASB) Though I have previously studied church history I must admit that I, like many, have tended to localize and personalize it without…
By: Dylan Branson on January 13, 2020
Have you ever looked at the social institutions of our world and simply asked the question, “Why?” Why is this here? Why is this run the way it is? Why does this group of people seem to thrive under these conditions while others don’t? At times we realize that our current situations are in place…
By: Steve Wingate on January 13, 2020
“God has established boundary stones in his word. They are primarily found in the Law but are elaborated on and repeated throughout the entire Bible. Our spiritual ancestors, through the history of the Church, have set a pattern for living by these ancient landmarks. These may be our fundamental doctrines, our Biblical pattern for living,…
By: Jer Swigart on January 13, 2020
Ten days after the 2016 Presidential election, I was invited to Washington DC to offer an analysis of white Evangelicalism in America. Throughout the polarizing election season that had just concluded, many had found themselves dumbfounded by the adamant support for Donald Trump by white Evangelicals. As the months unfolded, it seemed as though the…
By: Darcy Hansen on January 13, 2020
It was cold and wet. Quiet permeated as the sun gently rose over the tree-lined ridge. The trails were muddy at the Abbey. The flow of air into my out-of-shape lungs was shallow and swift as I climbed the hill that, at the moment, felt like a mountain. I took the first right turn off…
By: Shermika Harvey on December 20, 2019
The alarm on the iPhone goes off on the nightstand as Cheyenne frantically reaches to shut it off. However, once it is in her hand, notifications for work emails and social media flood her screen. Without hesitation, she unlocks her phone and immediately begins to check the onslaught of distractions greeting her before one foot…
By: Shermika Harvey on December 19, 2019
Many years ago, I found my voice and passion for writing in the theatre. The ability to create works of fiction that imitates life without the complication of reality was fascinating. It was exhilarating to become a different version of myself without fear of rejection. Being trusted to lead the audience on a journey of…
By: Shermika Harvey on December 19, 2019
Rethinking History! The Shocking Reality of History In the Making Reading The Silk Roads: A New History of the World by British writer and historian, Peter Frankopan, sparked intrigue and bewilderment on this new interpretation of a pivotal time in history for the West. Moreover, in the book Frankopan provided a challenge to the reader…
By: Simon Bulimo on December 5, 2019
IMPORTANCE OF A TITLE IN WRITING Having an attractive title is vital for any book to be read or to not be read. Convincing people to read your book demands for a title that will make readers inquisitive and to ask questions like: what next, how and why this book is a must for one…
By: Steve Wingate on November 25, 2019
Okay, I have to say this book title sounds just a bit tad more than ironic. The title actually sounds sacrilegious! But, quite the title. As far as a marketing scheme, it is genius. Since I am probably being groomed as a scruffy cultured individual, it’s probably a must-read. So, I read. What the title…
By: Chris Pollock on November 23, 2019
The last few months have been full of all kinds of new learning for me. I have thoroughly enjoyed the books we have not read together. Yes, it has been highly informative the learning from different perspectives, viewpoints of classmates on books they haven’t read and sharing my thoughts (to the best of my ability)…
By: Nancy Blackman on November 21, 2019
https://youtu.be/BacjILwcJf4 PC: @detroitshooting James I stood before my brothers (형제) and sisters (자매) staring into their souls, hoping to hear what I wanted to hear. I have read a portion of their lives in the anthology, “Mixed Korean: Our Stories,” but that is such a small tidbit of who someone is. “The act of reading…
By: Greg Reich on November 19, 2019
We live in a world consumed with knowledge. According to Berrett-Koehler Publishers there were over 700,000 books self-published in 2015. In 2013 over 300,000 books were published by traditional publishers. To date there are well over 1 million books self-published every year. A book has less than a 1% chance of being stocked by a…
By: Jer Swigart on November 19, 2019
In How to Talk About Books You Haven’t Read, Paris-based professor of French literature and psychoanalyst, Pierre Bayard, has fused French satire with sheer brilliance. While the title suggests a hack’s guide to reading-by-never-reading, the book is a thoughtful examination of the art of reading. Throughout its pages, Bayard reveals how unrealistic it is for…
By: Dylan Branson on November 18, 2019
At some point, we’ve all be there: We were assigned to read a book and, for whatever reason, we decided we could better spend our time doing something else. Whether it be because we were just put it off for too long, we began the book and were bored to tears once we started it,…