The “Dumbest Generation” has Finally Grown Up
Mark Bauerlein’s follow-up to his 2008 book, The Dumbest Generation, delivers a depressing assessment of what hollowing out the academic canon has produced in the lives of students subjected to the dumbed-down curriculum.
Bauerlein’s tome is not an elderly screed that complains about kids these days. Bauerlein deftly weaves together personal experience, trenchant observations, and a host of social scientific studies to bolster his claim that the central problem of higher education reflects the fact that we have “cut the young off from a living past,” with the... Continue Reading
Review of “Reformed & Evangelical Across Four Centuries”
The value of the book comes not from any new thesis, but in its concise and informative account of American Presbyterian history.
This is a valuable book which holds the interest of the reader, no small feat for a book on Presbyterian history. The value of the book comes not from any new thesis, but in its concise and informative account of American Presbyterian history. Reformed & Evangelical across Four Centuries, The Presbyterian Story in America by... Continue Reading
An Important New Book: Covenantal and Dispensational Theologies
The contributors each make a case for their own view―representing two versions of covenantal theology and two versions of dispensational theology.
“Over the last one hundred years, the debate between dispensationalism and covenant theology has often hampered more than helped fellow Bible-believing Christians understand one another or the Scriptures they all uphold as authoritative. This book represents a welcome exception. Each writer makes a cogent case for their respective positions, and the book delivers what the... Continue Reading
Book Review: Rediscover Church
Rediscover Church: Why the Body of Christ Is Essential. By Collin Hansen & Jonathan Leeman.
Hansen and Leeman make crystal clear what they mean by church: “A church is a group of Christians who assemble as an earthly embassy of Christ’s heavenly kingdom to proclaim the good news and commands of Christ the King; to affirm one another as his citizens through the ordinances; and to display God’s own holiness... Continue Reading
Jesus and John Wayne among the Deplorables
When Activism Masquerades as History
Book Criticisms: Du Mez will entertain only those arguments that accept her framework and dismiss any theological appeals, because Evangelicalism is not defined by theology, no matter what Evangelicals themselves claim. Once the reader realizes that this is what Du Mez is up to, he can make sense of how it is that she arrives... Continue Reading
A Review of “Still Time to Care,” by Greg Johnson
Book Review: Rev. Greg Johnson shows that religious gay celibacy mostly fails; why does he think it will work today?
Still Time to Care is an important work and teaches more than the author intended. Despite obvious theological and practical deficiencies (covered by other reviews), his book unwittingly reveals the cloudy future of the celibate gay movement. If pastors, elders, and laymen have time to care, they still have time to learn the right lessons from... Continue Reading
Greg Johnson’s “Still Time to Care” Repeatedly Misrepresents the RPCES
Greg Johnson’s interpretation about what the RPCES adopted on homosexuality in 1980 is erroneous and misguided.
In Synod’s long paragraph on Call to Repentance, we find that we must not deny responsibility for or excuse “unnatural desires” even if they began in infancy. (Johnson does not quote that part of the report.) Synod’s report then disagrees with Johnson head on when it speaks of cure when it says, “In sanctification we... Continue Reading
The Real Cost of Social Media
Book Review: The goal of the book “is to help you recognize that social media is changing the way you think, feel, and live. Like water to a fish, social media has come to pervade the lives of everyone.”
In this book, he demonstrates why it is so important for Christians to think well about these world-changing, heart-shaping, soul-forming technologies. I highly recommend Terms of Service to anyone who wants to better understand how we can take back what they’ve so eagerly taken from us. Like it or not, we live in a world... Continue Reading
When Harry Became Sally: Responding to the Transgender Moment
Book Review: Must-reading for all who care about what has taken place regarding sexuality and gender identity in our society.
I appreciated Anderson’s irenic tone. These are not the rantings of a hate-filled extremist, but an invitation to carefully consider the problems of today’s transgender ideology. He treats those whom he interacts with charitably, respectfully, and politely. The author stands as an exemplar in how critics are to handle contemporary controversies. Hopefully, this will lead... Continue Reading
Book Review: The Ruthless Elimination of Hurry
The truth is, busyness and hurry has infected our lives like a plague.
In the book, Comer claims “the mind is the portal to the soul, and what you fill your mind with will shape the trajectory of your character. In the end, your life is no more than the sum of what you gave your attention to.” I’ve also heard it said “you become what you behold.”... Continue Reading
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