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Featured image for “Corrupted Comforts: A Review of <em>Restless Devices</em>”
January 11, 2022
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Books

Corrupted Comforts: A Review of Restless Devices

by Kayt Frisch
…only do our phones serve as our telephone (that old-school device for voice-to-voice communication), they are also our navigation aid, our portable music player, our entertainment device, our internet access point, and our camera. They allow us to distract ourselves and to connect with others. Constantly. In the beginning, this ubiquity seemed like a boon, but in recent years, more and more people have started to raise concerns about the seemingly…
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Featured image for “The Shared Virtues of Science and Faith: A Review of <em>Why Science and Faith Need Each Other</em>”
March 11, 2021
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Books

The Shared Virtues of Science and Faith: A Review of Why Science and Faith Need Each Other

by Channon Visscher
…et accessible summaries. Finally, Ecklund’s present work provides an always-welcome reminder of the motiving values for scientific study, born out of humble curiosity and even a love built upon a shared human experience of the world. The cultivation of these shared virtues can move us away from a self-fulfilling conflict narrative and instead toward a posture of wonder and gratitude (Ecklund’s closing virtue) as together we explore and enjoy the b…
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Featured image for “De profundis: Lament in Worship”
June 20, 2018
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Essays

De profundis: Lament in Worship

by Karen A. DeMol
…lm 13” https://worship.calvin.edu/resources/resource-library/the-psalm-with-a-painful-lament-psalm-13/ ↩ “While I kept silence, my body wasted away through my groaning all day long. For day and night your hand was heavy upon me; my strength was dried up as by the heat of summer. Then I acknowledged my sin to you, and I did not hide my iniquity; I said, ‘I will confess my transgressions to the Lord,’ and you forgave the guilt of my sin.” Psalm 32:3…
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Featured image for “Christian Justice: A Review of <em>Becoming a Just Church</em>”
July 18, 2019
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Books

Christian Justice: A Review of Becoming a Just Church

by Abby Foreman
…from the onslaught of ugliness and injustice that we see and experience day-to-day… I believe it is the responsibility of every church, irrespective of context and social location, to weave the pursuit of God’s shalom as a way of life into the cultural fabric of the congregation. Without it, we are not fully the church (195). The church should occupy the low ground, it should be welcoming to Arnade’s back row, it is the place where all people shou…
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Featured image for “The Making of Beautiful Things: A Review of <em>Adorning the Dark</em>”
October 5, 2021
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Books

The Making of Beautiful Things: A Review of Adorning the Dark

by Channon Visscher
…hy?), or his Wingfeather Saga series of books—will find a reflective behind-the-scenes look at Andrew’s journey as a singer-songwriter, author, and maker in search of good things. These stories range from the early yet passing thrill of being able to buy his first recording equipment, to working as a Nashville waiter trying to score a gig, to the simple joy of homemade maple syrup.  Throughout this semi-autobiographical tour, Peterson explores num…
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Featured image for “Rejecting Deconstruction and Welcoming Christian Mysticism: A Review of <em> When Everything’s on Fire </em>”
May 10, 2022
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Books

Rejecting Deconstruction and Welcoming Christian Mysticism: A Review of When Everything’s on Fire

by Dave Mulder
…s a course through modernity that helps us understand that the seemingly oh-so-contemporary movement of “deconstruction” has developed over hundreds of years in the church. “…in the developments of the modern world as we’ve shifted into a postmodern culture, Christianity’s cultural dominance has declined.” Zahnd pushes forward on the contemporary discourse around “deconstruction.” At one point, he suggests that deconstruction “seems to be a method…
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Featured image for “How Did You Do It?: A Review of <em>Power Women</em> ”
March 4, 2022
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Books

How Did You Do It?: A Review of Power Women 

by Sandy Vanden Bosch
…bless those trying to use their talents to make our world a better place?”  https://www.history.com/topics/holidays/womens-history-month  ↩…
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Featured image for “Pentecost. It’s a Big Deal.”
June 4, 2017
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Essays

Pentecost. It’s a Big Deal.

by Caleb Schut
…one who goes to church on Christmas and Easter only) you should consider becoming a C&E&P-er. Pentecost is THAT big of a deal. It’s summer’s version of Christmas. The Christmas of the Spirit. Christmas, of course, is God becoming a person. Christmas means God hasn’t washed his hands of us. Love came down at Christmas as the song goes. But without Pentecost, we wouldn’t be celebrating it. At Pentecost, the living Christ (shout out to our #2 holiday…
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Featured image for “Keep the Hope Alive: A Review of <em>Imagining Theology</em>”
July 23, 2020
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Books

Keep the Hope Alive: A Review of Imagining Theology

by Justin Bailey
…ion can be distinguished from a more popular emphasis within the Christian community on “having a biblical worldview.” Worldview thinking has come under substantial critique in recent years as being excessively oriented towards propositional beliefs.1 This limited approach renders discipleship as a matter of downloading “what Scripture says” on any given subject. It fails precisely because it neglects our imaginative embeddedness: Scripture and so…
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Featured image for “The Essence of Hospitality”
October 19, 2017
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Devotions

The Essence of Hospitality

by Stephanie Doeschot
Daily Scripture Texts Psalm 96:1-9 Judges 17:1-6 3 John 9-12 For many years, I thought that hospitality was no more than providing meals or even overnight stays for people in our homes, or within the church—a cup of coffee and some cookies, accompanied by warm greetings for all in attendance at worship. It wasn’t until I realized that hospitality is actually a spiritual discipline that I began to grow in an expanded understanding of hospitality….
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Featured image for “Looking for “Deep Rest”: Confronting the Idolatry of Personal Success”
February 23, 2021
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Essays

Looking for “Deep Rest”: Confronting the Idolatry of Personal Success

by Justin Ariel Bailey
…ant that I had come to the end of my own resources; the illusion of my omni-competence had been unmasked. What I needed was not just “deep work,” but “deep rest.” The question that rose in my mind went something like this: “when will it ever be enough?”   This question was reinforced to me recently, after NFL quarterback Tom Brady won his record seventh Super Bowl. The consensus among sports commentators was that Brady is indeed the greatest NFL w…
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Featured image for “Lessons from a Guinea Pig: Love, Fear and the Law”
February 18, 2017
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Devotions

Lessons from a Guinea Pig: Love, Fear and the Law

by Shelbi Gesch
Daily Scripture Texts Psalm 119:33-40 Leviticus 24:10-23 Matthew 7:1-12 It’s amazing, the things you can learn from a guinea pig—or a pair of them, in our family’s case. We brought S’mores and Cinnamon home from the pet store about three years ago on the day after Christmas. Since we’d never had a family pet before, we figured guinea pigs would be an easier trial run than a puppy. Besides, I told my husband, I’d already potty-trained three small…
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Featured image for “God’s Plan for the Terrible-Two’s”
February 2, 2015
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Essays

God’s Plan for the Terrible-Two’s

by Luralyn Helming
…der what science says is happening in the toddler stage of development, in comparison to the real life experiences of living with one. I have developed an appreciation of the fact that this age we refer to as “the terrible twos,” is a necessary, and even vital, stage in our development as humans. I do often have to remind myself of the value of the stage: every time my son refuses to wake up in the morning, or tries to pull his shoes off as fast a…
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Featured image for “Sharing the Burden of Gender Dysphoria”
February 1, 2018
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Essays

Sharing the Burden of Gender Dysphoria

by Mark Yarhouse
…at the National Prayer Breakfast, February 3, 1994. Retrieved from https://www.ewtn.com/library/issues/prbkmter.txt Pinckaers, Servais O.P., Morality: The Catholic View. South Bend, IN: St. Augustine’s Press, 2001. Mark A. Yarhouse, Understanding Gender Dysphoria: Navigating Transgender Issues in a Changing Culture. Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press, 2015. Mark A. Yarhouse & Dara Houp, D., Transgender Christians: “Gender identity, family relat…
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Featured image for “Trying to Understand Memorial Day”
May 25, 2020
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Essays

Trying to Understand Memorial Day

by Howard Schaap
…cy in Five Minutes.” As such, it leaves much undiscussed: the specter that Communism really was in the world (i.e., in the world it created behind the Iron Curtain); the complicated politics and dictatorships of Central and South America; the factions of Islam and the difficulty of maintaining stability in the Middle East. But, before you dismiss me as one of those people who always undermines American actions in the world when no one else will st…
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June 2, 2017
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Essays

“All The Earth Is Mine”

by Peter TeWinkle
…are playful, accessible, and interesting. At its worst, placemaking has become the latest in a long line of development trends appealing to the consumer interests of upwardly mobile whites. Either way, “placemaking” highlights the notion that people make places. What we must also recognize is that places, in turn, shape people. Hope Reformed Church began in 1942. It was a time of stress and trauma as the United States was coming out of a Great De…
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Featured image for “The Clarity of Covid-19”
May 5, 2020
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Essays

The Clarity of Covid-19

by Caleb Schut
…hard human relationship. Central to the rise in addictions is our lack of real community. “I just don’t feel like I really know anyone,” is one of the most common refrains I hear from young congregants. I don’t have to convince you that community is central to our flourishing, or that the church should be a resource for the lonely. We are learning something about that right now. In the midst of national quarantine, churches are paying attention t…
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Featured image for “Finding Simplicity for Advent—Joy”
December 8, 2022
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Culture
Devotions

Finding Simplicity for Advent—Joy

by April Fiet
…n my couch reflecting on simplicity. Next to me, I have eight crochet works-in-progress organized on my craft cart. I take a break from writing to glance at my phone, which notifies me I have 22,675 unread emails in my various email inboxes. I sip from my mug of coffee, which is sitting right next to my water bottle, and I realize something about myself: I’m not sure I know what simplicity is. A couple of summers ago, I came across the book How to…
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Featured image for “What We Talk About When We Talk About Grace: A Review of <em>Jack</em>”
October 13, 2020
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Books

What We Talk About When We Talk About Grace: A Review of Jack

by Myles Werntz
…ced a more complex embrace of grace, and in a form for which Gilead has no comfortable room—the black community. The prodigal returns to Gilead, bearing stories of God’s grace in the blackness of Memphis and St. Louis, and Gilead does not yet have the ears to hear it. In the end, none of this means that the town of Gilead is false or hypocritical, but that it is the perfect hometown for someone who knows both the joys of ample grace and the diffic…
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Featured image for “A Letter to Those Growing Up in a Post-9/11 World”
September 11, 2016
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Essays

A Letter to Those Growing Up in a Post-9/11 World

by Donald Roth
…ike me to understand what living in America as a black man feels like, but opening our ears may open our eyes to better understand what we don’t know and what we can’t understand. It may help us feel a sense of the groaning of our brothers and sisters when they feel their world shifting under their feet. After 9/11, America closed its ears to all but one narrative about why things happened and how the world worked. If we choose to follow a differe…
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Featured image for “Movie Review “Won’t You Be My Neighbor?””
October 5, 2018
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Culture

Movie Review “Won’t You Be My Neighbor?”

by Josh Matthews
…ted his show. A short scene in the movie claims that he believed in a “wide-open Christianity” that infused a “spiritual vision” into the show. His core theological doctrine was a twist on the Second Great Commandment: love your neighbor and love yourself. The “love yourself” part resembles the feel-good, power-of-positive-thinking dogmas of Presbyterian pastors of the mid-twentieth-century era, such as Norman Vincent Peale and Robert Schuller. So…
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May 30, 2017
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Books

Beaches, Barbecues, and Books: Your Guide to Summer Reading

by Gail Marincovich
…life is nothing short of hilarious. Enter Rosie, an applicant to Don’s Find-a-Wife project, whose habits, personality, and outspoken character fit none of Don’s criteria. What ensues is a comic, perfectly paced story. The writing is smart and witty, the characters themselves endearing, and while we may predict the ending, it is the only one we want. The Waiting by Cathy La Grow – This true story is a great read for those who enjoy history and loca…
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Featured image for “Is the Gospel Thriving in Postmodern Europe?”
June 25, 2019
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Essays

Is the Gospel Thriving in Postmodern Europe?

by Sacha Walicord
…refer to the Biblical Gospel of Jesus Christ and not to any Humanist “knock-off-version.” Following these assumptions, here is my personal assessment of the situation in Europe. As an Austrian, currently living in the United States and having also lived in the United Kingdom and ministered in Germany, I can best speak for these areas; however, I have been following the events in other European countries as well. The overall percentage of evangelic…
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Featured image for “I Am a Part”
November 22, 2021
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Essays

I Am a Part

by Josie De Jong
…be a student, woman, and human being of action. I wanted to say yes to once-in-a lifetime opportunities. I wanted to be vulnerable, unapologetic in my relationship with the world and the people who walk beside me on the sidewalk. I wanted to lend myself to the experiences of life, to make time for the unexpected. I wanted to cast aside my identity as the outsider.  Like a machine barely used, my capacity for experiencing the unknown left much to b…
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Featured image for “When You Fast: Fasting and the Ultimate Purpose of Your Life”
March 23, 2016
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Essays

When You Fast: Fasting and the Ultimate Purpose of Your Life

by Shane Heilman
…ays, “The LORD loves justice.” He loves it. He delights in it. And He gets really, really ticked off when justice is perverted in ANY way. He rightfully and justly (there it is again) pours out His wrath upon those who disregard justice by keeping for themselves what is far more desperately needed by others. Nearly all of the pleas for God’s wrath in the Psalms are pleas for God to bring justice into a situation. “God, wake up! If You love justice…
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