If there is one thing that most Christian want to know, it is what God’s will is for their lives. The topic usually arises…
Denis Haack
Finding the Lost: Cultural Keys to Luke 15 (Kenneth Bailey, 1992)
Since the Bible is a literary work set in a particular cultural and historical setting, we must seek to read the text as the…
Financing the American Dream: A Cultural History of Consumer Credit (Lendol Calder, 1999)
When Dr. Calder, a historian at Augustana College, began his research, he held two beliefs about the rise of consumer credit—beliefs held by most…
Eyes Wide Open: Looking for God in Popular Culture ( William D. Romanowski, 2001)
I was speaking at a conference at Covenant Seminary recently when a participant raised a question that I am asked regularly: What books could…
Everyday Apocalypse: The Sacred Revealed in Radiohead, the Simpsons and Other Pop Icons (David Dark, 2002)
David Dark teaches English in Nashville, Tennessee, and so is in a good position to tell us we don't know the correct meaning of…
Evangelical Faith: A Personal Plea for Unity, Integrity, and Faithfulness (John Stott, 1999)
At a time when the evangelical movement continues to fragment instead of demonstrating unity in Christ, when many believers who identify themselves as evangelicals…
The Essential IVP Reference Collection (CD-ROM, 2001)
Christians who desire to be discerning take Bible study seriously. And serious students of Scripture will want to use good reference books as they…
The Journey: Our Quest for Faith and Meaning (Os Guiness, 2001)
We have regularly called attention to the Trinity Forum Study Series, convinced that they will stimulate thoughtful discussion on issues that matter. These two…
Engaging Unbelief: A Captivating Strategy from Augustine and Aquinas (Curtis Chang, 2000)
The first introduction many Christians were given to postmodernism came not by reading some postmodern thinker, but in a vague sense of unease. Somehow…
Breaking the Da Vinci Code: Answers to the Questions Everyone’s Asking (Darrell L. Bock, 2004)
An enormous amount of material—some thoughtful, some silly, some reactionary—has appeared in response to Dan Brown's novel, The Da Vinci Code and Ron Howard's…