Featured Articles

Tami Zietse

The Case for “Messed Up” Stories

There was a time in my career when the father of one of my students (in a different decade and a different state) requested a conference with me to advocate for the use of Christian biographies instead of fiction. His argument, although well-meaning, seemed designed to protect students instead of preparing them for life in a complicated world—and lacked any acknowledgement or awareness of the challenge of finding stories that students will actually read and engage with.

Featured Articles

Wes Granberg-Michaelson

Your Leap of Change

All of us spend much of our lives constructing the protection we think we need to survive and thrive. These layers of defense work well until crisis hits and they start to crumble. At this point you face a choice: double down on the defenses, or open yourselves to the pain and discover the life that is waiting to be revealed to you. In a book by Kelley Nikondeha I first read this truth, “Only the pain we name is available for transformation.”

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Jon Witt

Fact Checking the Reformed Journal

But Jeff wasn’t asking for a dissertation-level, academic deep dive on any of these claims. He was just curious about the general consensus out there

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Jared Ayers

For Those Who Fret About It

For much of my pastoral life, I’ve conversed in living rooms, at park benches, and in bars and cafés with people wondering about Christian faith,

Featured
Scott VanderStoep

My Last Letter to Zak

Earlier this summer, I wrote my last letter to a boyhood friend. He was executed 11 days after I mailed it. In his letter to

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Marc Nelesen

My Friendship with Walter Brueggemann

Walter was one who lived at his own crossroads of shame and grace, light and dark, brokenness and redemption. In Jungian terms, he befriended his

Latest from the Blog

Daily blog by our regular bloggers & guest contributors.

Jared Ayers

Day One Rant

Faith & Formation This year, I’ve started adjunct-teaching a class at Palm Beach Atlantic University, here in West Palm Beach, called Christian Faith & Formation.

Terry DeYoung

Making America Inaccessible Again

Trump’s second term has included numerous orders threatening or nullifying advances of the Disability Rights Movement that have taken decades to achieve.

Nancy Knol

My Hand Over My Mouth

Job’s response is so fitting. “You have spoken of things too wonderful for me. I put my hand over my mouth.”

Kyle Meyaard-Schaap

Sinners: This is Who We Are

Right on cue came the well-choreographed public dismay, along with one of the most well-rehearsed lines in our grotesque public liturgy: “This is not who

James Gould

The Witness of the Witnesses

Who knew? This small Christian sect, considered heterodox by many, stood firm against an evil regime.

Harlan Van Oort

Don’t Hate Your Customer

I tend to call them campers. People without a home care more about finding a place to rest than what we call them.

Reviews

Doug Brouwer

A Sustaining Vision: The Soulwork of Justice

In an era when social justice movements often burn bright and fast, leaving exhausted activists in their wake, Wes Granberg-Michaelson offers something desperately needed: a

Jeff Munroe

Searching for the Elusive

Socrates, who famously said that the unexamined life is not worth living, never met Doyle Shields, the main character in Thomas Lynch’s novel No Prisoners.

Beth Carroll

Bearing Witness to Scars

I was 21, unmarried, and pregnant the day I sat across from my pastor, asking for help. My voice was trembling, my future uncertain. He

Habeeb G. Awad

Colonialism, Racism, and Empire

What if the Israeli-Palestinian war isn’t just a political dispute, but a colonial project with deep historical roots, and what if our understanding of Christian

Mindy Miller

In Equal Measure, His Heart Expanded

I started asking for a horse in the third grade. My parents, wary of what might be a passing fancy, wisely refused. As I grew

Poetry

Poetry
Steven Peterson

A Famine of Words

It says right there in Amos chapter eight: “The time is surely coming,” syas the Lord …

Poetry
Karen An-Hwei Lee

Awake

An olive tree, aflame in my mind, awake in the wee hours …

Poetry
Lila Tindall

On Absolution

I pass the big nursery on the way to see my father for the first time in a year …

Podcasts

Podcast
Rose Postma

“A Famine of Words” by Steven Peterson

In this episode of the Reformed Journal Podcast, the poetry edition, Rose Postma interviewed Steven Peterson about his poem “A Famine of Words.” Steven is

Podcast
Rose Postma

“On Absolution” by Lila Tindall

In this episode of the Reformed Journal Podcast, the poetry edition, Rose Postma talks with Lila Robinett Tindall about her poem “On Absolution.” Lila is

Podcast
Rose Postma

“Grafting Apple Shoots” by Betsy Howard

In this episode of the Reformed Journal Podcast, the poetry edition, Rose Postma talks with Betsy Howard about her poem “Grafting Apple Shoots.” Betsy serves

Podcast
Rose Postma

“Annunication” by Janet Heller

In this episode of the Reformed Journal Podcast, the Poetry Edition, Rose Postma talks with Janet Ruth Heller about her poem “Annunication.” Heller is the