Featured Articles

Scott VanderStoep

A Personal Rememberance of Professor Fred Johnson

Fred gave his heart to everyone—his students in Holland and Muskegon, family, friends, voters. It’s hard to absorb the tragedy of someone who gave away his emotional heart and then lost his physical heart. His regalia was draped over the front seat at our most recent commencement, where Fred would sit after he marshaled the graduates to their seats. The loss is so great because the hole he left is so big. So much talent and energy gone without warning. And he still had gas in the tank. I remember his phrase: “Complete the mission.” Everyone who knew him believed that his mission was not complete, leaving us angry, empty, and struggling to understand this great loss. Thank God we had Fred as long as we did. We wanted more.

Featured Articles

Roy Anker

Terrence Malick: Then and Soon

Readers of Job know these questions (38: 4, 7) compose part of God’s response (such as it is) to Job’s queries about his profuse personal loss–of family, respect, and fortune. Perhaps the only thing unique about Job’s circumstance is that this time, for Job, God bothers to respond at all, a courtesy that even the cross-nailed Jesus does not get in response to his question about forsakenness. In the films of Terrence Malick, these eternally vexing questions replay over and over in innumerable varieties of inexorable wrestle, struggles full of sound and fury, blood and death, and tears and groaning. Still, despite the woe, in Malick film after Malick film, beginning in 1998 with combat film The Thin Red Line, there emerges a sort of luminous splendor, wondrous and revelatory, a counter of sorts to an ever-lurking, predatory evil that randomly devours all, including, horribly, children.

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J. Todd Billings, Suzanne McDonald, and Alberto La Rosa Rojas

What is Reformed Theology, Anyway?

Editor’s Note: Following is an excerpt from chapter one, “A Reformed Theology Primer: Misconceptions and Realities,” from Generously Reformed: Theology Rooted Deep and Wide. Slow

Featured
Beth Carroll

When the Faucet Runs Dry

Anger has had something of a reputation problem in Christian circles, especially for women. We tend to associate anger with sin. When I was younger,

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Daily blog by our regular bloggers & guest contributors.

Bethany Cok

Julian’s Hazelnut

It feels captivating that the world might be cradled in the palm of a hand, not merely created by the love of God but sustained

James Gould

The Subversive Social Trinity

The dominant Western social imaginary is individualistic. Hierarchical. Authoritarian. The doctrine of the Trinity is anything but.

Allison Vander Broek

Rage, Despair, and Hope

What do our professed values matter if we allow genocide to happen? Does any of our lofty rhetoric about freedom, democracy, and the value of

Dana VanderLugt

Nothing is Small about Our Talk

Church spaces are full of small talk. It’s often in narthexes and the backs of sanctuaries, during coffee hour or community meals, that our children

Reviews

Kathy Schuitema

The Courage to Welcome

Welcome drops all boundaries around the sacred space of her home, while her neighbors create impenetrable barriers and include her in their condemnation of the

James Hart Brumm

Generously Reformed

…even with is flaws and shortcomings, the Reformed tradition can be a fruitful pathway for growing deeper into maturity in Christ, for hearing the testimony

Marilyn McEntyre

The Outer Edges of Prayer

He declares, “This isn’t / exactly a prayer. It’s more / the unbelieving yelp of prey grabbed suddenly by a wolf . . . .”

Poetry

Poetry
Brian Phipps

Aeronaut

We’d become accustomed to the wonders that he worked–the wheel that drives the mill …

Poetry
Alex Arthurs

Broken Balm

Life does not consist of accumulating small comforts …

Poetry
Marjorie Maddox

Sowing

Yes, the seeds are small, the ground hard and rocky …

Podcasts

Podcast
Rose Postma

“Aeronaut” by Brian Phipps

In this episode of the Reformed Journal Podcast, the poetry edition, Rose Postma interviews Brian G. Phipps about his poem “Aeronaut.” Brian is the author

Podcast
Rose Postma

“Broken Balm” by Alex Arthurs

In this week’s episode of the Reformed Journal Podcast, the poetry edition, Rose Postma interviews Alex Arthurs about his poem “Broken Balm.” Alex is husband

Podcast
Rose Postma

“Sowing” by Marjorie Maddox

In this episode of the Reformed Journal Podcast, Rose Postma interviews Marjorie Maddox about her poem “Sowing.” Marjorie is Professor Emerita of English and Creative