Featured Articles

Dave Medema

Powerful Women in My Life: A Sharecropper’s Daughter, A Nanny, A Prophet/Priest, A Tribal Leader

What these women offered me was not correction from the outside but transformation from the inside. They offered invitation—an invitation to become someone I did not yet know how to be. More self-aware. More centered. More vulnerable.

They helped me see that the goal was never to become a “better man” by the world’s standards. It was to become a more whole human being. And that wholeness required something I had been taught to avoid: the integration of the feminine.

Featured Articles

Featured
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,

Featured
Anthony Davis

Where’s Our Belhar?

Belhar did not define unity. It proclaimed it. It reminded the church that Christ had torn down the dividing wall of hostility, and anything that

Featured
Nicholas Wolterstorff

Honor Everyone

When mulling over a topic for my speech, some of the episodes of demeaning treatment that I had learned about over the years came to

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Daily blog by our regular bloggers & guest contributors.

David Timmer

Loving and Leaving American Evangelicalism

The more deeply rooted one is in the evangelical world – in its congregations, conferences, family and friend networks, schools, publishers, book clubs, social media

Debra Rienstra

The Spiritual Practice of Nagging

The bittersweet end of the academic year means waving a fond goodbye to our graduates and wishing them well. It also means a sigh of

James Bratt

Kuyper the Mensch

For me the book’s most intriguing contributions lie in Kuyper’s largely private, lives: as world traveler and mountaineer.

Sara Sybesma Tolsma

Mom, Are Aliens Real?

Would the presence of intelligent extraterrestrial creatures diminish human dignity or force us to reconsider what it means for us to be created in the

Reviews

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 . . . .”

David Timmer

John Calvin: Refugee Theologian

Woo’s book arrives at a moment when refugees are at the center of many crises in our world, including here in North America.

Poetry

Poetry
Alex Arthurs

Broken Balm

Lifedoes not consistofaccumulatingsmall comfortsbutofaccumulatingmany wounds smalland great heldwith patientcare slowly metabolized and given backto thewoundingandwounded worldasbroken balm. You can hear a conversation about this poem

Poetry
Marjorie Maddox

Sowing

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

Podcasts

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

Podcast
Rose Postma

“The Return of Appetite” by Andy Stager

In this episode of the Reformed Journal Podcast, the poetry edition, Rose Postma talks with Andy Stager about his poem “The Return of Appetite.” Andy