Humility’s Inconvenient Truths
My wood-pallet compost bin is decomposing. Not only the leaves and coffee grounds and eggshells inside it, but the bin itself. It desperately needs to
My wood-pallet compost bin is decomposing. Not only the leaves and coffee grounds and eggshells inside it, but the bin itself. It desperately needs to
As I sing the servant song during evening worship, a familiar image recurs. In my imagination, I am standing on a dock, reaching down to
I love Winston Churchill stories. One of my favorites is the one that concerns the Dutch prime minister in exile during the Second World War.
Traveling on foot through the Cevennes in France, with a view to writing about the place and the people, Robert Louis Stevenson decided to buy
The Pope’s recent quotations both from Byzantine emperor Manuel II and verses from the Koran were intended as commentary on the history of rationalism, and
Paul Jonathan Willis after Charles Harper Webb As in the Apostle Paul, of course– a big name, though the word means little. I’ve always found
Reading prominent theological ethicists and social philosophers over the last couple of decades, one might get the impression that liberal democratic values and Christian beliefs
In Conceiving the Christian College, Wheaton College president Duane Litfin offers a readable and substantive apologia pro collegio suo, while helpfully illuminating broader issues facing
Please make checks out to Reformed Journal and mailed to:
PO Box 1282
Holland, MI 49422
© 2025 Reformed Journal.