Featured Articles


Welcome to Green Street
This summer, the summer of 1962, was different. This was the summer of the n-word. It was spoken often, not only on Green Street, but throughout Englewood, and not just by Frank Bertolli.
Featured Articles


What Pope Francis Wanted to Change
Beneath all he modeled and accomplished, Francis was trying to change the culture of the Vatican, and of the complex structures, institutions, and patterns of exercising authority shaping the lives of 1.4 billion Catholics. He did this through modeling different behavior, through tools of persuasion in his preaching and encyclicals, through changes in personnel holding various positions of influence, and through his power to convene parties in crucial dialogue and conversation.


A (Truly)Confessional Church?
When the debate over human sexuality in the CRC picked up and Heidelberg Catechism Question and Answer 108 provided a mechanism to single out and


How Big a Jerk Will Your Reading of the Bible Allow You to Be?
Hermeneutics, the science and art of biblical interpretation, is just that, a science and art. It requires deep thought, and there is a lot of


Moving Forward Looking Backward
I couldn’t make sense of the signage. The further I walked up the trail, the further I was from the end. Then I realized that


Standing at the Intersection, Seated at the Lord’s Table
The table signifies many things, including a rhythm, a routine, and the promise that this is the bread of life and the cup of salvation.


Language Learning: Moving from Hostility to Hospitality
If I had wanted to become a fluent German speaker, I should have started before I was ten years old, which seems to be the


The End of White Western Male Supremacy – Lessons Learned from Henk Hart
Before I go any further, I should clarify that I’m not channeling Critical Race Theory or parroting something I picked up in a DEI training.
Latest from the Blog
Daily blog by our regular bloggers & guest contributors.


Free to Be Faithful
By the time May 3 rolled around, 500+ had signed up to attend the event live and 3000 had registered for the livestream. There were


Windows on Mystery: Wet
Failure is written all over this story, Peter’s failures, the church’s failure, your failures and mine. But Jesus is not done with them


Why Love?
A few weeks ago, we made the trip to New York to see Maybe Happy Ending, a new musical that opened on Broadway last year.


More Virtuous Baggage
Hi Ron: I’m glad to have you for my ideal reader because the stuff I’m discussing in this series can get very heavy and abstract.


Creativity and Positive Freedom
Positive freedom works to create something. It aims to build a society where all flourish.


Dire Wolf-ish
Dire wolves roamed the Americas during the last ice age but went extinct more than 10,000 years ago


Hope with a British Accent
These two men did something very small for humankind, but it meant the world to me.


Uncomfortable about Power
Black power did not mean white disempowerment but the right of all people to exercise agency for themselves.
Reviews


The Pitt (TV Show)
Through Wylie’s grizzled and weary portrayal of a dedicated Emergency Room Chief Resident, The Pitt reminds us of our need for good shepherds to guide


James: A Novel
One of the “it” books of 2024, James has been enjoyed by many, including former president Barack Obama.


Defiant Dreams: The Journey of An Afghan Girl Who Risked Everything for Education
“In Afghanistan, you have to fear for the future of an educated child.”


A Balm for Gilead: Meditations on Spirituality and the Healing Arts
Health professionals have long emphasized a certain mental toughness that, although quite functional and healthy in many ways, can sometimes lead to a dysfunctional and


Holland is a Dud
I’m sorry to say, Holland is a dud, a movie with more plot holes than a piece of Swiss cheese (with no Gouda or Edam


The Way of Belonging: Reimagining Who We Are and How We Relate
Westfall encourages her readers to not only know and accept our belonging to God but also to live into the fact that belonging isn’t where


The Light Eaters: How the Unseen World of Plant Intelligence Offers a New Understanding of Life on Earth
Schlanger’s extensive review of cutting-edge plant research reveals that our green neighbors have numerous tricks up their shady sleeves.


How to End Christian Nationalism
Amanda Tyler’s timely new book, How to End Christian Nationalism, is a short and accessible addition to an expanding list of books written by Christians
Poetry


Manual Labor
Against the turnings of solstice hope sprouts eternal …


Wrapped and Laid
Wrapped and laid beginning and end bloth and cloth birth and death …


Every Sunday Morning
the phone rings–my grandmother’s voice winds through static, light as the creek curling around her back porch …


It’s About Us
It’s about us which is an empathy pronoun, replacing her and him and you and it and, praise the Lord, other.


Lost Sheep
Seventy-seven pounds of wool on that merino sheep who got lost
in the Outback.


Table
Let the sparrow take a chair at the Juneteenth table with Elijah …
Podcasts

“Manual Labor” by Caroline Liberatore
In this episode of the Reformed Journal Podcast, the poetry edition, Rose Postma talks with Caroline Liberatore about her poem “Manual Labor.” Liberatore is a

“Wrapped and Laid” by Bill Howden
In this week’s episode of the Reformed Journal Podcast, the poetry edition, Rose Postma interviews William D. Howden on his poem “Wrapped and Laid.” Howden

“Every Sunday Morning” by Taylor Mallay
In this episode of the Reformed Journal Podcast, the poetry edition, Rose Postma interviews Taylor Mallay about her poem “Every Sunday Morning.” Mallay is a

“It’s About Us” by Mark Hiskes
In this episode of the Reformed Journal Podcast, the poetry edition, Rose Postma interviews Mark Hiskes about his poem “It’s About Us.” Hiskes is a


“Lost Sheep” by Margaret DeRitter
In this episode of the Reformed Journal Podcast, the poetry edition, Rose Postma talks with Margaret DeRitter about her poem “Lost Sheep.” DeRitter is the


“Table” by Patrick T. Reardon
In this episode of the Reformed Journal Podcast, the poetry edition, Rose Postma talks with Patrick T. Reardon about his poem “Table.” Reardon, who was