Featured Articles

Tom Boogaart

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 I was hiking on the land of indigenous people who, unlike Westerners, viewed their world as expanding from a single source and marked space and time from their point of origin. The Agua Caliente people were telling me how far I had come from where I had begun. That perspective gave me pause. It is wise counsel, not only on the Murray Canyon trail, but on the trail of life. Always be mindful of the place where you began. 

Featured Articles

Zachary K. Pearce

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. Whenever we approach, we do so within and amid the chaotic bustling of the world around us and the many demands of our lives that seek to call our attention away.

Featured
Caroline J. Simon

In the Overlap: A Short Story

I have no idea how to be a decent soon-to-be-former-mother-in-law. My local library has no self-help books on the topic. I find no such books

Featured
Don Tamminga

A Lesson Never Learned

Because synod has left no space for other opinions, the end result is going to be disaffiliation. The fact that our congregation was even in

Featured
Rebecca Tellinghuisen

Remember to Take and Eat

I wonder if I kept that cup of July 2023 yogurt because I was savoring a memory or because I was fearing loss. But there

Latest from the Blog

Daily blog by our regular bloggers & guest contributors.

Tim Van Deelen

Blossom and Rise

A friend asked me weeks ago now, “what can we do?” and I put him off, promising I’d think about it and write something. But

Jennifer L. Holberg

Our Own Superheroes

Because I moved so often as a child–nine places but thirteen residences–I’m apt to say I’m not really “from” anywhere. But that’s probably not totally

Sophie Mathonnet-VanderWell

Tribal Loyalty

I have spent a lifetime metabolizing split allegiances and belonging to different tribes.

James Gould

When the Darkness is Gone

If we think God is a vindictive judge, we’ll imitate that God, on the assumption that God loves a favored few and hates everyone else.

Cambria Kaltwasser

Heaven’s Laughter

It is not surprising that Jesus should speak of laughter and rejoicing as the proper response to his announcement of reversals at hand with the

James Bratt

Virtuous Baggage: I

It’s wrong to dismiss “baggage” as a bad thing. It can also refer to some precious cargo that we can contribute to enrich our new

Reviews

Jeff Munroe

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

Caleb Lagerwey

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

Poetry
Taylor Mallay

Every Sunday Morning

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

Poetry
Mark Hiskes

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.

Poetry
Margaret DeRitter

Lost Sheep

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

Poetry
Patrick T. Reardon

Table

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

Poetry
Michael Zysk

You Said, Let There Be Light

You said, Let there be light, and there was light. And you saw that the light was good …

Poetry
Sarah M. Wells

Jesus, Son of Gop

On the night he was supposed to be betrayed, Jesus strapped on a Glock under his cloak, just in case the breastplate of righteousness didn’t

Podcasts

Podcast
Rose Postma

“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

Podcast
Rose Postma

“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

Podcast
Margaret DeRitter

“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

Podcast
Patrick T. Reardon

“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

Podcast
Matthew Pullar

“Life Beneath” by Matthew Pullar

In this episode of the poetry edition of the Reformed Journal Podcast, Rose Postma interviews Matthew Pullar about his poem “Life Beneath.” Pullar is a poet