By In Books, Family and Children, Interviews, Scribblings, Wisdom

A Very Kuyperian Book List

Another journey around the sun is almost complete and some of our contributors have compiled a list of book recommendations just in time for Christmastide. Be sure and plunder the Egyptian’s After-Christmas sales before Twelfth Night.

Our founder Uriesou Brito, Senior Pastor of Providence Church of Pensacola, FL, while he wasn’t being pleasingly surprised while teaching through Ten Myths About Calvinism: Recovering the Breadth of the Reformed Tradition (Stewart, InterVarsity Press, 2011), commends to our readers The Essential Trinity: New Testament Foundations and Practical Relevance (Eds. Crowe, Trueman, IV Press, 2016)

Steve Jeffrey, Minister of Emmanual Evangelical Church of Southgate, North London, recommends Dr. MAtthew Walker’s recent release Why We Sleep (Scribner, 2017). Grab a copy and improve your sleep in no time flat.

Contributor Joshua Luper, Deacon at Trinity Covenant Church of Wichita Kansas writes the following about Knowing Christ from Rev. Dr. Mark Jones (Banner of Truth2015):

“Jones presents a wealth of biblical insight and theological depth in a succinct, doxological package. Steeped in the Puritans, Jones also draws from patristic and medieval theologians. Especially helpful is his emphasis on the true humanity of Christ and the Trinitarian context of His work.”

Dustin Messer, teacher and pastoral associate at Christ Church (PCA) of Carrollton, TX:

The Embrace of Buildings: A Second Look at Walkable City Neighborhoods by Lee Hardy (Calvin College Press, 2017)

In the past few years, the conversation surrounding the new urbanism has matured beyond some of the early sentimental pining for the way things were, to a more robust reckoning with modernity’s effects on the built environment. Using fresh sociological research and ancient, biblical wisdom, Hardy offers a compelling vision for a more humane cityscape.

Contours of the Kuyperian Tradition: A Systematic Introduction by Craig Bartholomew (IVP, 2017).

I ordered this book the first day it was available from Hearts and Minds Books in Dallastown, PA. A stunning tour de force of Neo-Calvinism’s roots and myriad, sometimes conflicting, branches. No doubt in publishing this seminal work Bartholomew helped codify Kuyperianism in a day in which a deeper, more theocentric politics is needed.

Apologetics and the Christian Imagination: An Integrated Approach to Defending the Faith by Holly Ordway (Emmaus Road, 2017). Ordway’s Not God’s Type provided a beautiful portrait of her surprising conversion to the Christian faith. In her newest book, Ordway helps the reader come to grips with the plausibility structures in place for the post-Christian Westerner. Relying on Lewis, Chesterton, and Tolkien, Ordway shows that the evangelization of the imagination often precedes the evangelization of the intellect. Of course, Ordway is clear that the faith is not less than rational, but she does insist that it is more than rational. Must reading for anyone interested in sharing the faith in a more holistic, compelling way.

Jesse Sumpter, graduate of New Saint Andrews College and a teacher with Veritas Scholars Academy, makes his suggestion just in time for the 500th anniversary of the Protestant Reformation:

Here I Stand: A Life of Martin Luther by Roland H Bainton (Abingdon, 1978)
This book was first published in 1950 and is still a key authority on the subject of Martin Luther and the Reformation in Germany. There are a couple of key reasons this work holds up so well. First, Bainton quotes original sources. This is true for the star of the show, Luther, but Bainton gives good air time to other key sources: the Pope, folk stories, Muntzer, Aleander, and others. This also makes Bainton an honest historian, which is the second reason this work is so important. Bainton does not sugar coat the story. He gives you the sources and he shows you how he reaches his conclusions. The final reason this work is key is that Bainton shows how the Reformation touches the key cultural elements of the day: the Renaissance, Medieval philosophy, mysticism, the peasant’s revolt, family life, etc. On these things Bainton is flying high so he doesn’t cover all the nuances but he does help you see how the Reformation reshaped all areas of life. This is a solid choice for a Reformation 500 reading.

Contributor Remy Wilkins is the author of YA fiction Strays (Canonball Books 2017) and is a teacher at Geneva Academy:

The Wizard of Earthsea (1968) and The Tombs of Atuan (1971) by Ursula K Le Guin

I have spent some time this year catching up on some classics that were written before my time. Le Guin’s fantasy series is terrific and beautifully written. Le Guin, a Buddhist, has been quoted as saying that she was intentionally writing an anti-Christian tale, but her critique falls well short of true Christianity. Imagine a Harry Potter more concerned with pursuing virtue rather than a good time with his friends and you get Le Guin’s Earthsea Cycle. I can’t wait to read the rest of the series.
I read this a few years ago but, going through it again, I’m even more struck by its importance. Mitchell understands not only that good writing is clear thinking, which is a valuable lesson on its own right, but that words assume a moral world, and a laxness in vocabulary can undermine culture. Written forty years ago there has never been a more important time to read it than now.

Sean Johnson is a teacher at Trinitas Christian School in Pensacola:

Laurus, Eugene Vodolazkin: I typically become suspicious when “heartbreak” is offered as justification for a piece of art—this “heartbreaking scene” or that “heartbreaking tribute to [blah blah blah].” But as I attempt to describe Laurus, heartbreak looms in my memory as one of the poignant adult pleasures the book offers. A little like a twenty-first century Dostoevsky novel, the story follows a young physician as he suffers loss, wrestles with his calling, becomes a saint, and learns to see the world and himself as God sees them. The whole novel, in fact, is training the reader to see as God sees—and that is enough to break a man’s heart.

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