The Gospel Coalition has released the August 2017 issue of Themelios, which has 180 pages of editorials, articles, and book reviews. It is freely available in three formats: (1) PDF, (2) web version, and (3) Logos Bible Software. A print edition will be available for purchase in several weeks from Wipf and Stock.
Links to editorials, articles, and book reviews in Themelios 42.2 are included below.
- D. A. Carson | Editorial: On Knowing When to Resign
- Daniel Strange | Strange Times: The ‘Only’ Option
- John C. Wingard Jr. | Confession of a Reformed Philosopher: Why I Am a Compatibilist about Determinism and Moral Responsibility
- J. Daniel McDonald | Natural Selection and an Epistemology of Evil: An Incompatible Pair
- Jacob Shatzer | Wendell Berry’s ‘Risk’: In the Middle on Gay Marriage?
- Obbie Tyler Todd | The Preeminence of Knowledge in John Calvin’s Doctrine of Conversion and Its Influence Upon His Ministry in Geneva
- Christopher Woznicki | Redeeming Edwards’s Doctrine of Hell: An ‘Edwardsean’ Account
- George A. Terry | A Missiology of Excluded Middles: An Analysis of the T4T Scheme for Evangelism and Discipleship
- Book Reviews
- Old Testament | 8 reviews
- New Testament | 10 reviews
- History and Historical Theology | 2 reviews
- Systematic Theology and Bioethics | 6 reviews
- Ethics and Pastoralia | 10 reviews
- Mission and Culture | 4 reviews
Free eBook by Tim Keller: ‘The Freedom of Self-Forgetfulness’
Imagine a life where you don’t feel inadequate, easily offended, desperate to prove yourself, or endlessly preoccupied with how you look to others. Imagine relishing, not resenting, the success of others. Living this way isn’t far-fetched. It’s actually guaranteed to believers, as they learn to receive God’s approval, rather than striving to earn it.
In Tim Keller’s short ebook, The Freedom of Self-Forgetfulness: The Path To True Christian Joy, he explains how to overcome the toxic tendencies of our age一not by diluting biblical truth or denying our differences一but by rooting our identity in Christ.
TGC is offering this Keller resource for free, so you can discover the “blessed rest” that only self-forgetfulness brings.