Bestiary of Adorable Fallacies

This was a fun exercise, written together with my son Nate. All the odd stuff in there is from him. Illustrated by the fantastic Forest Dickison, this book brings logical analysis to the zoo, where it ought to spend more time.

Basic Christian Living

A workbook, designed to help young people understand the basics of personal holiness. It is all about practical Christian living. What does it mean to live what we profess to believe?

Back to Basics

This book has four contributors on various aspects of the Reformed faith. My section is the first, in which I argue for basic Calvinism, of the sort that doesn’t wince when articulating its own positions.

Angels in Architecture

This book, written together with Doug Jones, was intended as a primer or introduction to the basic approach to Christian living in community that we were striving to establish here in Moscow. It needs revision, but it is still a very good introduction to what we are attempting.

Against the Church

The centrality of regeneration has to be affirmed, again and again. One of the reasons is that the world likes being unregenerate, and keeps coming up with reasons to try to stay there.

After Darkness, Light

This book is a festschrift in honor of R.C. Sproul, containing essays from various teachers on the five points of Calvinism and the five solas of the Reformation. My contribution is on the effectual call.

Letters to a Broken Girl

This book is a series of letters to a fictional girl, one who had been abused by her father. All the particular circumstances in this work are fictional, but the sins that are described are unfortunately not.

Letters on Homosexual Desire

In this series of (fictional) letters, a pastor is writing a young Christian with a homosexual background about how best to understand and resist his impulses and temptations.

Flags Out Front

Tom Collins, mild-mannered president of a dwindling southern Bible college, becomes a target when a drunk prankster swaps his campus’s American flag with the Christian one, and Dr. Tom refuses to “fix” the situation. Big media, exuberant students, petty enemies, and pretty secretaries all play a part in this happy-go-lucky satire for the twenty-first century.