Drumroll, please … the annual Christianity Today Book Awards are out now! Check out dozens of winning titles addressing evangelical life, thought, and culture.
Christianity Today’s Book of the Year winner makes "the case for an always-reforming church."
Sixpence None the Richer is back on tour and making new music—with "Kiss Me" still a perennial favorite after 25 years.
Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health was a historic victory for the pro-life movement. It looks like the pro-life legal triumph has also
prompted the first significant shift in abortion views in decades.
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Books editor Matt Reynolds: The Christianity Today Book Awards are open to anyone. If you’ve written a book, with or without the aid of a traditional publisher, you can nominate it in one or more of our awards categories. Each year, lots of independent authors take advantage of this opportunity. But the sad truth is that their chances of winning aren’t very high, at least if past precedent is any guide. Virtually all our award winners come courtesy of major evangelical publishers such as Zondervan, InterVarsity Press, and Baker, with a handful sprinkled in from secular mainstays like Simon & Schuster or Oxford University Press.
By and large, that trend continues with this year’s crop of honorees. And for better or worse, I suspect it will continue in the years to come. But a few independently published titles did
manage to elbow their way into the winners’ circle. In categories filled with flashier author names, that’s no mean feat.
I don’t want to overstate the significance of this outcome, which might not be replicated anytime soon. Traditional publishers can marshal resources and expertise unavailable to most solo authors, even those who avail themselves of companies and technologies that facilitate the work of self-publishing. Still, I hope writers of all backgrounds will take encouragement from the fact that "platform" isn’t destiny. Name recognition and sales figures notwithstanding, your efforts matter to God. Which means they matter to CT too.
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One book changed C.S. Lewis from atheist to believer. Another transformed Augustine's heart in a garden. This Christmas season, CT's Holiday Gift Guide for Book Lovers helps you choose books with that same life-changing potential.
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Our curated collection features everything from thoughtful devotionals to beautiful children's Bibles. When electronics break and toys are forgotten, these books continue nurturing faith, year after year. Discover titles that could transform someone's spiritual journey.
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Today in Christian History
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December 3, 1552: Jesuit missionary Francis Xavier, one of the founding members of his order (the Society of Jesus or the Jesuits) and one of the greatest missionaries ever, dies awaiting admission to China. Before that, he had converted 700,000 people in Portugal, India, Indonesia, Japan, and elsewhere.
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In my art history classroom, I dim the lights and turn on the projector. The image pools on the screen at the front of the room. The heaviness of another…
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Some 27 letters into his correspondence, Screwtape stages an intervention. At all costs, the senior demon of C. S. Lewis’s classic Screwtape Letters tells his apprentice devil, Wormwood, do not let your…
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In 2020, I typed two lethal words: F— God. With that, I resigned from Christianity. As the world was falling apart from the pandemic, so was my faith. Some call…
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I ONCE HEARD SOMEONE CLAIM that if you could enter a black hole and reach the event horizon, you would see into the past and future simultaneously.…
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As this issue hits your mailboxes after the US election and as you prepare for the holidays, it can be easy to feel lost in darkness. In this issue, you’ll read of the piercing light of Christ that illuminates the darkness of drug addiction at home and abroad, as Angela Fulton in Vietnam and Maria Baer in Portland report about Christian rehab centers. Also, Carrie McKean explores the complicated path of estrangement and Brad East explains the doctrine of providence. Elissa Yukiko Weichbrodt shows us how art surprises, delights, and retools our imagination for the Incarnation, while Jeremy Treat reminds us of an ancient African bishop's teachings about Immanuel. Finally, may you be surprised by the nearness of the "Winter Child," whom poet Malcolm Guite guides us enticingly toward. Happy Advent and Merry Christmas.
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