It’s time to meet the parents.
Mixed Media
Reviews of books, movies, music, television, websites, and more, looking at the world of arts and entertainment from a Reformed perspective. To submit a review, click here.
I was 13 years old when I first discovered U2’s fifth album, The Joshua Tree.
Charles Spurgeon was known for expository preaching
“School is the worst part of my life and I spend more time there than anywhere else.”
A favorite CRC-published children’s devotional
On the southernmost Italian island, Lampedusa, people live modest but mostly comfortable lives.
“How can we make it through the long night of despair to the bright day of hope?”
Though children may be exposed to the Lord’s Prayer at home, school, and church,
Our platforms for communication are endless.
After a 9-year hiatus, gospel powerhouse CeCe Winans returns with a reflective and hopeful work, Let Them Fall in Love.
Elections in the U.S. and Britain show a distinct distrust of the establishment.
In his poetry, John Terpstra embraces personal and macro themes
When 10-year-old Obayda’s father loses his leg in a bomb explosion in Kabul, Afghanistan,
Peter Harris and Rod Wilson are friends.
John Arndt and David Gungor, known together as The Brilliance, have crafted another thoughtful, carefully constructed song cycle with their latest release,
Back in 2011, Phil Vischer of VeggieTales fame produced the first in a 13-DVD series
One day, a policeman entered the school and told Sarah to leave and never return.
When Ellie Holcomb got the news that her father, legendary CCM producer Brown Bannister, had been diagnosed with cancer,
Fourth-grader Laney Grafton doesn’t quite fit in at her school.
Dr. Charles Stanley, pastor at First Baptist Church of Atlanta, has ministered to thousands
Maybe you’ve seen the gowns, the glamour, and the glitches of the Academy Awards, but have you seen the movies they rewarded?
Growing up, author Dawn Anahid MacKeen heard her grandfather Stepan Miskjian’s stories
Jonathan Goldstein’s podcast, Heavyweight, is a smart and introspective show about revisiting the very moments we wonder about and regret.
While Old Love may be his debut release, Eric Brandon’s years of performing experience provide a quiet maturity