• Books •
Friday, June 4, 2010
Summer Reading: Books Fit For the Season
The arrival of summer brings family vacations, time at the pool, and a chance to read books! This is a good opportunity to enjoy biographies, think critically, and exercise worldview analysis while reading. Earlier this week, Dr. Mohler released his recommended reading list for the summer of 2010 challenging readers to take advantage of this…
Thursday, October 1, 2009
Banned Book Week – Parenting at the Mercy of the Local Librarian
Banned Books Week is this week in America, trying to draw attention to the dangers of limiting access to all types of information. But are books really being banned in America? Certainly not. The American Library Association’s problem actually falls on parents who are concerned about what their children are reading. On today’s program, Dr….
Friday, July 17, 2009
What Christian Fiction Reveals about Christianity
Christian fiction novels are both powerful and influential in the Church. What message does the content of Christian fiction send about where the heart of the Church is today? The stories we buy and read reflect the issues that are most clearly on our hearts. Jennifer Lyell and Justin Taylor join Dr. Moore in discussing…
Friday, June 6, 2008
What Do We Expect From A President?
Thursday, May 29, 2008
What Makes Humans Different?
Just what makes humans different from other animals? A recent article in New Scientist explains how scientists and bioethicists are struggling to explain human exceptionalism. Apart from a theocentric worldview, they have very little to work with. On today’s program, Dr. Mohler analyzes the article and considers what it tells us about what it means…
Tuesday, April 8, 2008
Losing to the Glory of God
Monday, January 7, 2008
The Twilight of the Books?
Writing in The New Yorker, Caleb Crain warns that literary reading is fast disappearing as Americans are shifting attention to amusements. In “The Twilight of the Books,” Crain cites a number of research reports from both the United States and the Netherlands and argues that we are just not reading as previous generations had read….

