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Surviving an Unwanted Divorce: A Biblical, Practical Guide to Letting Go While Holding Yourself Together

Lysa TerKeurst, with Joel Muddamalle and Jim Cress. Thomas Nelson, $25.99 (128p) ISBN 978-1-4002-5012-7

TerKeurst (I Want to Trust You, But I Don’t) teams up with her Therapy and Theology podcast cohosts Muddamalle (The Hidden Peace), a theologian, and Cress, a therapist, for a refreshingly concise and candid guide to enduring divorce. After learning of her husband’s infidelity in 2016, TerKeurst engaged with him in a “dysfunctional dance” of empty promises, marriage counseling, and reconciliation attempts before filing for divorce in 2021 (“I wasn’t giving up. I was finally accepting the reality that changing a marriage really isn’t possible if one of the two people is unwilling or incapable of making the desperately needed changes”). The author addresses concerns common to believers considering or recovering from a divorce, including the biblical stance on the subject (God doesn’t “hate divorce,” according to TerKeurst, and scripture shows it’s “permissible under certain situations,” including in abusive marriages), how to adjust to a new normal, and how to forgive without forgetting or reconciling. TerKeurst does important work in debunking the notion that divorce is a spiritual failure, while actionable tips from Cress (on recognizing codependency, among other topics) add value. This will be a balm to believers in the midst of or fresh off their own marital breakups. (Nov.)

Reviewed on 09/12/2025 | Details & Permalink

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Liturgies for Resisting Empire: Seeking Community, Belonging, and Peace in a Dehumanizing World

Kat Armas. Brazos, $19.99 trade paper (224p) ISBN 978-1-58743-649-9

Theologian Armas (Abuelita Faith) aims in this incisive manifesto to dismantle the lies the world’s empires have woven into “our imagination and our theology.” In Armas’s view, empires­­—and the Westernized, evangelical church that’s become tied up in them—instill social narratives that seek to “keep people in their place” by capitalizing on “fears of not belonging.” She also charges these institutions with perpetuating unchangeable “systems and hierarchies” and supporting dualistic forms of thought that draw stark divisions between the powerful and the oppressed (a mindset that’s been weaponized by the church, for instance, via “colonial and missionary efforts to bring ‘the light of the gospel’ to the so-called ‘heathen’ in the non-Western world”). In its place, she envisions a “divine kingdom” dedicated to serving society’s marginalized, and a theology that frames faith as messy, human, and in need of interpretation—especially when it comes to the Bible, a text “written by and for a people struggling to make sense of who they are within a system of hierarchy, domination, and greed.” Armas ranges fluidly between biblical analysis, philosophy, history, and her own experiences as a Latina woman to deliver complex ideas in accessible language (“The illusion of certainty masquerades as spirituality, but the real stuff is found in the messy middle—in the ambiguity, the doubt”). The result is a thought-provoking look at the intertwining of religion and social control. (Nov.)

Reviewed on 09/12/2025 | Details & Permalink

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Guided: The Secret Path to an Illuminated Life

Laura Lynne Jackson. Dial, $30 (368p) ISBN 978-0-593-72957-1

Psychic medium Jackson follows up Signs with an uplifting if familiar invitation for readers to harness guidance from the “other side” to access their “highest path.” The bulk of the book comprises stories from those who’ve taken comfort in signs they’ve received from deceased loved ones. Natalie, who, along with her sister Elaine (nicknamed “Nanny Goat and Lainey Pie,” respectively), saw a field of goats and a pie shop on a road trip following their mother’s death, says that “since then, I’ve felt like I’m connected to this higher, bigger source, and I feel like I know... things I don’t even remember learning.” Jackson interlaces these stories with encouragement for readers to stay open to signs of all kinds, including out-of-body experiences, by connecting to nature, making art, and practicing gratitude. More generally, readers should be responsive to the “pulls we feel from the Universe” and to “magical people” placed “into our paths at pivotal times.” Those missing their departed loved ones will be comforted by the author’s reassuring philosophy, though the testimonial structure and many of the concepts repeat from her previous books. Still, seekers new to Jackson’s message will be heartened. (Nov.)

Reviewed on 09/12/2025 | Details & Permalink

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Father Yourself First: Everything You Need to Become the Father Your Family Deserves

Glen Henry. Thomas Nelson, $29.99 (256p) ISBN 978-1-4002-5255-8

Henry draws from his popular YouTube channel, Beleaf in Fatherhood, for this empowering debut guide to bettering oneself in order to become a better dad. The author, who grew up apart from his biological father (and was inspired to create his YouTube channel by becoming a stay-at-home parent) notes that dads must first ensure they’re emotionally healthy enough to parent well. That involves “fathering oneself” into a more mentally healthy place—encouraging, protecting, and speaking kindly to oneself as a parent would to a child. He also suggests that dads connect with one another, seek out positive parenting models, and above all focus on being present rather than perfect, since “attention is the most valuable currency we have as human beings.” Drawing deeply from personal experience, the author outlines an uplifting philosophy that parenting is “good work” honored by God, even when it seems thankless. He also makes valuable points about the importance of creating visible models of Black fatherhood in a culture dominated by false narratives of “the absent Black father, the angry Black man, the broken Black family.” First-time dads and dads of faith will find this especially worthwhile. (Nov.)

Reviewed on 09/12/2025 | Details & Permalink

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Transformed by the Messiah: How Old and New Testament Jesus Connections Reveal God’s Intentional Story for Your Life

Jason Sobel. W, $29.99 (224p) ISBN 978-1-40033-844-3

Messianic rabbi Sobel (Mysteries of the Messiah) argues in this mixed-bag work that viewing Jesus as the messiah can shed valuable light on believers’ lives. He points to Old Testament prophecies that are, in his view, fulfilled by Jesus’s coming, from Deuteronomy’s prediction that “The lord will raise up for you a prophet like me from yourselves, from your own kinsmen” to God’s vow in Genesis to “put animosity between” the serpent “and the woman—between your seed and her seed” (which foreshadowed a battle between Satan—the serpent’s descendant—and Jesus, who descended from the “seed of the woman,” or the virgin Mary). Jesus’s life fulfilled those prophecies, proving “God is faithful to every single promise He makes, even when it may seem impossible,” according to Sobel, and showing how connections between Old and New Testament can enrich readers’ understanding of faith and God. While the author’s biblical analyses are often thorough and detailed, he’s less successful in applying them to believers’ lives; a discussion of Jesus’s occupation as a carpenter, for example, is used to remind readers that Jesus is “the Master Craftsman” who “wants to craft your life into something beautiful and meaningful.” The result is an intermittently intriguing analysis of the symbolism of Jesus’s birth, life, and death. (Nov.)

Reviewed on 09/12/2025 | Details & Permalink

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Nervous Systems: Spiritual Practices to Calm Anxiety in Your Body, the Church, and Politics

Sara Billups. Baker, $19.99 trade paper (240p) ISBN 978-1-54090-421-8

A more accepting, Jesus-centered Christianity can assuage many of the anxieties dominating modern society, according to this expansive treatise from That’s the Spirit podcaster Billups (Orphaned Believers). Drawing on her own struggles with anxiety, which were supercharged by the Covid-19 pandemic and the challenges of caring for her aging parents, she assesses how the emotion shows up in today’s world. She finds signs of anxiety in bodies that are overstimulated by technology; in a church that’s increasingly ill-equipped to meet society’s needs; and in a conservative politics that serves as a refuge from an unstable world, with rising fears about America’s waning Christian identity pushing evangelicals, in particular, “into the arms of Donald Trump” and other politicians promising a return to order. Billups contends that the solution is a more inclusive Christianity that provides comfort without offering false promises and supports a humble and welcoming church community that “pursues an earthly holiness... inspired by the teachings of Jesus,” including by using “words instead of weapons.” While the thesis can sometimes get lost in lengthy meditations on Billups’s own caregiving experiences, the links she draws between individual and systemic stressors are incisive and thought-provoking. This will provide stressed-out Christians with plenty of food for thought. (Nov.)

Reviewed on 08/29/2025 | Details & Permalink

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The Fight to Find Yourself: Moving from Uncertain to Unstoppable

Joel Tudman. Faithwords, $27.99 (240p) ISBN 978-1-5460-0892-7

In this plainspoken guide, pastor Tudman (Brave Man) explains how Christians can shed false notions of the self and embrace their “God-given” identities. In his 40s, the author was skating along as a successful but overworked pastor when a series of tectonic life shifts, including the deaths of his dad and oldest son, forced him to begin “the hard work of finding myself.” Using his own experiences as a guide, he walks readers through the benefits of praying (to replace negative thought spirals); going to therapy (to uncover the roots of one’s trauma); and rebuilding strained bonds with family members. Tudman makes good use of his pastoral skills throughout, challenging readers to ask God hard questions (“God, is there anything I’m trusting in more than I’m trusting in you?”) and sensitively opening up about the consequences of his own traumas and difficulties, including childhood abuse, marital clashes, and emotionally distant relationships with his kids. Believers seeking their own fresh starts will be inspired. (Nov.)

Reviewed on 08/29/2025 | Details & Permalink

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Beard: A Memoir of a Marriage

Kelly Foster Lundquist. Eerdmans, $28.99 (250p) ISBN 978-0-80288-473-2

Lundquist, an English professor at North Hennepin Community College in Minnesota, debuts with a wrenching account of the breakup of her marriage to a gay man. Lundquist met her future husband in the late 1990s at a Christian camp, where the two bonded over their love of TV soaps and off-kilter humor. In spite of her ex’s jumbled attempts to explain his identity crisis (“I’m afraid you can’t actually know me. Not really,” he told her), they began dating in their teens and married in their early 20s. Trouble arrived when Lundquist found grainy photographs of a half-naked man on their shared computer; her husband brushed her off by explaining they were related to quasi–conversion therapy he’d had as a teen. The couple then moved to Chicago’s gay district, where Lundquist eventually discovered that her husband had been sleeping with men throughout much of their marriage. In addition to chronicling her marriage’s demise, the author reckons with the religious, sin-obsessed environment in which she and her husband had been raised; binary notions of sexuality and desire; rejection and loneliness; and her own quest to lose weight in an effort to gain control in a world that views beauty and thinness as currency. At once brave and tender, this is a candid look at the burdens of love and the challenges of discovering oneself. (Nov.)

Reviewed on 08/29/2025 | Details & Permalink

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Magic Maker: The Enchanted Path to Creativity

Pam Grossman. Penguin Life, $30 (368p) ISBN 978-0-593-83236-3

Witch Wave podcaster Grossman (Waking the Witch) outlines in this pensive outing how readers can use magic to fuel their art. For Grossman, art is itself a kind of magic—an intentional “collaborating with a Creative Force in order to transform” both the artist and “whomever bears witness to the new thing they have made.” More traditional magical crafts can also serve as vehicles for creativity, she writes, noting that tarot decks can spark inspiration or draw out patterns in one’s art (for fabulist author Italo Calvino, tarot was “a machine for constructing stories” and helped him write The Castle of Crossed Destinies), while augury—the interpretation of signs—is a useful means of directing one’s attention to new and fruitful “areas of creative investigation.” Readers seeking step-by-step tips for casting spells or reading tea leaves will be disappointed, but Grossman’s exploration of what it means to create is expansive and inspiring, bolstered by intimate anecdotes of artists’ creative philosophies. For instance, she notes that jazz saxophonist John Coltrane, who saw music as “the spiritual expression of who he was,” framed his 1965 album A Love Supreme as an offering to God and accompanied it with a manifesto that highlighted his view that “thought, belief, and creativity are all connected to the divine.” This is a thought-provoking guide and a joyous ode to creativity’s many mysteries. (Oct.)

Reviewed on 08/29/2025 | Details & Permalink

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Healing the Wounds of Rejection: Moving Forward with Strength, Confidence, and the Ability to Trust Again

Joyce Meyer and Ginger Stache. Faithwords, $28.99 (240p) ISBN 978-1-5460-0929-0

Bible teacher Meyer (The Courage to Change) and Emmy Award–winning documentarian Stache (Chasing Wonder) team up for a lucid guide to tackling rejection with the help of one’s faith. In alternating chapters, the authors recount their own formative betrayals—Meyer’s abuse at her father’s hands and neglect at her mother’s, Stache’s uncovering of her husband’s pornography addiction—and lay out steps to recovery that center on remembering God’s unconditional love and using it to work toward self-acceptance. Elsewhere, they detail how to rebuild trust in betrayers when appropriate by choosing “hope over fear,” partly because anticipating rejection can become a self-fulfilling prophecy and one is better served by living in “the joy God promises rather than the dread of what someone else’s next action or decision might bring.” While there’s no earth-shattering advice here, the authors’ path to healing is clear and pragmatic, and their disclosures of how they grappled with rejections of their own are candid and affecting. Christians looking to move past stubborn grudges or old hurts will feel seen. (Sept.)

Reviewed on 08/29/2025 | Details & Permalink

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