Apologetics for an Ever-Changing Culture: A Biblical and Culturally Relevant Approach to Talking About God

Sean McDowell
Associate Professor of Christian Apologetics

Harvest House, January 2025

Apologetics for an Ever-Changing Culture is a practical how-to guide for conveying and upholding the Christian faith in our contemporary cultural context. With contributions from 23 leading voices in Christian apologetics and six in-depth expert interviews, this empowering resource addresses both classic and new apologetics issues, helping you engage confidently with non-Christians with guidance from a diverse group of seasoned apologists; converse biblically and effectively on pressing issues including the mental health crisis, contemporary critical theory, deconstruction, gender narratives; and learn practical skills for defending the faith online, teaching apologetics to the next generation, doing apologetics in the church, and helping people through doubt.

Mission-Driven Colleges: Keeping First Things First in Christian Higher Education

Scott B. Rae, Co-author
Dean of Faculty, Professor of Christian Ethics
Richard Langer, Co-author

Professor Emeritus, Faculty Mentor

B&H Academic, February 2025

What defines a university? What sets a Christian university apart? What makes your specific university unique within the Christian landscape? How can academic disciplines be approached from a Christian perspective? Through these questions, Rae and Langer demonstrate how to build the structural framework that empowers a Christian university to thrive. They guide educators and administrators in strategizing, planning, and implementing practices that ensure both a deep Christian identity and academic rigor. Mission-Driven Colleges is a vital resource for anyone committed to the success of Christian universities, offering a clear path to realizing their full educational mission.

Metaethics: A Short Companion. Essentials in Christian Ethics

David A. Horner, Co-author
Professor of Theology and Philosophy
J.P. Moreland, Co-author
Distinguished Professor of Philosophy
B&H Academic, February 2024

In Metaethics: A Short Companion, Horner and Moreland provide a primer on how to think about questions surrounding the concept of morality — its nature, status, grounding, underlying presuppositions, and philosophical commitments. From a stance rooted in moral realism, they explore and evaluate the major metaethical positions on offer in the field, including expressivism, error theory, relativism, constructivism, ethical naturalism, and ethical nonnaturalism. They conclude by arguing for the rationality of a Christian worldview as a guiding metaethical position.

The Story of Jesus Continues: A Survey of the Acts of the Apostles

Douglas Huffman
Professor of New Testament and Dean of Academic Programs
Zondervan Academic, April 2025

Douglas Huffman takes readers through different introductory and interpretive issues in the study of Acts, including the genre, purpose, history, culture, and geographical setting of the story. Equipped with these fascinating details, in broad strokes the author traces Luke’s well-told recounting of the ongoing story of Jesus. Sensitive to the purposes Luke had for his text — as well as its connection to the Gospel of Luke — Huffman concludes by noting how the Jesus story is intended to continue into the present.