Tullian Tchividjian’s recommended books

Tullian is pastor of New City Church in Coconut Creek, FL and grandson of Billy Graham. From his post Understanding Our Times.

Here are my top fifteen recommendations (in no particular order):
1. No Place for Truth by David Wells
2. God in the Wasteland by David Wells
3. Culture Making by Andy Crouch
4. Engaging God’s World by Cornelius Plantinga
5. The Gospel in a Pluralist Society by Lesslie Newbigin
6. Resident Aliens by Stanley Hauerwas and William Willimon
7. American Evangelicalism by James Davison Hunter
8. The Gravedigger File by Os Guinness
9. Christian Mission in the Modern World by John Stott
10. The Way of the Modern World by Craig Gay
11. How Now Shall We Live? by Chuck Colson and Nancy Pearcey
12. Christ and Culture Revisited by D.A. Carson
13. Where in the World Is the Church? by Michael Horton
14. Lectures on Calvinism by Abraham Kuyper
15. Chameleon Christianity by Dick Keyes

And here are twenty-five more I highly recommend, listed alphabetically by title:

A Peculiar People by Rodney Clapp
The Abolition of Man by C. S. Lewis
Above All Earthly Powers by David Wells
All God’s Children in Blue Suede Shoes by Ken Myers
Christ and Culture by H. Richard Niebuhr
The Church Before the Watching World by Francis Schaeffer
The Contemporary Christian by John Stott
The Courage to Be Protestant by David Wells
Creation Regained by Albert Wolters
The Culturally Savvy Christian by Dick Staub
Culture Matters by T. M. Moore
He Shines in All That’s Fair by Richard Mouw
Heaven Is a Place on Earth by Michael Wittmer
Losing Our Virtue by David Wells
No God but God by John Seel and Os Guinness
Not The Way It’s Supposed to Be by Cornelius Plantinga
Prophetic Untimeliness by Os Guinness
Redeeming Pop-Culture by T. M. Moore
Rumor of Angels by Peter Berger
Surprised by Hope by N. T. Wright
The Transforming Vision by Brian Walsh and Richard Middleton
Too Christian, Too Pagan by Dick Staub
Total Truth by Nancy Pearcey
When the Kings Come Marching In by Richard Mouw
Where Resident Aliens Live by Stanley Hauerwas and William Willimon

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