“That’s life for you, Rose thought. Tragedy and celebration, all mashed up next to each other like tuna salad and white bread. You needed both to make a sandwich. Thinking back on her joyful marriage to Charlie, and the devastating pain of being widowed, she figured that the sad times and the happy times were all part of the big picture. You couldn’t get through life without a hefty serving of both.”
– Rachel Ekstrom Courage, Murder by Cheesecake: A Golden Girls Cozy Mystery (Hyperion Avenue, 2025), “Out of the Freezer, Into the Frying Pan.”
- A couple of new (biblical studies) books have landed in my library. Ian Mills’ The Hypothesis of the Gospels: Narrative Traditions in Hellenistic Reading Culture and Michael Alter’s The Hypothesis of Undesigned Coincidences: A Critical Review.

- Is there a religious revival happening among Gen Zers? Not really, argues Andrew Mark Henry.
- As a blossoming cat lover, I enjoyed this piece by Joshua Schwartz on cats in and around ancient Israel. We have an orange semi-feral cat we feed regularly (along with his half-siblings and a few others) and I’ve fallen in love with him. We’ve tamed him enough that he can come indoors for a little while and loves to have his belly rubbed. I used to loathe cats but I suppose, now that I’m middle-aged, I’m starting to mellow out.
- If you’re looking for some free reading material, Rafael Rodriguez’s The First Christian Letters: Reading First and Second Thessalonians can be downloaded from Wipf and Stock. But act soon because it won’t be available for very long. (HT: Charles Savelle.)
- Megan Lewis interviewed Paula Fredriksen on diversity in early Christianity. Some of you may know that Fredriksen is probably my favorite scholar of ancient Christianity.
- ICYMI, I went on the YouTube channel What Your Pastor Didn’t Tell You to discuss undesigned coincidences (for better or for worse). Check it out!
- Robyn Faith Walsh talks about Q, the source posited as the solution to the double tradition (i.e., material found only in Matthew and Luke but not Mark).
- My parents got me this tracker for my birthday. So far in 2026, I’ve finished 3 books! Just 49 to go and I’ll have hit my goal. I’ll try to update this regularly.

Thanks for the new roundup. (If I had a book counter, it would probably remain in the single digits for most of the years, given my tendency to try to juggle multiple books at once.)
Interesting stuff on cats in ancient Israel: Discussions on animals in any part of the ancient world are really interesting to me both as someone who generally likes animals (grew up in a house with multiple dogs and cats) and wants to know how far back domestication of the different species goes.
Also, is it just me or does Dr. Walsh like medusa-related artwork? (She’s got that one snake headed bust in the background in a few videos and in the one above she’s got a figure that kind of looks like a gorgon.)
Maybe I should look for some Greek mythology figures to add to that random collection left over from my childhood… (I grew up in the late 90s and early 00s, so 3/4 of it is probably Star Wars and Bionicle stuff. A few stormtroopers are missing limbs due to the covert activities of a young English Setter no doubt working for the Rebel Alliance.)
LikeLike