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Did the Ancient Greeks Worship Stones as Gods?
FERNANDE HÖLSCHER | Aniconism was a concept created in nineteenth century Germany to describe an important phenomenon in Greek religion...
Jun 12, 2013


Wyclif’s Theology for the Laity
IAN CHRISTOPHER LEVY | The Late Middle Ages witnessed a narrowing of the divide that had traditionally separated the clerical and lay estates throughout much of the medieval period...
May 29, 2013


Clement of Rome’s Mediterranean Travels, the First Christian Novel, and the Character of Early Christianity
JAMES CARLETON PAGET | F.C. Baur is regarded as the founder of the modern study of Christian origins and, in particular, of the New Testament...
May 29, 2013


Politics and Culture Wars on the Other Side of American Evangelicalism
TODD M. BRENNEMAN | Much of the attention paid to contemporary evangelicalism in the United States has focused on the political activity of evangelicals who have energetically supported conservative causes...
May 29, 2013


Were the Theologies of Wyclif and Hus Really That Radical?
FRANS VAN LIERE | Biblical hermeneutics is the key to understanding the Reformation in the sixteenth century...
May 22, 2013


The Earliest Known Memoir in Ladino Reveals the Struggles of a Nineteenth Century Ottoman Jewish Community
NINA CAPUTO | The modern memoir typically follows a narrative arc similar to the one Augustine applied in his Confessions, tracing the protagonist’s struggles to overcome internal weakness or external challenges that impede their effort to live a good and moral life...
May 22, 2013


Tributes to Geza Vermes, June 22, 1924-May 8, 2013
T.M. LAW | Geza Vermes passed away one week ago today...
May 15, 2013


Has the Grasp of Science Outstripped its Reach?
FRANCIS J. CAPONI | Nagel is an atheist and makes it clear that he is speaking of a wholly natural teleology: no designers need apply...
May 6, 2013


An-sky’s Vast Verbal Museum of Jewish Life in the Pale
HARRIET MURAV | One hundred years ago Shloyme Zanvil Rapoport, better known by his pen-name An-sky, began his ethnographic expeditions into the Russian Pale of Settlement, the western and southern area of Russia in which most of the world’s Jews lived...
May 3, 2013


How did Origen Vindicate God Amidst the Horrors of Evil and Suffering?
PETER MARTENS | Anyone with a smattering of training in religion or philosophy knows at least two things about Origen (ca. 184-253 CE): he castrated himself, and he was condemned as a heretic of the Christian church...
Apr 4, 2013


Can “Neutral” Historical Scholarship Successfully Grasp a Theologian Who Deconstructed his Own Self?
GORAZD KOCIJANČIČ | At the end of the 1980s Jacques Derrida gave a lecture in Jerusalem on negative theology...
Mar 26, 2013


Pilgrimage to Reclaim a Matriarchal Christianity, Celebrate the Sacredness of Sexuality and Femininity
LEIGH ANN CRAIG | In the summer of 2004, a group of women who had just visited the shrine of Mary Magdalene at La Saint-Baume in Provence found themselves engaged in a lively debate about the Mass they had heard during their visit...
Mar 26, 2013
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