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Death at the Border: A Theologian’s Perspective on Migration
PAUL GRIFFITHS | Early in the twentieth century, Australians built a supposedly rabbit-proof fence across that continent...
Oct 18, 2019


History Is Not Enough: The Bible After Modernity
AMY PEELER | Biblical Studies is changing...
Oct 4, 2019


St. Augustine and The American Apocalypse
ALEXANDER EARL | If there is one word that captures the situation of “the West” it is crisis...
Sep 6, 2019


Asian American Ethics and Identity
JAMES W. MCCARTY III | Three years ago Peter Liang, a twenty-eight year-old Chinese American police officer in New York City, shot and...
Jan 18, 2019


Hobbits as Heroes
CLARK ELLISTON | The popularity of the fantasy genre, perhaps more than any other medium, illustrates the human desire for transcendence...
Sep 10, 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


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


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


The Latest Volume in the Kierkegaard Research Series
GEORGE PATTISON | Kierkegaard Research: Sources, Reception and Resources is continuing to prove a remarkable achievement, and is cumulatively providing an important point of reference for...
Jan 29, 2013


Strange Bedfellows: Peter Singer and the Church
CHRISTOPHER M. HAYS | To describe the ethics of Peter Singer and those of the Catholic Church as oil and water may appear far too serene a metaphor...
Jan 29, 2013
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