
Jesus and John Wayne: How White Evangelicals Corrupted a Faith and Fractured a Nation
The year that has passed since Kristin Kobes Du Mez published her New York Times best seller, Jesus and John Wayne, has been a politically
The year that has passed since Kristin Kobes Du Mez published her New York Times best seller, Jesus and John Wayne, has been a politically
“History is…an important way of thinking through the questions about what a university is, what it does, what it should do, and who and what
Dietrich Bonhoeffer was a semi-aristocratic German theologian and minister who, through family connections, joined a conspiracy to overthrow the Third Reich. Having decided that a
Early on in the book Caste, Isabel Wilkerson invokes a metaphor familiar to anyone conversant with Jesus’s parables. She says that society is like a
At first glance, the subtitle of Jennifer M. McBride’s book, Radical Discipleship: A Liturgical Politics of the Gospel (Fortress Press, 2017) might appear to embody
Willie Jennings, now a professor at Yale Divinity School, was an academic dean at Duke Divinity School for ten years, has been teaching divinity students
It has been one hundred years since Herman Bavinck died. Much has changed and shifted in our world in the last ten years, let alone
Thomas Lynch has a singular voice in American literature. Although an accomplished poet and essayist, it’s his day job as owner of Lynch and Sons
Esau McCaulley’s Reading While Black is a detailed analysis and explication of the African American biblical interpretive enterprise as seen in its traditional ecclesial life
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