Marilynne Robinson and the Mystery of Grace
by Moriah SpecialeMarilynne Robinson's Gilead should be read as a summa pietatis rather than a summa theologiae. Continue Reading »
Marilynne Robinson's Gilead should be read as a summa pietatis rather than a summa theologiae. Continue Reading »
We need a new understanding of what is at stake. Continue Reading »
For Augustine, love is the most basic appetite of the soul. Continue Reading »
Christian liturgy—and God himself—have become victims of the abolition of the pre-political. Continue Reading »
Reading Ink, I was taken back to the churches I attended in Pomona, California in the 1950s. Continue Reading »
The resolution of the intercommunion question in Germany will have far-reaching consequences in the Church. Continue Reading »
“Mutual mediation” is, in fact, what the Reformers meant by “priesthood of believers.” Continue Reading »
Protestantism will not reach its end until the Reformation’s divisions end. Continue Reading »
All Christians can be shocked by the vitriol of sixteenth-century theological disagreements, but no one should be shocked by Luther’s anger over corruption, abuse, and injustice. Continue Reading »
Both catastrophist and triumphalist narratives of the Reformation, however sophisticated and nuanced the idiom, always oversimplify. Continue Reading »