Peter J. Leithart is President of the Theopolis Institute, Birmingham, Alabama, and an adjunct Senior Fellow at New St. Andrews College. He is author, most recently, of Gratitude: An Intellectual History (Baylor).
Eyes in the apocalypse are either flaming, or wet. Continue Reading »
Abraham Kuyper’s original idea of common grace is more complex and nuanced that some of his followers’. Continue Reading »
Scholars have long recognized that the Bible supplied what Mark Noll has called the “common coinage of the realm” in early America. Eran Shalev of Haifa University thinks that historians have not gone far enough. They have failed to grasp just how, and how deeply, the Bible formed the American imagination. Shalev argues in American Zion that early America was not simply a biblical republic. It was, quite self-consciously, a Hebrew republic. Continue Reading »
Russell Shorto on the birthplace of liberalism. Continue Reading »
George MacDonald’s theology of levity and carelessness. Continue Reading »
Moderns are a very religious folk. Continue Reading »
Thumbs up for socializing and politicizing Paul’s epistles. But you still have to deal with the text. Continue Reading »
Wesley Vander Lugt takes the theatrical turn in theology, Continue Reading »
Iain Provan invites moderns to reconsider the story they rejected - the biblical one. Continue Reading »
How the living creatures guard the heavenly throne. Continue Reading »
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