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).

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Hauerwas the Liberal

From Leithart

In his wise contribution to the Blackwell Companion to Political Theology, RR Reno concludes that Hauerwas’s theology is “a thoroughgoing Christian liberalism” (314). This isn’t a criticism or a charge of inconsistency. Reno knows that Hauerwas “he rejects the . . . . Continue Reading »

Capitalist Legoland

From Leithart

Noah Kristula-Green responds to the politicization of the Lego Movie by, well, trying to score political points:“the film does play lip service to political tropes, but what really makes the film work is that it represents the highest form of capitalist expression: it is a . . . . Continue Reading »

Spooking Putin

From Leithart

Putin is watching Ukraine carefully, writes Julia Ioffe, because he knows that what happens in Kiev could be replicated in Moscow:“Putin and the system he built do sweat the small things because Putin sees dissent as a slippery slope. He knows the cold has never stopped a single Russian . . . . Continue Reading »

Triple Name

From Leithart

Jesus promises to make the victors in Philadelphia pillars in His temple, and to inscribe a triple name on them.Fill in the blank: “The name of My God, and the name of the ____________ of My God, which comes down out of heaven from My God, and My new name” (Revelation 3:12).God, BLANK, . . . . Continue Reading »

Expulsion and Sacrifice

From Leithart

Finlan (Paul’s Cultic Atonement Metaphors) wants to distinguish sharply between sacrifice and the removal ritual of the day of atonement. He is not persuasive.He claims that “Hebrew sacrifice must be performed in the temple, and it is used to cleanse the temple, which is the center and . . . . Continue Reading »

Care and sacrifice

From Leithart

Finlan doesn’t think there’s any idea of substitution in the sacrificial rites, though there is in the scapegoat ritual (Paul’s Cultic Atonement Metaphors, 91).To see a penal substitution in sacrifice, “assumes something that is never stated in Hebrew texts: that the animal . . . . Continue Reading »

Playing by the Rules

From Leithart

Dorothy Sayers once said that the incarnation and atonement prove that, whatever God may be up to with His world, He is determined to play by the rules.Paul would have agreed. Stephen Finlan writes (Paul’s Cultic Atonement Metaphors, 101), apropos of Paul’s use of cultic terminology in 2 . . . . Continue Reading »

On Eagles’ Wings

From Leithart

Yahweh brought Israel out of Egypt “on eagles’ wings” (Exodus 19:4). John A. Davies argues (A Royal Priesthood) that this is no trite metaphor:“Representations of [eagles and vultures] are found in close association with royalty in both Egypt and Mesopotamia. A series of . . . . Continue Reading »

Imago Dei

From Leithart

Priests have been despised throughout the modern era, but in Scripture the priest is a foretaste of the destiny of the human race. He is a sign of the restoration of the imago Dei.John Davies explains how (A Royal Priesthood, 164-5): “Just as the original creation of the cosmos . . . is . . . . Continue Reading »

Like Adam

From Leithart

Hosea 6:7 has been a Reformed proof text of an Adamic covenant: They broke covenant like Adam.Recent commentary has been skeptical. “Adam” can mean “mankind,” rather than the individual first man.John Davies (A Royal Priesthood, 202) thinks the older interpretation, however . . . . Continue Reading »