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).

RSS Feed

Solomon’s crown

From Leithart

Song of Songs 3:11 speaks of the crowning of Solomon on the day of his wedding.  Most commentators refer to the Orthodox practice of crowning grooms and brides as new Adams and Eves.  I’ve got no problem with that, but I suspect there’s something else. First, as Ernst Wendland . . . . Continue Reading »

My dove

From Leithart

The beloved is a dove.  Why a dove? We can answer by taking a detour through temple theology.  The temple is made according to the pattern of the mountain, reflecting the beauty of Yahweh’s original glory.  The temple is glory come to earth., And the glory of Yahweh is like a . . . . Continue Reading »

Liturgical test

From Leithart

Jenson again.  He notes that liturgy provides a test of theological truth, in the sense that “no teaching can be true whose consequences would pervert the practice or darken the understanding of irreversibly instituted liturgy.” He illustrates: “the Reformers insisted there . . . . Continue Reading »

Continuity from the future

From Leithart

In the first volume of his Systematic Theology , Jenson argues that the Spirit is the guarantor of the church’s continuity over time: “it is God the Spirit who sustains the gospel’s and so the church’s self-identity through time,” but this means that “that . . . . Continue Reading »

Earthquake

From Leithart

Jesus’ death is earth-shattering, literally and figuratively. In the OT, earthquakes are associated with the revelation of Yahweh’s glory (cf. Psalm 77:18) and His coming as the divine warrior to rescue His people. But in Matthew, the earth quakes at Jesus’ death.  It quakes . . . . Continue Reading »

Sermon Notes

From Leithart

INTRODUCTION Orthodoxy claims that Jesus of Nazareth is God the Son in human flesh, but the test case of orthodox Christology has always been the crucifixion of Jesus.  Especially here, we confront the mystery of the incarnation, for God the Son died on the cross just as surely as He was born, . . . . Continue Reading »

Valley of Bones

From Leithart

In a 1976 CBQ article, Donald Senior points to correspondences between Matthew’s account of the death of Jesus and the dry bones scene of Ezekiel 37: “There are several apparent contacts between the description in Ezekiel and the text of Matthew: (1) reference to an earthquake . . . . Continue Reading »

Toward the temple ruins

From Leithart

The Jews mock Jesus as if He were an impotent, ruined temple.  They should have known better. When Solomon built the temple, he prayed that Yahweh would hear prayers directed toward that place.  Even when Israel went into exile, Solomon hoped, Yahweh would still hear the prayers of the . . . . Continue Reading »

Temptation of the Christ

From Leithart

The crowds, Jewish leaders, and robbers all join in a Satanic temptation” “If you are the Son of God.”  Jesus is Adam at the tree,a tree that has become a means of execution rather than a source of fruit.  The temptation of the Christ is the same as the temptation of the . . . . Continue Reading »

Baptismal meditation

From Leithart

Matthew 27:32: Now as they came out, they found a man of Cyrene, Simon by name. Him they compelled to bear His cross. The first few times Matthew uses the word “cross” in his gospel, he is referring to the cross that of the disciple rather than the cross of Jesus.  “He who does . . . . Continue Reading »