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).
Hilary Clinton had some stiff opposition last week in Pakistan. Everywhere she went in her dazzling blue pants suit, Pakistanis raged about US policy in Afghanistan and along the Afghanistan-Pakistan border. One woman pointedly asked, Do the US drone bombings that kill Pakistani . . . . Continue Reading »
Mike Bull responds to my comments on Athanasius’ discussion of purity and bodily secretions: “I agree with Luther, but isn’t the point more that what comes out is ‘worthless”? Moving beyond the Old Testament pedagogical purpose of ceremonial uncleanness, affirming the . . . . Continue Reading »
Athanasius insists that the Father must have an eternal Son because the Father’s essence could never have been imperfect: “if He is called the eternal offspring of the Father, He is rightly so called. For never was the essence of the Father imperfect ( ateles ), that what . . . . Continue Reading »
From Richard Wilbur’s “Lying”: In the strict sense, of course, We invent nothing, merely bearing witness To what each morning brings again to light: Gold crosses, cornices, astonishment Of panes, the turbine-vent which natural law Spins on the grill-end of the diners roof, . . . . Continue Reading »
Canon Press is having a Fall Sale, which you can read about here: http://www.canonpress.com/shop/ . . . . Continue Reading »
Perhaps the most obvious and easiest resolution of the conundrums that Augustine explores is a perichoretic one. Does the Father have wisdom “in Himself”? Yes, because the Wisdom that is the Son dwells in Him by the Spirit. Does the Father possess His being “in . . . . Continue Reading »
1 Corinthians 1:24 says that Christ is the power and wisdom of God. Augustine spends two books of de Trinitate trying to figure out what that means. In Book 6, he tries out the notion that the Father’s power and wisdom is simply the power and wisdom that He begets as Son, so that . . . . Continue Reading »
Augustine argues ( de Trinitate 5.1.6) that claims about human beins are spoken either secundum substantiam or secundum accidens . The latter category includes relational terms, statements about us ad aliquid , with reference to another. That is, for humans, in contrast to God, . . . . Continue Reading »
Addressing the question of whether God is object to us, Jenson says that objectivity is essential to conversation: In all true mutual discourse . . . each must be both subject for and object of the other. As I am present to address you, I am a subject and you are my . . . . Continue Reading »
Athanasius’ letter to Amun (354) is a meditation on purity. Defilement, he argues, occurs “when we commit sin, that foulest of things.” That is what Jesus meant when He said that we are defiled by what comes out - out of the heart . Bodily functions, by contrast, do . . . . Continue Reading »
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