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).
The church should be operate on the expectation that we've still got things to learn. Continue Reading »
The last few fires of Revelation are smokeless. Continue Reading »
Should we believe in subjects and objects? Continue Reading »
The fruits of our labor are also the fruits of the labor of others. Continue Reading »
What makes churches divide? Continue Reading »
Catholicity is a Protestant tradition. Continue Reading »
God creates and decreates by His voice. Continue Reading »
Ten plagues in Exodus. Ten in Revelation. Coincidence? Continue Reading »
Books are aids to memory. Continue Reading »
Should pastors grease the Kardashian celebrity machine by mentioning Bruce Jenner from the pulpit? There are good arguments for ignoring the whole thing, but I think that’s a pastoral mistake. So much of our cultural trajectory converges on Bruce: our rampant Gnosticism, our confidence in technology, our moral libertarianism and determined flight from biblical standards, our cult of fame, our sexual self-contradictions. Bruce Jenner will be forgotten soon enough, but what he represents isn’t going away, because transgressiveness is one of the few cultural imperatives that we are not permitted to transgress.If we preach about Bruce, what should we say? When I asked the Jewish theologian David Novak how a synagogue would respond, his answer was stunning in its simplicity: First, “Jews would not recognize Jenner as a woman”; then, “Torah forbids castration.” Castration doesn’t turn a man into a woman. It only leaves him a damaged man. Continue Reading »
influential
journal of
religion and
public life
Subscribe
Latest Issue
Support First Things