Is Martin Luther’s doctrine of vocation adequate to address the futility of so much modern work?
Augustine Against Vitalism
Against the charge that Christianity neuters human excellence, Augustine has already provided an answer.
Postliberal Gods and Monsters
To counter non-Christian postliberal thinkers, the Church must reckon with the end of Western civilization.
Will All Be Saved? David Bentley Hart on Universal Salvation
Few topics are more likely to cause a stir among Christians than universal salvation, or apokatastasis—the view that no person will ultimately experience eternal estrangement from God. Although the universalist view is difficult, if not impossible, to reconcile with the authoritative teaching of most Christian churches, it is not consistently considered heresy on the level of, say, denying the Trinity or the hypostatic union in Christ. But the concept of hell as “eternal conscious torment” has undoubtedly been a part of the Christian theological fabric for centuries, and from the perspective of the broader Church catholic, the burden of proof is probably on any challenger wishing to disrupt that consensus.