Reclaiming the Medieval Atonement by Benjamin Wheaton | Feb 7, 2022 | Church History, Theology, Web Exclusives A new book, busting the myth that medieval Christians had no theory of propitiation and expiation.
Tragedy as Philosophy in the Reformation World: A Review by Philip Thomas Mohr | Nov 4, 2021Tragedy as Philosophy in the Modern World by...
What I’ve Been Writing by Brad Littlejohn | Aug 30, 2021Over the past eighteen months, I have been...
Of Minds and Machines: Transhumanism and the Christian by Christopher Brown | Aug 12, 2021Since the beginning of history, people have used...
Introducing Quartet for the End of Blogs by John Ahern | Jul 7, 2021What can you expect from the "Quartet for the...
Persecuted, But Not Forsaken: Lessons from the Second Century Church by Calvin Goligher | Mar 23, 2023At the end of his watershed book The Rise and...
Progressives and the Bible in the Gilded Age by Miles Smith | Mar 22, 2023The United States’ centennial celebrations in...
“O Wash Our Fetid Guilt”: Another Poem of Georg Fabricius by E.J. Hutchinson | Mar 21, 2023In this post, I translate the second hymn of...
After Dominion: An Interview with Tom Holland by Rhys Laverty | Mar 21, 2023A long form interview with historian Tom Holland...