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Category Archives: Bruce McCormack

Bruce McCormack’s 2011 Kantzer Lectures now available

23 Friday Dec 2011

Posted by Jason Goroncy in Bruce McCormack, Election, Lecture, Theology, Trinity

≈ Leave a Comment

Back in September, I posted on Bruce McCormack‘s 2011 Kantzer Lectures on the theme ‘The God who Graciously Elects’. I tried watching these at the time via the livestream, but the stream itself, or something at my end of it, was really quite inadequate. That said, what I did hear of the lectures was, as expected, fantastic. I’m pleased to announce that the lectures are now available for MP3 download:

Lecture One: Tuesday, September 27 |
“Is the Reformation Over? Reflections on the Place of the Doctrine of God in Evangelical Theology Today”.

Lecture Two:  Wednesday, September 28 | 
“From the One God to the Trinity: The Creation of the Orthodox
Understanding of God”.

Lecture Three: Wednesday, September 28 |
“The Great Reversal: From the Economy of God to the Trinity in
Modern Theology”. 

Lecture Four: Thursday, September 29 | 
“The God Who Reveals Himself: The Mystery of the Trinity in the New
Testament”. 

Lecture Five: Monday, October 3 | 
“Which Christology?  Refining the Economic Basis of the Christian
Doctrine of God”.

Lecture Six: Monday, October 3 | 
“The Processions Contain the Missions: Reconstructing the Doctrine
of an Immanent Trinity”.

Lecture Seven: Tuesday, October 4 |
“The Being of God as Gift and Grace: On Freedom and Necessity, Aseity
and the Divine “Attributes”.

The lectures are also available to watch via Henry Centre Media.

 

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By the way, if you’re the praying kind – i.e., if you’re someone who tries to be human – please consider ascending a few breaths for the people of Christchurch who have just, about an hour ago, experienced another earthquake.

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‘The God who Graciously Elects’: Bruce McCormack and the 2011 Kantzer Lectures [UPDATED]

17 Saturday Sep 2011

Posted by Jason Goroncy in Bruce McCormack, Election

≈ 2 Comments

The plan is that in just 10 days time, Bruce McCormack will deliver the first of seven of the 2011 Kantzer Lectures in Revealed Theology. His theme? ‘The God who Graciously Elects’. Few have thought, written and spoken more about this topic in recent years than Bruce has, and even though I’ve now heard Bruce speak to this theme on five occasions across three continents, I’m very much looking forward to hearing him again, this time via the promised live stream.

Here’s the UPDATED lecture titles:

Lecture One: Tuesday, September 27 | 7:00-8:30 pm
“Is the Reformation Over? Reflections on the Place of the Doctrine
of God in Evangelical Theology Today”
 
Lecture Two:  Wednesday, September 28 | 2:00-3:30 pm
“From the One God to the Trinity: The Creation of the Orthodox
Understanding of God”
 
Lecture Three: Wednesday, September 28 | 4:00-5:30 pm
“The Great Reversal: From the Economy of God to the Trinity in
Modern Theology”
 
Lecture Four: Thursday, September 29 | 4:00-5:30 pm
“The God Who Reveals Himself: The Mystery of the Trinity in the New
Testament”
 
Lecture Five: Monday, October 3 | 2:00-3:30 pm
“Which Christology?  Refining the Economic Basis of the Christian
Doctrine of God”
 
Lecture Six: Monday, October 3 | 4:00-5:30 pm
“The Processions Contain the Missions: Reconstructing the Doctrine
of an Immanent Trinity”
 
Lecture Seven: Tuesday, October 4 | 4:00-5:30 pm
“The Being of God as Gift and Grace: On Freedom and Necessity, Aseity
and the Divine “Attributes”
 
The lectures are open to all, free of charge. They will also be live-streamed here.


 

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Bruce McCormack Lectures

22 Friday Oct 2010

Posted by Jason Goroncy in Bruce McCormack, Lecture

≈ 10 Comments

January 2011 will witness Professor Bruce McCormack give the Croall Lectures (in the Martin Hall at New College) on the theme ‘Abandoned by God: The Death of Christ in Systematic, Historical, and Exegetical Perspective’. The titles are:

  • 17th January – Penal Substitution: Its Problems and Its Promise
  • 18th January – The Cry of Dereliction: The Strange Fate of Jesus in the New Testament
  • 20th January – The Incarnation as Saving Event: Theories Which Order the Work of Christ to a Metaphysical Conception of His Person
  • 24th January – Let Justice and Peace Reign: Theories Which Fail to Integrate the Person and Work of Christ
  • 25th January – After Metaphysics: Theories Which Order the Person of Christ to His Work
  • 27th January – The Lord of Glory was Crucified: Reformed Kenoticism and Death in God.

And later in the year (September 27 – October 4, 2011), Professor McCormack will also be giving the Kantzer Lectures on the theme ‘The God Who Graciously Elects: Six Lectures on the Doctrine of Election’.

Any who have been so priviledged to have heard Bruce lecture before can anticipate a real feast.

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Coleridge on the ‘Ground’ of God

08 Monday Jun 2009

Posted by Jason Goroncy in Bruce McCormack, Karl Barth, Paul Molnar, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Steve Holmes

≈ Leave a Comment

After re-reading McCormack and Molnar recently, I began to make my way through Berkeley’s fascinating essay on Coleridge, where I was struck by this claim:

‘The most radical element of Coleridge’s account of the Trinity is the inclusion of a fourth term: the “Prothesis” or “Ground” of God. [Coleridge] insists that this ground be conceived as will, and bases his claims of the personality of God on this subtlety’. – Richard Berkeley, Coleridge and the Crisis of Reason (Houndmills: Palgrave Macmillan, 2007), 46.

Now I’m no Coleridge scholar (Steve Holmes is my Coleridge man), but might it be that good ol’ uncle Samuel has something to contribute to this debate among Barth’s interpreters?

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Cassidy on McCormack on Barth: Election and Trinity

28 Thursday May 2009

Posted by Jason Goroncy in Bruce McCormack, Karl Barth

≈ 1 Comment

The latest issue of The Westminster Theological Journal includes a piece by James J. Cassidy entitled ‘Election and Trinity’ in which he offers a ‘non-Barthian’ critique of Bruce McCormack’s reading of Barth’s ‘second’ doctrine of election. It’s a predictable argument: ‘… what McCormack has done is conflate the very Creator-creature distinction that he claims to maintain. Or, rather, he has collapsed the creature into the Creator, just as his Christology (with its ‘‘Reformed kenosis’’) collapses the humanity into the divinity of Christ’.

I have neither the time nor the desire to engage with Cassidy here, at least at this stage,  but simply wanted to draw attention to the article.

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Bruce McCormack responds to his critics

10 Thursday Jul 2008

Posted by Jason Goroncy in Bruce McCormack

≈ 2 Comments

Bruce McCormack has written a (lengthy but erudite) two-part response to his critics at WTS. Even for those relatively unfamiliar with the context in which his response is offered, the response itself is well-worth reading.

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McCormack lays down the gauntlet

10 Tuesday Jun 2008

Posted by Jason Goroncy in Bruce McCormack, Christology

≈ Leave a Comment

Recently over at aboutlet, Bruce McCormack cleared up a few misreadings and then laid down the gauntlet to Lane Tipton: ‘The issue for me has never been the existence of a Logos asarkos (to deny which would be tantamount to rejecting the pre-existence of the eternal Son). The issue has always been the identity of the Logos asarkos (i.e. whether the identity of the eternal Son can be established on the basis of some form of natural theology or only on the basis of Christology)’. Read the post here.

It’s great to see Bruce entering blogdom.

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Great Theologians

15 Tuesday Jan 2008

Posted by Jason Goroncy in Bruce McCormack, Karl Barth, Theology

≈ 4 Comments

Perhaps encouraged by a new leaf of democracy in Australian politics, Ben has resorted to a poll in order to identify the ‘world’s best living theologian’. A harmless enough exercise, I suppose, though thwarted with little promise of edifying anyone – something good theologians ought to be about. [Read: Jason's just grumpy because Eberhard Jüngel is struggling to not come last]. In something of a response, Steve proposes some helpful comments on what it means – and should mean – to evaluate theologians.

Upon reading these two posts, I was reminded of the recent TF Torrance Lectures by Bruce McCormack and of how Bruce began on the first night by honouring Professor Torrance. He did so by recalling some words from Barth who once said that the phrase ‘great theologian’ was something of a contradiction in terms because worldly notions of greatness require qualities and values in a person which are contrary to the calling of a theologian. A theologian is called to be a witness – one who points beyond themselves – and to do so in service of those called to be ministers of the word.

NB: Ben has since redeemed the dignity of his blog with this post.

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Steve Holmes evaluates McCormack’s TF Torrance Lectures

07 Monday Jan 2008

Posted by Jason Goroncy in Bruce McCormack, Creation, Kenosis, Kenoticism, Trinity

≈ Leave a Comment

After posting his four reflections, Steve Holmes (who is obviously not lecturing this week and so has more time to devote to blogdom) now stands back and asks, ‘How to evaluate McCormack’s novel account of kenosis?’ He writes:

On trinity: ‘… it seems to me that [McCormack's] basic position is securely orthodox, certainly much more so than all of the recent theology that, misled by the word ‘Person’, insists on finding three instances of many or most divine properties (will; operation; knowledge; …) within the Godhead.’

On creation: ‘If there is a criticism which is in danger of sticking, I think it is to do with creation.’

On kenosis: ‘McCormack’s account of kenosis is, or at least could easily be rendered, orthodox. Is it, however, compelling? Alongside the constructive work in these lectures was a line of critique of classical Christology which established the need for the fresh construction. Simply and bluntly, I found this critique unconvincing. It was, in essence, Herrmann’s critique of metaphysics: the problem with Christology prior to Schleiermacher was its investment in certain metaphysical commitments that were alien to the gospel. This led to irreconcilable tensions, in patristic Christology, which only Cyril’s (supposed) Origenism allowed him to escape, and throughout the tradition into the nineteenth century, with the incompatibility of the anhypostasia and dithelitism coming to the fore. It is these metaphysical commitments, giving rise to the tensions they do, that drive the need for a revisionist Christology … I don’t feel the pressure that is driving Bruce.’

Full post here.

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Bruce McCormack’s TF Torrance Lectures – Lecture 4

07 Monday Jan 2008

Posted by Jason Goroncy in Bruce McCormack, Kenosis, Kenoticism, Stanley Fish, Theology

≈ 2 Comments

Steve Holmes has posted his fourth reflection of McCormack’s recent TF Torrance lectures at St Andrews. He writes of Bruce’s proposal:

Let me approach it like this: it is a standard thesis of classical theology that God’s being is His act; further, God’s act is single, and simple. This is, of course, already a problem, at least if one wants to continue to maintain that God’s existence is independent of the created order: St Thomas devotes considerable ingenuity to explaining how God’s act of creation can happen without any change in God (1a q.45 arts 2 &3). When Barth brings the doctrine of election into the doctrine of God (it is treated in the second part-volume of vol. II, not the first of vol. III), and links election closely to incarnation, the problem becomes acute. However, the gains of Barth’s novel doctrine of election are sufficiently obvious that almost every serious (Protestant) theological proposal of the second half of the twentieth century chose to face the problems, rather than lose the gains.

In general, and in one way or another, the problems were eliminated in the later twentieth century by the simple expedient of losing the axiom of impassibility, properly understood: if God’s life is allowed to be dependent on creation, there is no problem. The single greatest merit of Bruce’s proposal, it seems to me, is that he is not prepared to play this game. Instead, he develops a novel account of kenosis.

Read the full post here. I have linked to all of Steve’s notes here, and I hope to post my notes from these lectures sometime soon.

Also, around the traps …

  • Locke and Mill both believed in being open to the other side’s ideas. Read here.
  • Andy and Jim (part 1; part 2) have both posted reviews on Rob Warner’s, Re-inventing English Evangelicalism 1966-2001: A Theological and Sociological Study
  • Barry Smith of Birkbeck College London gives a lucid account of Wittgenstein’s conception of Philosophy in this MP3.
  • Stanley Fish asks, ‘Will the humanities save us?’. He concludes:

Teachers of literature and philosophy are competent in a subject, not in a ministry. It is not the business of the humanities to save us, no more than it is their business to bring revenue to a state or a university. What then do they do? They don’t do anything, if by “do” is meant bring about effects in the world. And if they don’t bring about effects in the world they cannot be justified except in relation to the pleasure they give to those who enjoy them.

    To the question “of what use are the humanities?”, the only honest answer is none whatsoever. And it is an answer that brings honor to its subject. Justification, after all, confers value on an activity from a perspective outside its performance. An activity that cannot be justified is an activity that refuses to regard itself as instrumental to some larger good. The humanities are their own good. There is nothing more to say, and anything that is said … diminishes the object of its supposed praise.

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    Neue Zeitschrift für Systematische Theologie und Religionsphilosophie

    22 Saturday Dec 2007

    Posted by Jason Goroncy in Bruce McCormack, Journals, Karl Barth, Paul Molnar, Theology, Wolfhart Pannenberg

    ≈ Leave a Comment

    The latest edition of Neue Zeitschrift für Systematische Theologie und Religionsphilosophie is out and includes two articles of interest to me:

    ‘Can the Electing God be God without us? Some Implications of Bruce McCormack’s Understanding of Barth’s Doctrine of Election for the Doctrine of the Trinity’, by Paul D Molnar (pp. 199-222)

    Abstract:

    This article is the attempt at a dialogue with Bruce McCormack about the position he espoused in The Cambridge Companion to Karl Barth concerning the relation between God’s Election of grace and God’s Triunity. I had criticized McCormack’s position in my book, Divine Freedom and the Doctrine of the Immanent Trinity (2002), but I did not elaborate on it in great detail. To develop the dialogue I will: 1) consider McCormack’s claim that in CD II/2 Barth made Jesus Christ “rather than” the Eternal Logos the subject of election; 2) consider what Barth means when he speaks of Jesus Christ “in the beginning”; 3) compare McCormack’s thesis that the Father never had regard for the Son, apart from the humanity to be assumed, with Barth’s belief that we must not dispute the eternal will of God which “precedes even predestination”; 4) analyze in detail McCormack’s rejection of Barth’s belief that the logos asarkos in distinction from the logos incarnandus is a necessary concept in trinitarian theology; 5) discuss Barth’s concept of the divine will in relation to the concept advanced by McCormack and suggest that McCormack has fallen into the error of Hermann Schell by thinking that God in some sense takes his origin from himself, so that God would only be triune if he elected us; 6) explain why it is a problem to hold, as McCormack does, that God’s self-determination to be triune and his election of us should be considered one and the same act; and finally 7) explain McCormack’s confusion of time and eternity in his latest article on the subject in the February, 2007 issue of the Scottish Journal of Theology, and his own espousal of a kind of indeterminacy on God’s part (which he theoretically rejects).

    ‘The Difference Totality Makes. Reconsidering Pannenberg’s Eschatological Ontology’, by Benjamin Myers (pp. 141-155)

    Abstract:

    Summary Wolfhart Pannenberg’s eschatological ontology has been criticised for undermining the goodness and reality of finite creaturely differentiation. Drawing on David Bentley Hart’s recent ontological proposal, this article explores the critique of Pannenberg’s ontology, and offers a defence of Pannenberg’s depiction of the relationship between difference and totality, especially as it is presented in his 1988 work, Metaphysics and the Idea of God. In this work, Pannenberg articulates a structured relationship between difference and totality in which individual finite particularities are preserved and affirmed within a coherent semantic whole. Creaturely differences are not sublated or eliminated in the eschatological totality, but they are integrated into a harmonious totality of meaning. This view of the semantic function of totality can be further clarified by drawing an analogy between Pannenberg’s ontological vision and Robert W. Jenson’s model of the eschatological consummation as a narrative conclusion to the drama of finite reality.

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    Steve Holmes on Bruce McCormack’s TF Torrance Lectures

    21 Friday Dec 2007

    Posted by Jason Goroncy in Bruce McCormack, Karl Barth, Steve Holmes

    ≈ 1 Comment

    Though a newcomer to theo-blogdom, Steve Holmes (not this one, nor this one, and definitely not this Transylvanian Saxon from Sibiu) is no stranger to most of us. He has kicked off his blog – Shored Fragments – with, among other tidbits, a number of helpful reflections on Bruce McCormack’s recent TF Torrance Lectures (formerly the SJT lectures) held at the University of St Andrews. Here’s Steve’s posts:

    • Bruce McCormack’s TFT Lectures (1)
    • Bruce McCormack’s TFT Lectures (2)
    • Bruce McCormack’s TFT Lectures (3)
    • Bruce McCormack’s TFT Lectures (4)
    • Bruce McCormack’s TFT Lectures (5): Evaluation

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    Bruce McCormack to Lecture at St. Andrews

    03 Saturday Nov 2007

    Posted by Jason Goroncy in Bruce McCormack, Christology

    ≈ 3 Comments

    The Frederick and Margaret L. Weyerhaeuser Professor of Systematic Theology at Princeton Seminary, Bruce L. McCormack, will give the Scottish Journal of Theology Lectures at St Andrews University the week of December 3-6, 2007. His lectureship is titled ‘The Eternity of the Eternal Son: A Reformed Version of Kenotic Christianity’, and will include four lectures. For more information about times and locations, contact St Mary’s College at the University of St Andrews. I know at least one guy in St Andrews who can’t wait. Bring it on Bruce!

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    McCormack’s Justification in Perspective: A Review

    11 Sunday Feb 2007

    Posted by Jason Goroncy in Bruce McCormack, Justification

    ≈ Leave a Comment

    JUSTIFICATION IN PERSPECTIVE: HISTORICAL DEVELOPMENTS AND CONTEMPORARY CHALLENGES. Edited by Bruce L. McCormack. Grand Rapids/Edinburgh: Baker Academic/Rutherford House, 2006. Pp. 277. $24.99, (currently $17.24), ISBN 10:0-8010-3131-1; ISBN: 13: 978-0-8010-3131-1.

    This collection of 10 papers and a sermon from the tenth Edinburgh Dogmatics Conference(2003) seeks to explicate more fully the Protestant teaching on justification. The papers are gathered into 3 sections: (i) Sermon, (ii) Antecedents and Historical Development, and (iii) Continuities and Discontinuities in Current Challenges to the Traditional View.

    The volume’s editor, Bruce McCormack, asserts that the function of this collection is to serve as ‘a progress report on the state of the Protestant doctrine of justification today in the midst of challenge and change’ (p. 9). He also confesses that ‘no effort was made to ensure uniformity of perspective’ (ibid). This is, arguably, part of the collection’s strength. That it is offered as something of an ‘in-house’ conversation amongst evangelicals of a Reformed flavour makes the exchange deeper and more exciting, even if narrower in scope. Contributors include Mark Bonnington, Nick Needham, David Wright, Carl Trueman, Karla Wübbenhorst, Anthony Lane, Andrew McGowan, Bruce McCormack, Henri Blocher, Simon Gathercole, and Tom Wright.

    Some highlights from the menu for this reviewer include Needham’s offering on ‘Justification in the Early Church Fathers’, wherein he convincingly argues that notions of imputed righteousness, penal substitution, and justification through faith alone occur in the fathers. Wübbenhorst’s paper is an impressive reminder of Calvin’s indebtedness to, and critical appropriation of, Luther’s thinking, whilst McGowan helpfully explores the relationship between justification and the ordo salutis, identifying two main streams of ‘union with Christ’ thinking within the Reformed tradition thus reminding us of the tradition’s diversity.

    McCormack’s paper on Justitia Aliena in Barth is an opulent and timely feast. While not all readers will be convinced, McCormack offers not only a faithful exposition of Barth’s doctrine of justification, but also ample evidence that Barth is one who ought rightly be regarded as standing clearly in the ‘Reformed’ stream. In the final essay, Wright responds provocatively and, at times, scathingly to critics of the ‘New Perspective’ outlining the main tenets of the ‘Perspective’ and clarifying his own position within and against the smorgasbord of ‘Perspectives’.

    Justification in Perspective makes a worthy contribution alongside recent works by Thomas Oden (The Justification Reader), David Aune (Rereading Paul Together: Protestant and Catholic perspectives on justification, Alister McGrath (Iustitia Dei: A History of the Christian Doctrine of Justification), Tuomo Mannermaa (Christ Present In Faith: Luther’s View Of Justification), and Mark Husbands and Daniel Treier (Justification: What’s at Stake in the Current Debates). While the volume as a whole betrays a dearth of serious exegetical work (a fact that Wright annunciates), it remains a valuable collection from which the undergraduate or informed historian and systematician will glean much.

    A modified version of this review is to be soon published in Religious Studies Review, after which the definitive version will be available from Blackwell Synergy.

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    • University of Otago Library

    Other Journals

    • Cambridge Humanities Review
    • Candour
    • Ceasefire
    • Wunderkammer

    Pastoralia

    • Alban Institute
    • Covered Dish
    • Deep and Wide
    • Faith and Leadership
    • Fresh Expressions
    • Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America Ministry Resources
    • John Mark Ministries
    • Lewis Center for Church Leadership
    • New Creation Teaching Ministry
    • New Way
    • Presbyterian Youth Ministry
    • Priscilla's Friends
    • ReSource
    • Rural & Migrant Ministry
    • Rural Ministry
    • SpouseConnect
    • The Connection
    • Youth Worker

    Research Tools

    • ABC Religion & Ethics
    • Alexander Turnbull Library
    • Arts & Letters Daily
    • Australiasian Digital Theses Program
    • BibleGateway
    • Bibleworks
    • British Online Archives
    • Center for Barth Studies
    • Charles Darwin Online
    • Christian Classics Ethereal Library
    • Creeds of Christendom
    • D. Anthony Storm’s Commentary on Kierkegaard
    • Dictionary of New Zealand Biography
    • Dictionary of the Scots Language
    • Dooyeweerd Pages
    • Dr Williams Centre for Dissenting Studies
    • Early New Zealand Books Project
    • Etymology Dictionary
    • Find Articles
    • FirstSearch
    • Great Books & Classics
    • Hauerwas Online
    • Humanities Research Network
    • Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy
    • Jonathan Edwards Online
    • JournalSeek
    • Kant on the Web – 1
    • Kant on the Web – 2
    • Karl Barth Archive
    • Kierkegaard Articles
    • Letters of Note
    • Monachos
    • Māori Dictionary
    • National Museums Scotland
    • New Schaff-Herzog Encyclopedia of Religious Knowledge
    • New Zealand Electronic Text Centre
    • New Zealand History Online
    • New Zealand Religious History Newsletter
    • Nietzsche
    • Online Books
    • OpenDOAR
    • Oxford Dictionary of National Biography
    • Papers Past – National Library of New Zealand
    • Perichoresis
    • Philosophical Libraries
    • Philosophy Professor
    • Presbyterian Church of Aotearoa New Zealand Archives Research Centre
    • Presbyterian Research
    • Project Gutenberg
    • Reformation and Renaissance Studies
    • Religion Online
    • Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy
    • Royal Historical Society
    • Søren Kierkegaard Research Center
    • Scottish Archive Network
    • Scottish Reformation Society
    • Te Aka Māori-English – English-Māori Dictionary
    • The H. Henry Meeter Center for Calvin Studies
    • The Post-Reformation Digital Library
    • The R.S. Thomas Study Centre
    • Theological Research Exchange Network
    • Theological Studies UK
    • Theses
    • Trinity Study Centre
    • Tyndale House
    • UMI Dissertation Publishing
    • Victorian Web
    • William Blake Archive
    • Worldcat
    • Yale Research Guide

    Societies

    • American Academy of Religion
    • American Society of Church History
    • Anabaptist Association of Australia & New Zealand
    • Aotearoa New Zealand Association for Mission Studies
    • Association of Practical Theology
    • Association of Practical Theology in Oceania
    • Australasian Theological Forum
    • Australian and New Zealand Association of Theological Schools
    • Australian Association for the Study of Religions
    • Center for Barth Studies
    • Christian Theological Research Fellowship
    • Churches Theological Research Trust
    • CS Lewis Society of California
    • Dietrich Bonhoeffer Society
    • Hegel Society
    • Institute for Reformed Theology
    • Institute for Theology, Imagination and the Arts
    • International Academy of Practical Theology
    • Jürgen Moltmann Group
    • Kierkegaard Society of the UK
    • Mercersburg Research Fellowship
    • New Creation Teaching Ministry
    • New Zealand Association of Theological Schools
    • New Zealand Historical Association
    • Nineteenth-Century Theology Group
    • Presbyterian Historical Society
    • Reformation Scotland
    • Religious History Association of Aotearoa New Zealand
    • Royal Historical Society
    • Søren Kierkegaard Society (USA)
    • Scottish Evangelical Theology Society
    • Scottish Reformation Society
    • Societas Liturgica
    • Society for Pastoral Theology
    • Society for Reformation Studies
    • Society for the Study of Theology
    • Society of Biblical Literature
    • TF Torrance Theological Fellowship
    • The International Reformed Theology Institute
    • The Jonathan Edwards Society
    • The Mercersburg Society
    • The Society of Christian Ethics
    • Vatican – The Holy See
    • World Communion of Reformed Churches
    • World Reformed Fellowship

    Theology Journals

    • American Theological Inquiry
    • Anvil
    • Ars Disputandi
    • Australian Religion Studies Review
    • Case Magazine
    • Christian Century
    • Colloquium
    • Communio
    • Credenda Agenda
    • Crucible
    • CT – Books & Culture
    • CT – Christian History & Biography
    • Cultural Encounters
    • Ecclesia Reformanda
    • Ecclesiology
    • First Things
    • Harvard Ichthus
    • Harvard Theological Review
    • Heythrop Journal
    • HTS Teologiese Studies/Theological Studies
    • International Bulletin of Missionary Research
    • International Journal of Practical Theology
    • International Journal of Public Theology
    • International Journal of Systematic Theology
    • Irish Theological Quarterly
    • Journal for Christian Theological Research
    • Journal for Cultural and Religious Theory
    • Journal for Scripture & Theology
    • Journal of Pastoral Care & Counseling
    • Journal of Pastoral Theology
    • Journal of Psychology & Theology
    • Journal of Reformed Theology
    • Journal of Religion and Popular Culture
    • Journal of Theological Interpretation
    • Journal of Theological Studies
    • Lectionary Homiletics
    • Literature and Theology
    • Logia
    • Modern Reformation
    • Modern Theology
    • Neue Zeitschrift für Systematische Theologie und Religionsphilosophie
    • New Blackfriars
    • Open Theology
    • Pacifica
    • Participatio
    • Perspectives Journal
    • Practical Theology
    • Princeton Theological Review
    • Pro Ecclesia
    • Public Theology
    • Quodlibet
    • Reformed World
    • Religious Studies
    • Religious Studies Review
    • Review of Biblical Literature
    • Reviews in Religion & Theology
    • Revue d'Histoire et de Philosophie Religieuses
    • Scottish Bulletin of Evangelical Theology
    • Scottish Journal of Theology
    • St Mark's Review
    • Stimulus
    • Studies in Christian Ethics
    • Testamentum Imperium
    • The Journal of Analytic Theology
    • The Other Journal
    • Themelios
    • Theological Librarianship
    • Theology in Scotland
    • Wesleyan Theological Journal
    • Zeitschrift für Neuere Theologiegeschichte

    Worship Resources

    • Book of Common Prayer
    • Bruce Prewer
    • Calvin Hymnary Project
    • CCEL Hymn Tune Archive
    • Center for Worship Resourcing
    • Cyber Hymnal
    • Disclosing New Worlds
    • Emu Music
    • Genevan Psalter
    • Girardian Reflections on the Lectionary
    • Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America Ministry Resources
    • Ignatian Spirituality
    • Laughing Bird
    • Liturgies Online
    • Lutheran Hymnals
    • New Creation Music
    • Oremus
    • PC(USA) Worship Resources
    • Psalter.org
    • Ralph McMichael
    • Reformed Liturgical Institute
    • Reformed Praise
    • RUF Hymnbook
    • Sacred Space
    • Taize
    • The Billabong
    • The Preachers Institute
    • The Text This Week
    • The Work of the People
    • Torch – The English Province of the Order of Preachers
    • Transforming Worship
    • Wild Goose Resources
    • Worship in Scots

    Books I’ve Written/Contributed To

    Topics

    Advent Advice Alexander Solzhenitsyn Alfonse Borysewicz Anglicanism Anthropology Apologetics Art Atheism Atonement Aung San Suu Kyi Australia Authority Baptism Barack Obama Bible Biblical criticism Biblical theology Biography Blasphemy Blogging Book Review Books Brian Turner Bruce McCormack Burma Calvinism Children Christianity Christmas Christology Church Church and State Church History Church unity Compassion Conference Confession Conscience Creation Creeds Cross CS Lewis Culture David Bentley Hart Death Democracy Dietrich Bonhoeffer Discipleship Dunedin Easter Eberhard Jüngel Ecclesiology Ecumenism Education Election Emil Brunner Eschatology Ethics Eucharist Evil Faith Fatherhood Film Forgiveness Freedom Friedrich Nietzsche Friedrich Schleiermacher Fyodor Dostoevsky Geoffrey Bingham Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel GK Chesterton God God's name Gospel Grace Hans Küng Hans Urs von Balthasar Healing Hell Hermeneutics History Holiness Holy Communion Holy Spirit Hope Humanity Human Rights Humour Hymn Idolatry Imagination Imago Dei Incarnation Indigenous Australia Iraq James Denney James K. Baxter Jesus Christ John Calvin John McLeod Campbell John Pilger John Webster Joseph Ratzinger Journals JRR Tolkein Judgement Justice Justification Jürgen Moltmann Karen Karl Barth Kingdom of God Knowledge of God Leadership Lent Les Murray Life Love Love of God Marilynne Robinson Marriage Martin Luther Michael Leunig Miroslav Volf Missiology Mission Music Names News New Testament Studies New Zealand Noam Chomsky NT Wright Parenting parenting style Pastoral Ministry PCANZ Penal substitution Philosophy Podcasts Poetry Politics Power Prayer Preaching Presbyterianism PT Forsyth R.S. Thomas Ray Anderson Reading Recipes Reconciliation Redemption Reformed Religion Research Resurrection Revelation Review Richard Bauckham Richard Dawkins Richard Lischer Robert Cording Robert Jenson Roman Catholicism Rowan Willams RS Thomas Rudolph Otto Sacraments Salvation Sanctification Science Scripture Sermons Sex Sin Slavoj Žižek Stanley Hauerwas Suffering Søren Kierkegaard Teaching TF Torrance Theodicy Theological education Theology Theology and the Arts Trevor Hart Trinity Universalism Victorians Videos Violence Walter Brueggemann War War Crimes William Stringfellow Wine Worship Writing

    Archives

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