Elisha Anthology
The Saint John’s Bible uses parallel panels in several illuminations to create a visual anthology. One such image is the Elisha Anthology, which depicts five of Elisha’s miracles side-by-side. From...
View ArticleMarking Gratitude: Rethinking Plagiarism
When I discuss plagiarism with my students, I’ve learned to expect lots of questions. They are incredibly anxious about identifying the elusive line that separates theft of another’s ideas from proper...
View ArticleMore on the Dubiousness on Leadership
A few months ago, I wrote a post on the dubiousness of leadership. In it, I talked about the ambiguity of leadership as one of the university’s core values. I suggested that leadership should be...
View ArticleTransfiguration
This week the Western church celebrates Transfiguration Sunday and prepares for Lent, which begins on Wednesday. While the Transfiguration looks forward to Easter and even Christ’s second coming, it...
View ArticleGift, Studiousness, and Core Values
There are a number of things I appreciate about Paul Griffiths’ Intellectual Appetite, but chief among them is his treatment of the intellectual and spiritual dispositions that fit the Christian way of...
View ArticleSuffering Servant
During this season of Lent, Christians reflect on the role of suffering in God’s redemption. Not only are we saved by Christ’s faithfulness through great suffering, but we are called to share in his...
View ArticleGriffiths on Gift: Being Creatures
Coming to Paul Griffiths’ Intellectual Appetites with the still-tender scars of a years-long academic engagement in which post-modern thought on “gift” was a major combatant, I read Chapter Five,...
View ArticleLuke Anthology
Next Sunday the gospel reading in the lectionary comes from Luke 15, the chapter that recounts three of Jesus’ parables about the lost: the parable of the lost sheep, the parable of the lost coin, and...
View ArticleDinner at the Pharisee’s House
Hospitality is hard. It brings chaos into our lives. It upsets our tidy order. But we are commanded to practice hospitality because God has already shown radical hospitality toward us. Our human...
View ArticleCrucifixion
As we enter Holy Week, we begin to walk with Jesus toward the cross. The gospel accounts of the crucifixion describe many people who are involved with Jesus’ suffering and death, and their responses to...
View ArticleResurrection
We know the Easter story. We know the joy and amazement and gratitude that we are supposed to feel. But sometimes we can get so caught up trying to put on the feelings we’re supposed to have that we...
View ArticleRoad to Emmaus
The story of the disciples on the road to Emmaus complements the story we looked at last week, where Mary first mistakes Jesus for the gardener and then recognizes him as the risen Christ. The...
View ArticleLife of Paul
The Easter season is a time of celebration and proclamation. We celebrate the good news of Jesus’ resurrection, and we follow the example of Mary Magdalene and the disciples whom Jesus met on the road...
View ArticleThe Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse
While we generally focus on the more happy parts of Easter—the empty tomb, the glorified Christ, and the brightly colored plastic easter eggs filled with candy—the new life that Jesus brings still...
View ArticleVision of the New Jerusalem
The last full illumination in The Saint John’s Bible celebrates the New Jerusalem that will descend to earth as the fulfillment of the redemption set in motion by Jesus’ incarnation, death, and...
View ArticleRaising of Lazarus
Jesus’ most spectacular miracle, one that forced witnesses to either believe in him or violently reject him, was raising Lazarus from the dead. John’s narration of this miracle focuses on the various...
View ArticlePentecost
Next week the Western church celebrates the feast of Pentecost, the birth of the church. On this day, the church became the embodiment of Jesus on earth, and we celebrate the Holy Spirit’s power to...
View ArticleAt the Intersection: Thinking and Teaching at the Intersection of Theology...
This is the first entry of an ongoing series called “At the Intersection” that profiles the work of academics thinking and teaching at the intersection of two or more academic disciplines. We here at...
View ArticleAm I Rubbish? On Academic Impostor Syndrome
A Guest Post by David Russell Mosley I am the worst theologian there is. When I find myself in a group of my “peers” I feel totally inadequate, as if I can be nothing more than a mere popularizer of...
View ArticleEducational Technology’s Inflated Promises
I recently came across a slender book that aims to redesign liberal education using digital technologies. Titled Open and Integrative: Designing Liberal Education for the New Digital Ecosystem, it...
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