Theological Journals


Westminster Theological Journal (Nov 2021, 251-266): in “Franciscu Junius, Old Princeton, and the Question of Natural Theology: A Response to Shannon’s `Junius and Van Til on Natural Knowledge of God,” Dr. Kevin DeYoung concludes that natural theology is valuable and appreciated in the Reformed tradition, notwithstanding the alleged imputation by Dr. Shannon that it amounts to non-theology or false theology. Mid-America Journal of Theology (Fall 2021, 7-34): in “Mea Culpa: An Apology for Original Sin,” Dr. Hans Madueme argues that our relationship to Adam is federal, organic, unitive and constitutes the basis of the imputation of Adamic guilt. Anglican & Episcopal History (Sept 2014), in “Ecclesiology of Prayer Book Illustrations,” Posey Krakowski will look at illustrations from four BCPs for the ecclesiology: 1636, 1681, 1774, and 1813. Protestant Reformed Theological Journal 55,1 (Fall, 2021): “In the Way of Obedience,” Rev. Joshua Englesma introduces offending statements of a minister handled in the Synod of the PRCA in 2017. Reformed Theological Journal (Sept 2021), in “From the Periphery to the Center: American Presbyterianism and Global Presbyterianism,” Dr. D. G. Hart continues to compare the wide differences between historical contexts for British and American Presbyterianism. Southwestern Theological Journal (Fall 2021), in “Use of the OT in the Synoptics,” Craig Evans notes that Jesus uses the Danielic version of the Son of Man, Self-consciously, as well as Psalm 110.1. The Biblical Repertory/Princeton Review (Volume 9, Issue 1, 1837, pages 29ff.). James Waddel Archibald review Paul Henry’s “The Life of John Calvin, the Great Reformer” (Vol. 1, 1835). Rev. Archibald comments on Calvin’s self-image as diffident, retiring and, yet, getting the opposite. Concordia Theological Journal (Winter 2020), “The Conversions of Adiabene and Edessa in Syriac Christianity and Judaism: The Relations of Jews and Christians in Northern Mesopotamia in Antiquity: Dr. Michael Thomas has wandered off onto rabbit trails again. Princeton Theological Review (Vol.22, No.1, Spring 2019), in the “Militant and the Void: The Communist Christologies of Ernst Block, Alain Badiou, and Pier Paolo Pasolini, Dr. Casey Aldridge is baffle-blabbing about deconstruction of Jesus in the “forest of fable” in the arduous pursuit of a “concrete Utopia.”

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