Theological Journals
Calvin Theological Journal (Spring 2022): in “Permaculture for Ecotheology: An Innovative Experiment,” Troy Bierma discusses ethics and virtue as an apologetic model. ??.
Westminster Magazine (Spring 2022): in “Ministry of the Word Today,” a commencement address at WTS, Dr. James Innes Packer focuses on the ministry of the Word in the face of a “disintegrated evangelical vision” (??) and “decadent Protestantism” with its hostilities.
Modern Reformation (Jan/Feb 22), in “Rethinking How We Think about the Evangelical Mind and the Local Church,” Dr. Charles Cotherman discusses Harold J. Ockenga of Boston (former student of Machen’s), his PhD from Pittsburg and Charles Fuller’s establishment of Fuller Seminary in Pasadena, CA.
Westminster Theological Journal (Nov 2021, 317-36): in “William Perkin’s Doctrines of Faith and Assurance Through the Lens of Modern Faculty Psychology,” Matthew Payne comments on Perkins’ inheritance and use of an establish faculty pattern of the soul: understanding, affections and volition,
Mid-America Journal of Theology (Fall 2021, 7-34): in “Still No Peeking: Karl Barth’s Conflict with Federal Theology,” Dr. Beach offers a quick tour of Barth’s complaints about federal theology which is so hypersonically fast and indescribably shallow that one can’t get the point.
Anglican & Episcopal History (Sept 2014), in “Thomas Cole and the Episcopal Church,” Dr. J. Robert Wright concludes that some modern artists view Cole as a religious escapist living in Christian resignation. Someone wanna remind the reviewers: in the midst of life we are in the midst of death?
Churchman (Winter 2018): in “How Jesus’s Cry from the Cross in Mark 15.34 Answered?”, Dr. Donald West ends his article like a bag of rocks going to the bottom. It’s an extremely disconnected conclusion ending with a few platitudes.
The Biblical Repertory/Princeton Review (Volume 9, Issue 1, 1837, pages 29ff.). James Waddel Archibald reviews Paul Henry’s “The Life of John Calvin, the Great Reformer” (Vol. 1, 1835). Rev. Archibald notes how bigoted, biased, and ignorant are some enemies of Calvin.
Concordia Theological Journal (Winter 2020), in “טומ Means ‘Collapse,’ Not ‘Be Shaken,” Dr. Paul Puffe puffs on esoteria fit for an internal editorial inside a faculty lounge.
Princeton Theological Review (Vol.22, No.1, Spring 2019), in in “God’s Simple Knowledge and Disagreement,” Eric Tuttle, 3rd year MDiv student and postulant to the TEC, gloriously ends his puffings about how disagreements are resolved in the unknowable God. Paging relativism, obscurantism and arcane-mumbo-jumping. Put this article in the paper-shredder. If the lad disagrees, he can go hide in the unknowable God.
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