Theological Journals, Part 2


Mid-America Journal of Theology (Fall 2021, 7-34): in “Still No Peeking: Karl Barth’s Conflict with Federal Theology,” Dr. Beach needs to bring this to a close. Barth’s done, finished, over, gone. Anglican & Episcopal History (Sept 2014): BOOK REVIEW: Richard Blake’s “Religion in the British Navy, 1815-1879: Piety and Professionalism:” Suzanne Geissler, the reviewer, discusses the growing evangelicals in the Royal Navy in this period: Blue Lights (evangelical officers) and psalm-singers (evangelical enlisted men). Global Anglican (Spring 2022), in “Beyond Male and Female? How Redemption’s Relationship to Creation Shapes Sexual Ethics,” Sam Ashton is long-talking DeFranzia’s discredited effort to make eunuchs a third gender. Reformed Presbyterian Theological Journal (1837): the Editor continues to talk clearly about natural revelation. Protestant Reformed Theological Journal 55,1 (Fall, 2021): in “Introduction to Church Holidays from Gereformeerd Kerkrecht,” Peter Vander Schaa is giving a tedious rendering about liturgical calendar days for the Dutch Reformed. Reformed Theological Journal (Sept 2020), in “Justification of Ordained Office of Deacon Restricted to Qualified Males, “Dr. Robert J. Cara continues his advocacy of male-order deacons only. The Biblical Repertory/Princeton Review (Volume 9, Issue 1, 1837, pages 29ff.). James Waddel Archibald reviews Art. 1V.—Plea for Voluntary Societies and a Defense of the Decisions of the General Assembly of 1836 against the Strictures of the Princeton Reviewers and others.— By a member of the Assembly, New-York, John S. Taylor, 1837, pp. 187. Rev. Alexander wisely and rightly comments on the PCUSA’s control of education and examination of ministers. Versus laymen running unattached missions societies. Concordia Theological Journal (January 2022), in “Hermann Sasse’s View of the Office of the Ministry Up to World War II,” the LCMS’s President, Matthew C. Harrison, offers comments on the laying on of hands, the church’s call to ministry and apostolic succession as indexed to apostolic doctrine. Princeton Theological Review (Vol.22, No.1, Spring 2007): the Editor is still introducing and outlining students’ articles on the atonement. Some sound classical, but we’ll see.

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