Theological Journals
Historiographer (Episcopal Church): “Early Witness to Globalization,” Rev. Kyle is providing a history of an Episcopal clerk and US Navy Chaplain (1803-1865), Chaplain Fitch Taylor.
Table Talk (June 22): the exposition of Exodus 16-19 continues noting manna and the waters of Marah and Meribah.
Standard Bearer (May 15, 2022): “PRC Missions in the Philippines:” Rev. Daniel Kleyn further discusses post-Covid developments to the Philippine churches.
Bibliotheca Sacra (Jan-Mar 2021): in “`Not Abandoned to Sheol:’ The Psalms and Hope for the Righteous after Death,” Dr. Kyle Dunham zeroes in on hope in the afterlife as per Psalm 16.9-11.
Modern Reformation (May/June 2022): “Everything in Nature Speaks of God: Understanding Sola Scriptura Aright:” Jordan Steffaniak, a ThM, defines natural theology as including confessions, creeds, books, traditions, etc. As if he’s just discovering this? He complains about “Biblicists,” but sounds a bit elitistic without a pastoral perspective. We’re watching.
Calvin Theological Journal (Spring 2022): in “Permaculture for Ecotheology: An Innovative Experiment,” Troy Bierma ended his serial belchings and virtue-signaling.
Westminster Magazine (Spring 2022): in “Jerusalem and Athens, Pt. 1: Proclaiming Christ on the College Campus,” Rev. Juan Martinez highlights the strident, fundamentalistic Progressives with their hopes, ethics and flat metaphysics with the worship and sacraments of secularity.
Westminster Theological Journal (Nov 2021, 355-381): “Classical Versus Contemporary: Engaging Trinitarian and Pneumatological Modelling for Ongoing Theological Construction:” Torey J.S. Teer outlines social trinitarianism, a new construct that emerged from Barth’s reorienting of the Trinity in theology.
Mid-America Journal of Theology (Fall 2021, 7-34): in “Still No Peeking: Karl Barth’s Conflict with Federal Theology,” Dr. Beach is going wonky on Barth again.
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