Theological Journals


Historiographer (Episcopal Church): “Touchstones: Divining the Mysteries of a Foundation Stone:” John Runkle talks about the foundation stone of the National Cathedral, laid in September 1907. A stone of memorial for children and grandchildren. Table Talk (June 2022): a detour is taken on the Lord’s Prayer (“hallowed by Thy name), Isaiah 6, Isaiah’s vision and divine holiness—collaborative exposition of such in connection with Sinai in Exodus 19. Table Talk (July 2022): an interesting article on salt and light in difficult circumstances of life. The Sermon on the Mount is both salt and life. Bibliotheca Sacra (Jan-Mar 2021): in “`Not Abandoned to Sheol:’ The Psalms and Hope for the Righteous after Death,” Dr. Kyle Dunham is doing a cracker-jack job of showing hope and belief in the afterlife in the OT. Modern Reformation (May/June 2022): “Everything in Nature Speaks of God: Understanding Sola Scriptura Aright:” Jordan Steffaniak appears to argue the sola scriptura makes room for intuition, natural theology, theology, liturgy and providence. He’s complaining about “biblicists” who apparently denies these other venues. Jordan, please read and study Dr. Thomas Cranmer, Bishop John Jewel, and Dr. Whittaker and rise above your Baptistic, evangelical background. This is not the finest defense of sola scriptura, but we soldier on. Calvin Theological Journal (Spring 2022): in “The Beatitudes and the Life of the Church, Gerard M, Cisar argues ably that the Sermon on the Mount is part of the “teaching mandate” of the Great Commission. Westminster Theological Journal (Nov 2021, 355-381): “Classical Versus Contemporary: Engaging Trinitarian and Pneumatological Modelling for Ongoing Theological Construction:” Torey J.S. Teer has finished characterizing and summarizing social, trinitarian models. Mid-America Journal of Theology (Fall 2021, 7-34): in “Still No Peeking: Karl Barth’s Conflict with Federal Theology,” Dr. Beach is wrapping it up. He chides Barth’s allegation of historicism in federal theology. Global Anglican (Spring 2022), in in “Evaluating the Place of Main Images of the Atonement in Common Worship’s Order Two and its Significance for the Mission of the Church,” Alexander Evans describes the substitutionary atonement, sacrifice, ransom, justice, reconciliation, moral exemplar, and victory as implicit and explicit themes of one idea—atonement. Gloriously done by this writer.

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