American life is now riven by an unprecedented kind of political conflict that we experience everywhere, not just in elections but also in ordinary life. This political conflict is partisan
The most famous “thesis” concerning Protestantism and modernity is undoubtedly that of the German sociologist and historian Max Weber (1864–1920). The “Weber thesis” has to do with the
Books on Jesus’ ascension are rare; books on the Transfiguration of Jesus are rarer still. Accordingly, Patrick Schreiner’s volume The Transfiguration of Christ: An Exegetical and
There are good reasons to avoid the subject of missionary Puritanism—it is too fraught. Nowadays, Christian missions reek of white-savior cultural imperialism (at best). Puritans have a bad
If you are a federal employee who has moral objections to referring to coworkers by their preferred pronouns, I would argue that you have two options (besides, of course, compromising on
In thinking about the Puritan education legacy, Yale and Harvard come immediately to mind. In fact, in 1702 Cotton Mather, the leading Puritan intellectual in colonial New England, published
In the debates between Roman Catholics and Protestants (such as they abide), the former have the advantage of a worship service that ends generally in an hour and features a rite that
On April 9, 1945, at Flossenbürg concentration camp, the Nazis executed the talented pastor and theologian Dietrich Bonhoeffer by hanging, on suspicion of his involvement with the Abwehr
In a popular 17th century work called Of the Principles and Duties of Natural Religion, the Anglican John Wilkins defended the proposition that “Religion is the Cause of Riches.” The true