Peter J. Leithart is President of the Theopolis Institute, Birmingham, Alabama. He is the author, most recently, of Creator (IVP).
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Peter J. Leithart
Web Exclusives Articles
The End of Protestantism
The Reformation isn’t over. But Protestantism is, or should be. . . . Continue Reading »
The Adventure of Orthodoxy
Its a common complaint that patristic Trinitarian theology obscured the gospel by relying on the premises and categories of Greek thought. Though rarely as extreme as Adolf von Harnack, who claimed that the Nicene Creed was a symptom of an acute Hellenization of the Church, theologians today can put off a recognizably Harnackian scent… . Continue Reading »
Domesticating Constantine
In academia, Constantine is suddenly hot. Several major new biographies have appeared, joined by new editions of older volumes and a spate of monographs on aspects of Constantines empire and its aftermath. Academic conferences on Constantine have become a cottage industry… . Continue Reading »
Borderland
Rousing Soviet songs surround us as we pass through a gloomy gauntlet of titanic statues on our way to Kyivs Museum of the Great Patriotic War. My friends, a Polish and a Ukrainian pastor, remember the songs, which played incessantly on the radio during their childhood. The sculpture complex depicts lunging soldiers and hardy peasants in dignified poses, men pointing guns and women handling bombs, boys and girls, all united in a total war effort to defeat the Nazis… . Continue Reading »
A Hermeneutics of the Open Ear
I have occasionally given students a pop culture survey that tests their knowledge of movies, music, and TV. They do scarily well. Some of them remember advertising jingles and silly sitcoms from my childhood. Then I give them a Bible trivia quiz, asking them to identify the daughters of Zelophahad or give the weight of Goliaths armor or identify Jeremiahs birthplace. On that test they typically do, shall we say, less well… . Continue Reading »
Fathers and Sons of the Bible
A couple of weeks ago, the fourth of our ten children got married. We’re down to three at home, our version of empty-nesting. And it’s not over. Soon enough, the other children will leave, and my wife and I will be back where we started, just the two of us. Then we’ll both die, and the Peter Leithart family will vanish. This is as it should be. Families exist to die… . Continue Reading »
Freeing Protestantism from Liberalism
Once upon a time, everyone followed a simple, relaxed, guilt-free religion, uncluttered by rites and dogmas. Along came the greedy priests, who complicated and corrupted everything. They added ceremonies and demanded payment for their performance, elaborated precise doctrines, and persecuted deviants, and in all this perverted the God-and-me immediacy of true religion. Its as predictable as gravity: From the beginning, every religion devolves from primitive purity to decadent ritualism… . Continue Reading »
Impure Thinkers
When the Dutch prince William of Orange took the English throne in 1688, he sparked a poetry war. Originally a supporter of William, the journalist John Tutchin became disenchanted and in The Foreigners attacked the Dutch as a people void of Honesty and Grace, / A Boorish, rude, and an inhumane Race and chided his countrymen for giving to such excrement a Portion in the Promis’d Land, / Which immemorially has been decreed / To be the Birth-right of the Jewish [that is, English] Seed. Daniel Defoe, a Whig supporter of the Revolution, responded with a poem of his own … Continue Reading »
Church in the Metropolis
It seems that denominationalism has had its day. A 2009 Barna survey found that denominational commitments have gone squishy in mainline Protestant churches, and Evangelicals dont fare much better than the rest. After a similar survey, Ron Sellers of what was then Ellison Research said that Protestants are as loyal to their denominations as they are to their toothpaste … Continue Reading »
On the Road
My youngest son and I just finished a road trip. We revved up our overloaded Toyota Camry in Idaho, stopped in Sheridan, Sioux Falls, Chicago, Columbus, and Pittsburgh, and continued across Pennsylvania to New York City before taking a sharp right to Philadelphia and Washington on our way to Birmingham. Sixteen states, eight hotels, and over 3,800 miles in two weeks, and only one lost piece of electronics… . Continue Reading »
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