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Academic Journals
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From:CHOICE: Current Reviews for Academic Libraries (Vol. 47, Issue 4)47-1837 PN4751 2008-49081 CIP Normative theories of the media: journalism in democratic societies, by Clifford G. Christians et al. Illinois, 2009. 275p bibl index afp ISBN 9780252034237, $75.00; ISBN...
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From:Anthropological Quarterly (Vol. 88, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedThis article explores how an evangelical community in southern California can embrace disparate worship modalities--formalistic/anti-formalistic, Jewish/Christian--as legitimate and acceptable moral options. It argues...
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From:Journal of Psychology and Theology (Vol. 42, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedIn this article, we hypothesize that health outcomes associated with forgiveness, if it is received from God, others, or oneself or if it is granted to others, foreshadow the eschatological regeneration of Christians....
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From:Windsor Review: A Journal of the Arts (Vol. 43, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedPrologue On Monday, August 6, 1945, an atomic bomb dropped from the sky, obliterating the city and citizens of Hiroshima, Japan. According to Christian calendars, August 6 is the Day of Transfiguration, the day...
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From:European Judaism (Vol. 38, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedBeing intimately connected to a College, European Judaism is an organic entity that grows and develops its subject matter as part of a living community. Thus many of the materials we receive emerge from the interests or...
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From:First Things: A Monthly Journal of Religion and Public LifeIt is my impression that many of the finest and most stimulating historians of the present generation are historians of religion, and of Christianity in particular--and, furthermore, that they are men and women who are...
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From:International Bulletin of Missionary Research (Vol. 23, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedTrends and statistics for the 20th and 21st centuries indicate the growth and achievements of worldwide Christian mission. Christians of all kinds have grown in number from 558 million in 1900 to 1.99 billion in...
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From:International Bulletin of Missionary Research (Vol. 18, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedThe figures presented by the annual statistical table on global mission for 1994 will only be significant if viewed as an indicator of how well Christians are fulfilling their duties and responsbilities. Often,...
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From:Journal of Psychology and Christianity (Vol. 36, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedThis qualitative phenomenological research study was conducted through semi-structured interviews with 21 self-described practicing evangelical Christian families who have both biological and adopted children. The...
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From:Currents in Theology and Mission (Vol. 32, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedThe need for hospitality At the very root of the Christian tradition is the biblical model and mandate to offer welcome to and share hospitality with "strangers," those who are outside one's particular community or...
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From:Journal of Psychology and Theology (Vol. 30, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedExistential-phenomenological methodology explored the meaning and experience of profound sexual and spiritual encounters described by five men and five women who were practicing Christians. Through qualitative analysis...
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From:Leadership Journal (Vol. 29, Issue 4)Once, while giving a Muslim friend a ride, I asked him, "Tamir, why should I become a Muslim?" "To have a community," he said, and "to enjoy a sense of purpose." I replied, "I can find these in Christ." "Well,...
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From:Journal of Psychology and Christianity (Vol. 34, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedThis study examined the efficacy of a religiously-tailored career intervention, designed to assist Christian clients in the career development process, using a dismantling design in a randomized controlled trial....
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From:Fides et Historia (Vol. 52, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedWhat does history reveal to the Christian? This important question is at the heart of recent developments in political theology, especially the work of Oliver O'Donovan, Honorary Professor of Divinity at St. Andrews...
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From:Journal of Psychology and Christianity (Vol. 39, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedIn this article, the authors explore Christian apophatic contemplative practice as a clinical intervention. Focusing primarily on the anonymous Medieval writing, the Cloud of Unknowing, the authors argue that regular...
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From:First Things: A Monthly Journal of Religion and Public Life (Issue 239)And on the Catholic side as well, I should add, though I have no similar stories to tell. I have had the experience of the pious Catholic lady from central casting, with the Irish or Italian or Polish name, the daily...
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From:First Things: A Monthly Journal of Religion and Public Life (Issue 228)* Judging from our correspondence, there really is, out there, such a thing as Islamophobia. Muslims, several letter-writers have said, worship a demon, and others insist that Islam is not a religion at all but a...
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From:Shofar (Vol. 28, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedThis article considers the motion picture The Ninth Day (2004, dir. Volker Schlondorff), and the manner in which Father Jean Bernard's experience in Dachau has been portrayed in the film. It looks at the experience of...
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From:Interpretation (Vol. 64, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedIsaiah 11:1-11 THIS PASSAGE FROM ISAIAH IS BRIMMING WITH IMAGERY that has shaped the imaginations of Jews and Christians for centuries. Although the eschatological visions of Jews and Christians are dramatically...
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From:Harvard Theological Review (Vol. 103, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedThis dissertation explores the ways in which early Christians thought about resur-rected bodies in terms of desires, sexual practices, reproduction, and how to distinguish maleness and femaleness. Early Christian...