Article
Discerning Vocation through Loss, Suffering, and Death
Volume 1 | June 6, 2022
Theme: Pedagogy, Suffering and Death, Vocation
Discipline: Religious Studies, Theology
In September of 2002, exactly one year after the attack on the Pentagon and the World Trade Center, essayist Mark Slouka reflected on how those events had challenged the American psyche, defined for so long by the myth of happy endings. Here in the New Canaan, in the land of perpetual beginnings and second chances,…Beyond Deep Gladness: Coming to Terms with Vocations We Don’t Choose
Volume 1 | June 6, 2022
Theme: Pedagogy, Suffering and Death, Vocation
Discipline: Religious Studies, Theology
Back in the 1990s, St. Olaf and many other campuses across the country were infused with grants from the Lilly Endowment to explore the concept of vocation. Lutheran institutions of higher education lift up vocation in part due to the prominent role it plays in Lutheran tradition and identity. Vocation comes from the Latin vocare…Purpose and Meaning in a Time of Crisis
Volume 1 | June 6, 2022
Theme: Pedagogy, Suffering and Death, Vocation
Discipline: Religious Studies, Theology
In his profound and troubling book, Fear and Trembling, the Danish religious writer Søren Kierkegaard remythologizes the story of the binding of Isaac from Genesis 22. I say “remythologizes” rather than “analyzes” or “understands” because Kierkegaard takes pains to attend to all the unthinkable components of the story—to the narrative elements that resist translation into takeaway ethical lessons or airtight conceptual categories.A Case for Biblical Studies as Asset to People of Faith
Volume 1 | June 6, 2022
Theme: Biblical Scholarship, Debate
Discipline: Religious Studies
In any given academic year, I read the New Testament with 200 nineteen year olds. Some of them bring Bibles that are still shrink wrapped, purchased only as a required text for a required class. They sit next to peers who quite literally cut their teeth in cradle roll on those little leather New Testaments.…Thomas H. Olbricht: In Memory of a Life Well Lived
Volume 1 | June 6, 2022
Theme: In Memoriam
During the 2021 Christian Scholars’ Conference at Lipscomb University in Nashville, Tennessee, a group of scholars presented their reflections on the life and work of Thomas H. Olbricht, the namesake of the conference, who had died a few months earlier. Speaking for many at the conference and around the world, these scholars sought to find…Tom Olbricht as Interpreter of the Old Testament
Volume 1 | June 6, 2022
Theme: Biblical Scholarship, In Memoriam
Discipline: Religious Studies
The editor of Ecclesiastes spoke of Qohelet as one who “sought to find pleasing words and to write true words.” That tribute to his teacher certainly applies to ours as well. Thomas H. Olbricht sought to integrate his own life, the ongoing history of his ecclesial family, and the Bible into a coherent whole. Part…Introduction to Biblical Studies: An Asset or Liability for People of Faith?
Volume 1 | June 6, 2022
Theme: Biblical Scholarship, Debate
Discipline: Religious Studies
A friend of mine, who is the past chairperson of the board of trustees for an Ivy League university—not Yale, in case you are wondering—recently read a book, which was an introduction to the Bible. He and I chat routinely, and he said, “It seems to me that biblical scholars have created sophisticated barriers that…The Blinders that We Wear: When Biblical Scholarship Becomes a Liability for People of Faith
Volume 1 | June 6, 2022
Theme: Biblical Scholarship, Debate
Discipline: American Religious History
When Dean Greg Sterling asked me to help explore whether biblical studies are an asset or a liability for people of faith, I thought to myself, “Why, they are both, of course.” I have always prized biblical studies for their ability to illumine the biblical text. Yet, when biblical scholarship becomes an end in itself,…