ABOUT THIS ISSUE: November/December, 1995
November 1, 1995
ARTICLE: Can the New Jesus Save Us?
ARTICLE: Foreordained Failure
ARTICLE: Mere Creatures of the State?
ARTICLE: Race Doesn't Matter
ARTICLE: Hollywood Goes East
ARTICLE: Belfast: Tense with Peace
ARTICLE: Public Religions in the Modern World
ARTICLE: Confessions of a Bible Translator
ARTICLE: A Well-Versed Pope
ARTICLE: The Romance of American Psychology
ARTICLE: Congregation: The Journey Back to Church
ARTICLE: American Congregations
ARTICLE: The Black Churches of Brooklyn
ARTICLE: The Feminist Question
ARTICLE: The Stories of Vladimir Nabokov
ARTICLE: The Baltimore Book Dump
IN BRIEF
EDITOR'S NOTE
READINGS: Trust: The Social Virtues and the Creation of Prosperity
READINGS: Remembering the Christian Past
CONTRIBUTORS
James D. Bratt, chair of the Department of History at Calvin College, is the author of several books, including "Dutch Calvinism: A History of a Conservative Subculture."
Rodney Clapp is academic and general books editor at InterVarsity Press.
Michael Cromartie is senior fellow in Protestant studies and director of the Evangelical Studies Project at the Ethics and Public Policy Center. He is the editor of "Disciples and Democracy: Religious Conservatives and the Future of American Politics" and "Creation at Risk? Religion and the New Environmentalism" (forthcoming from Eerdmans).
Edward E. Ericson, Jr., is professor of English at Calvin College. His essay on Michael Lind and religious conservatism appears in "The American Enterprise" (November/December 1995).
C. Stephen Evans is William Spoelhof Scholar and Professor of Philosophy at Calvin College. His book "The Historical Christ and the Jesus of Faith: The Incarnational Narrative as History" is forthcoming from Oxford University Press. He contributed the entries on Kierkegaard and ...
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