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Catalyst Publications by Category

Authors

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Thomas Noble

T.A. Noble is Research Professor of Theology at Nazarene Theological Seminary in Kansas City, Missouri, where he has served there since 1996.

Tim Meadowcroft

Tim Meadowcroft is senior lecturer in biblical studies at Laidlaw College, Auckland, New Zealand. He has published widely on OT texts of

Timothy Gombis

Gombis is associate professor of New Testament at Grand Rapids Theological Seminary. He is the author of The Drama of Ephesians: Participating

Tom Albin

Albin is a John Wesley Fellow, and Dean of the Chapel and Ecumenical Relations, Upper Room Ministries, The United Methodist Church.

Uche Anizor

Anizor is associate professor of theology Talbot School of Theology at Biola University. He is the author of How to Read Theology:

Veli-Matti Kärkkäinen

Kärkkäinen is professor of systematic theology, Fuller Theological Seminary. He has authored or edited some twenty books in English, and is presently

Vince Bantu

Bantu is assistant professor of church history and Black church studies at Fuller Theological Seminary. He is the author of Gospel Haymanot:

Virginia Todd Holeman

Holeman is professor of counseling at Asbury Theological Seminary. Among her publications are Theology for Better Counseling: Trinitarian Reflections for Healing and

W. Brian Shelton

W. Brian Shelton is vice president of academic affairs at Toccoa Falls College. He is the author of Prevenient Grace: God’s Provision

W. David O. Taylor

Taylor is associate professor of theology and culture at Fuller Theological Seminary and the author of several books, including Open and Unafraid:

Wafik Wahba

Wahba is associate professor of Global Christianity at Tyndale University College and Seminary, Toronto, and has taught theology and intercultural studies in

Walter Brueggemann

Brueggemann is a retired Old Testament scholar, prolific author, and professor emeritus at Columbia Theological Seminary. He is the author of dozens

Warren S. Brown

Brown is professor of psychology and director of the Lee Travis Research Institute at the Graduate School of Psychology, Fuller Theological Seminary.

Wendy J. Deichmann

Deichmann, a John Wesley Fellow, is professor of history and theology at United Theological Seminary, Dayton, OH. Her areas of teaching and

Wesley Hill

Hill is assistant professor of biblical studies at Trinity School for Ministry, Ambridge, PA. He is the author of Washed and Waiting:

William J. Abraham

Before his death in 2021, Abraham was Professor Emeritus of Wesley Studies at Perkins School of Theology, and Director of the Wesley

William P. Brown

William P. Brown is an ordained minister of the Presbyterian Church (USA) and the William Marcellus McPheeters Professor of Old Testament at

William Willimon

Willimon is a retired bishop of The United Methodist Church, and professor of the practice of Christian ministry, Duke University Divinity School.

Winfield Bevins

Bevins, a John Wesley Fellow, is the Director of Church Planting at Asbury Theological Seminary and a visiting scholar at the National

Wyndy Corbin Reuschling

Corbin Reuschling is professor of ethics and theology, Ashland Theology Seminary, and author of Reviving Evangelical Ethics: The Promises and Pitfalls of

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Consider Wesley

These essays are an ongoing series devoted to Wesley and Wesleyan distinctives.

Realism and Hope in American Democracy

The Christian tradition has not been a hotbed of democratic ferment. For most of its existence, Christianity has found itself the subject of pagan or other non-Christian rulers or has served to legitimate Christian monarchies. Dissent from this often took a sectarian direction in forming counter-cultural communities apart from the larger society—and most of them […]

Consider Wesley
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April 26, 2023
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Carrie Aman
Read More
The Constantinian Fall of the Church

In the latter half of the third century CE, the early church had been free of persecution and had not only grown in numbers but had become largely accepted as part of Roman society. So, as Alan Kreider has said, renewed persecution from 303–312 “was traumatic for the believers and their leaders” (The Patient Ferment […]

Consider Wesley
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February 8, 2023
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Carrie Aman
Read More
On Spiritual Idolatry

Concern for idolatry permeates the Scriptures. If idolatry is understood as turning away from God and placing one’s trust in someone or something else, it appears as early as Gen 3. John Wesley addresses it in many sermons and essays, but perhaps nowhere more directly than his 1781 sermon “Spiritual Idolatry.” Taking as his text […]

Consider Wesley
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November 16, 2022
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Carrie Aman
Read More
What Makes a Nation Christian?

One of the prominent movements influencing American politics today is Christian nationalism. This is not a new phenomenon. Christian nationalism in one form or another has existed throughout American history. Nor is it uniquely American, as versions of it can be found in other nations. But the contemporary American form has its own distinctive shape. […]

Consider Wesley
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October 5, 2022
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Carrie Aman
Read More
The Dangers of Riches

In the previous Consider Wesley, we saw that John Wesley’s answer to why the Methodists, despite the advantages given them by their doctrine and discipline, are in spiritual decline. It was, he said, their failure to practice self-denial. But this does not complete Wesley’s diagnosis of the problem. In “Causes of the Inefficiency of Christianity” […]

Consider Wesley
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April 6, 2022
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Carrie Aman
Read More
On Self-Denial

John Wesley had an optimism of grace. He witnessed in thousands of lives what the power of God could do. When he thought of all God had done in the awakening, it was easy for Wesley to envision the entire church, and then the world, renewed in holiness, as he did in his 1783 sermon […]

Consider Wesley
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March 2, 2022
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Carrie Aman
Read More
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Conversations

Regular insights, questions, and observations from our panel of professors and pastors. Join the discussion!

Jesus: Not Superhero but Friend

I preached recently and was given the Easter Emmaus text (Luke 24:13–35), a story I have never really found interesting. Having to say something on Sunday, though, I am grateful it came to me anew. As I should have expected, the very thing that had kept me from connecting before was now the thing that […]

Conversations
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August 7, 2023
/
Carrie Aman
Read More
An Education or a Diploma?

Are you seeking a diploma, or are you seeking an education? So many of you tell me you’re here because graduating from here will get you a job and better pay than if you don’t have a degree. But I have to tell you: It’s not the piece of paper that gets you the good […]

Conversations
/
June 5, 2023
/
Carrie Aman
Read More
On Reading a Book’s Cover

Living in the age of TikTok, sound bytes, emojis, and GIFs one might think the practice of reading a book is antiquated and unnecessary. Yet, even in our digital age of sight and sound, the majority of information is primarily transmitted by the written word. Certainly, for Christians, as people of the book, Bible reading […]

Conversations
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May 29, 2023
/
Carrie Aman
Read More
Three Questions for Reading the Psalms for Deep Transformation

The Book of Psalms is a collection of prayers written originally to shape God’s people in ancient Israel for identity, mission, community, and holiness. These prayers continue to serve as a guide for God’s people today as we journey through the life of faith. In this essay, I’m going to share with you a key […]

Conversations
/
May 22, 2023
/
Carrie Aman
Read More
The Church in John 20

The penultimate chapter of John’s Gospel is busy, with accounts of Jesus’s resurrection and his first appearances to his disciples on Easter and on the first Sunday after Easter. In this chapter, we read about Mary Magdalene visiting the tomb and about Peter and the beloved disciple racing there only to walk away in stunned […]

Conversations
/
May 15, 2023
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Carrie Aman
Read More
The Ground of Our Faith

Theological education isn’t what I thought it would be. I rightly expected it to be challenging, in terms of heavy workloads and difficult concepts. Although I knew that I’d have to learn massive amounts of new information, I didn’t anticipate the existential crises I’d experience. Sure, I’d just moved to the Los Angeles area from […]

Conversations
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May 8, 2023
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Carrie Aman
Read More
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Footnotes

Announcements and brief commentary on opportunities, events, and resources.

Reading Romans with a Master Guide

Years ago, in the New Testament postgraduate seminar at the University of Aberdeen, we took a break from our usual diet of engaging each other’s papers and guest presentations in order to read through Romans together. The late I. Howard Marshall, a British Methodist, led the seminar. His procedure was to call on one of […]

Footnotes
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April 25, 2022
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Carrie Aman
Read More
Faithful Church Life: Moving toward the Center

Drilling for oil in deep-sea conditions introduces some challenges, and not only because it’s a long way down from the ocean surface to the ocean floor. There’s also the problem of how to account for ocean waves strong enough to fracture and break the platform supports, allowing the platform to float away from the drilling […]

Footnotes
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March 21, 2022
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Carrie Aman
Read More
On Nurturing Faith

Edie, Fred P., and Mark A Lamport. Nurturing Faith: A Practical Theology for Educating Christians. Eerdmans, 2021. ISBN 978080287556-3. 512 pp. A recurring question occurs anytime an introductory textbook appears within the varying (but interdependent) fields of Christian Education, spiritual formation, discipleship, or educational ministry. How will the new text reflect the “tradition” while offering […]

Footnotes
/
December 27, 2021
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Carrie Aman
Read More
Five Models of Scripture

When one thinks about Scripture, particularly reading this sacred text, many think about what a passage or the whole canon says. One might also question how Scripture’s content informs how to read it. In Five Models of Scripture (Eerdmans, 2021), Mark Reasoner, a Protestant-trained-turned-Catholic theologian based in Minnesota, captures the importance of intentionally wrestling with […]

Footnotes
/
November 15, 2021
/
Carrie Aman
Read More
Just Tell the Truth

St. Augustine, writing in what is arguably the most influential handbook for preachers in the Christian tradition (De Doctrina Christiana) begins by citing the experience and words of St. Paul to emphasize the importance of learning from the example and wisdom of others: “What do we have, after all, that we have not received? But […]

Footnotes
/
September 27, 2021
/
Carrie Aman
Read More
Cruciform Shepherds for Resurrection Communities: The Transformation of Paul’s (and Our) Ministry Imagination

The task of faithfully pastoring a church so that its life together would embody Christ’s life and ministry has never been easy. It is even harder today in a deadly pandemic where some church people refuse to wear masks because it violates their “rights” while other church people are prepared to defend (even violently) their […]

Footnotes
/
January 25, 2021
/
Carrie Aman
Read More
View All

Perspectives

Analysis of and reflections on a wide range of topics and concerns confronting seminarians, pastors, and other Christian leaders.

Our Postmodern Moment, Part 3: The Biblical Metanarrative

This is the final installment of a three-part article that I’ve been invited to write on the question of how Christians might engage our contemporary postmodern culture, especially the toxic polarization that characterizes so much of our world today. In the first two installments, I drew on material from the book that Brian Walsh and […]

Perspectives
/
August 9, 2023
/
Carrie Aman
Read More
Our Postmodern Moment, Part 2: The Biblical Metanarrative

This is part 2 of a three-part essay in which I’ve been invited to revisit the analysis that Brian Walsh and I made in our book Truth Is Stranger Than It Used to Be: Biblical Faith in a Postmodern Age (InterVarsity Press, 1995). Although the book was written nearly thirty years ago, I have been […]

Perspectives
/
May 24, 2023
/
Carrie Aman
Read More
Our Postmodern Moment, Part 1: Diagnosing the Problem

We live in a time of toxic polarization. It’s not just that people hold different opinions. It’s that we hold our opinions vehemently—often with disdain or anger towards those who disagree with us. This is true also for Christians, whether on the right or on the left. It has become vividly clear that we who […]

Perspectives
/
May 17, 2023
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Carrie Aman
Read More
Don’t Let Me Catch You Sleeping: A Biblical Response to Climate Change

Several years ago, I was traveling on a plane when we ran into a biblical-sized storm system. It seemed to cover the entire Southeast. Our plane went up, then down, was diverted, landed at a small airport, refueled, and then went back up again. Like pilgrims from Canterbury, the passengers on the plane were inspired […]

Perspectives
/
May 10, 2023
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Carrie Aman
Read More
Confronting Eurocentrism in Christian Historiography

In his letter to the church at Corinth, Paul used the analogy of the human body to describe the interdependence of the church of Jesus Christ. Paul’s motivation was so that the Corinthian church understood that certain spiritual gifts should not be seen as more valuable than others. The Corinthian church also represented a wealthier […]

Perspectives
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February 22, 2023
/
Carrie Aman
Read More
Women, Leadership, and the Kingdom of God

What happens when women lead? What really happens — relationally, psychologically, personally, spiritually? What barriers do women leaders face, and what strategies will equip them to lead past those barriers so they can lead effectively? What does healthy female leadership look like, and how does that contrast with what healthy male leadership looks like? These […]

Perspectives
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February 15, 2023
/
Carrie Aman
Read More
View All

Profiles

Identifies key contemporary figures on the theological landscape, introducing their background, work, and primary contribution.

Remembering Geoffrey Wainwright

One of the truly poignant dimensions of the global pandemic has been its effect on how we accompany, mourn, and remember the dead. Often we cannot be present with those who are dying, especially if they are in a hospital or other care facility. Services are, in most cases, strictly limited to small gatherings. At […]

Conversations,Profiles
/
March 1, 2021
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Carrie Aman
Read More
The Legacy of Larry W. Hurtado: New Testament Studies and Early Christian Origins

The impact of Larry W. Hurtado’s work on the study of the New Testament and early Christian origins has been broad and deep, leaving a lasting impression on biblical scholarship. As indicated by the title of a 2015 festschrift published in his honor (Mark, Manuscripts, and Monotheism [T&T Clark, 2015]), Hurtado had three primary areas […]

Profiles
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October 21, 2020
/
Carrie Aman
Read More
Randy Maddox—A Wesleyan, RessourcementTheologian

This year Randy Maddox retires from teaching Wesleyan and Methodist Studies at Duke Divinity School, where he has been on the faculty since 2005. In March, Maddox received the 2019 Lifetime Achievement Award from the Wesleyan Theological Society, recognition that seemed both appropriate and long overdue. As general editor of the Wesley Works Editorial Project […]

Conversations,Profiles
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November 4, 2019
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Carrie Aman
Read More
Richard B. Hays

Several years ago, I introduced a Festschrift in honor of Richard B. Hays, George Washington Ivey Professor of New Testament and Dean of Duke Divinity School, with these words: Perhaps no modern biblical scholar has argued more eloquently or more compellingly than Richard Hays that those who would read Holy Scripture rightly must be prepared […]

Profiles
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April 16, 2014
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Carrie Aman
Read More
Thomas Forsyth Torrance: Scientist, Evangelist, Theologian, Christian

More Than a Professor Few generations produce thinkers of such importance that their work has an influence well beyond their immediate context. The history of Christian thought is littered with countless scholars whose legacy goes to the grave with them. But every so often God raises up an individual and sets them apart for a […]

Profiles
/
January 29, 2014
/
Carrie Aman
Read More
E. Stanley Jones

Eli Stanley Jones was born in Clarksville, Maryland, on January 3, 1884, at the height of the American Holiness Movement. Even though as a Christian Jones was shaped by this movement, his years as a Methodist missionary in India radicalized him in ways that are instructive today. Jones’ Life and Faith Jones grew up in […]

Profiles
/
March 1, 2010
/
Carrie Aman
Read More
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Resources

Annotated recommendations for theological students and pastors, including print media, web resources, and more.

Building a Theological Bookshelf: Wesley/Methodism

I am often asked to recommend a book on some aspect of Wesleyan Studies. I love books and enjoy questions that press for clarity. A query about the best book on a particular subject is a great way to bring precision. For this essay, I was given some helpful guidelines. I am going to share […]

Resources
/
May 3, 2023
/
Carrie Aman
Read More
Building a Theological Bookshelf: Christian Ethics

The place to acquire a reputable knowledge and collection of works in Christian Ethics should not begin with Christian Ethics. Background work should be done first. As a relatively recent academic discipline, Christian Ethics brings together two venerable traditions of thought, moral philosophy and theology. Prudential readers and researchers of Christian Ethics would benefit from […]

Resources
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April 19, 2023
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Carrie Aman
Read More
Building a Theological Library: Historical Theology

St. Vladimir’s Popular Patristics Series Building a historical theology library must begin with primary sources. I know that many of you are looking to this series for recommendations of recent scholarship to keep your library and your knowledge up to date, but in historical theology, if you have to choose between buying a primary source […]

Resources
/
November 23, 2022
/
Carrie Aman
Read More
Building a Theological Bookshelf: Systematic Theology

Systematic theology is a vast field with a wide range of sub-disciples and a seemingly endless number of scholarly approaches. It is nearly impossible to keep up with the number of publications annually, so a list of recommended books in systematic theology, including this one, will always reflect the recommender’s limitations as much as the […]

Resources
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October 19, 2022
/
Carrie Aman
Read More
Building a New Testament Library: Hebrews—Revelation

I had one opportunity to spend time one-on-one with the late James D. G. (“Jimmy”) Dunn. In that delightful time, we bonded over our love for the letters from Hebrews to Jude, and he shared that, for him, that love was born out of the fact that his year at Oxford studied neither Paul nor […]

Resources
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April 13, 2022
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Carrie Aman
Read More
What Is Ecotheology?

Our living planet is in peril, pressed on all sides by unprecedented dangers. Human action and inaction, to no small degree, are at the root of it. So, to start with this most urgent matter before us, ecotheology is a liberative theology: it seeks to overcome oppression and evil in the name of God. Unlike […]

Perspectives,Resources
/
February 9, 2022
/
Carrie Aman
Read More
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Topics

Topics is the parent category for several topics

Our King Carries a Towel, Not a Scepter

The world watched last September as millions mourned the death of Queen Elizabeth. Subsequently, many watched with great interest as Charles was enthroned as king in May. The pageantry and celebration had not been seen in a generation. As King Charles assumed the throne, he was given the regalia of royalty: a crown, an orb, […]

August 18, 2023
/
Carrie Aman
Read More
Our Postmodern Moment, Part 3: The Biblical Metanarrative

This is the final installment of a three-part article that I’ve been invited to write on the question of how Christians might engage our contemporary postmodern culture, especially the toxic polarization that characterizes so much of our world today. In the first two installments, I drew on material from the book that Brian Walsh and […]

Perspectives
/
August 9, 2023
/
Carrie Aman
Read More
Jesus: Not Superhero but Friend

I preached recently and was given the Easter Emmaus text (Luke 24:13–35), a story I have never really found interesting. Having to say something on Sunday, though, I am grateful it came to me anew. As I should have expected, the very thing that had kept me from connecting before was now the thing that […]

Conversations
/
August 7, 2023
/
Carrie Aman
Read More
An Education or a Diploma?

Are you seeking a diploma, or are you seeking an education? So many of you tell me you’re here because graduating from here will get you a job and better pay than if you don’t have a degree. But I have to tell you: It’s not the piece of paper that gets you the good […]

Conversations
/
June 5, 2023
/
Carrie Aman
Read More
Our Postmodern Moment, Part 2: The Biblical Metanarrative

This is part 2 of a three-part essay in which I’ve been invited to revisit the analysis that Brian Walsh and I made in our book Truth Is Stranger Than It Used to Be: Biblical Faith in a Postmodern Age (InterVarsity Press, 1995). Although the book was written nearly thirty years ago, I have been […]

Perspectives
/
May 24, 2023
/
Carrie Aman
Read More
Three Questions for Reading the Psalms for Deep Transformation

The Book of Psalms is a collection of prayers written originally to shape God’s people in ancient Israel for identity, mission, community, and holiness. These prayers continue to serve as a guide for God’s people today as we journey through the life of faith. In this essay, I’m going to share with you a key […]

Conversations
/
May 22, 2023
/
Carrie Aman
Read More
View All

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