This paper describes the period (1960-67) the author spent working with Norman Porteous in the department of Old Testament at New College, Edinburgh. He describes this as a time when Porteous was at the peak of his reputation as the foremost scholar of Old Testament Theology in Great Britain. However, the magnum opus that he might have been expected to produce at this point never appeared, in particular because the publication of von Rad’s Old Testament Theology made him realise that, with an already crowded schedule, he would not be able to devote sufficient time to be able to engage properly with such a major departure from the established ways of working in biblical theology. The paper does however give us insights into Porteous’ thinkin...
Review of Hannibal Hamlin and Norman W. Jones (eds.): The King James Bible After Four Hundred Yea...
Albert Brecht was born in Dallas, Texas, in 1946. He attended the University of North Texas, where h...
Review ofWilliam H. Willimon, Conversations with Barth on Preaching (Nashville: Abingdon Press, 2006
Colin Williamson describes his time as a student in T. F. Torrance's class at New College in the lat...
Law Professor, Bruce Huber, Robert and Marion Short Scholar, and the Law School Distinguished Teache...
The purpose of this paper is twofold. It is first to provide, particularly for students and those no...
“My life in etymology” is a story of a new etymological dictionary of English. The essay tells of ho...
Is it possible to have a just politics of citation? Reflecting on their work to create a guide to fa...
Seventy years from the publication of Thomas Sharp’s classic Anatomy of a Village, Michael Hebbert c...
This audio recording is of Landon Brady Saunders\u27 19 November 1974 lecture in his Abilene Christi...
Alexander Broadie introduces us to Hume’s Dialogues, sets Hume in his context, and explains how subt...
Looking through the 17th and 18th centuries and specifically the diaries of Samuel Pepys and William...
I was eight when I first tried my hand at deception (actually thievery, to be more specific). I was ...
Audio recordings of Feeling Good About Yourself, presentations by Landon Brady Saunders on 28-30 Aug...
True autumn doesn’t come with a date on a calendar; it comes with a change in the air, a certain qua...
Review of Hannibal Hamlin and Norman W. Jones (eds.): The King James Bible After Four Hundred Yea...
Albert Brecht was born in Dallas, Texas, in 1946. He attended the University of North Texas, where h...
Review ofWilliam H. Willimon, Conversations with Barth on Preaching (Nashville: Abingdon Press, 2006
Colin Williamson describes his time as a student in T. F. Torrance's class at New College in the lat...
Law Professor, Bruce Huber, Robert and Marion Short Scholar, and the Law School Distinguished Teache...
The purpose of this paper is twofold. It is first to provide, particularly for students and those no...
“My life in etymology” is a story of a new etymological dictionary of English. The essay tells of ho...
Is it possible to have a just politics of citation? Reflecting on their work to create a guide to fa...
Seventy years from the publication of Thomas Sharp’s classic Anatomy of a Village, Michael Hebbert c...
This audio recording is of Landon Brady Saunders\u27 19 November 1974 lecture in his Abilene Christi...
Alexander Broadie introduces us to Hume’s Dialogues, sets Hume in his context, and explains how subt...
Looking through the 17th and 18th centuries and specifically the diaries of Samuel Pepys and William...
I was eight when I first tried my hand at deception (actually thievery, to be more specific). I was ...
Audio recordings of Feeling Good About Yourself, presentations by Landon Brady Saunders on 28-30 Aug...
True autumn doesn’t come with a date on a calendar; it comes with a change in the air, a certain qua...
Review of Hannibal Hamlin and Norman W. Jones (eds.): The King James Bible After Four Hundred Yea...
Albert Brecht was born in Dallas, Texas, in 1946. He attended the University of North Texas, where h...
Review ofWilliam H. Willimon, Conversations with Barth on Preaching (Nashville: Abingdon Press, 2006