Donald Bruce gives an account of his own involvement in apologetics, offering an understanding of the kind of background typical of a Christian apologist in the twenty-first century. He introduces us to the work of Os Guinness, raises some of the commonly-posed issues relating to the frontier between faith and science and concludes, appropriately, with Christ and His gospel
Seventy years from the publication of Thomas Sharp’s classic Anatomy of a Village, Michael Hebbert c...
This article looks at the way in which a certain understanding of sectarian violence and discourses ...
The traditional view in epistemology is that we must distinguish between being rational and being ri...
Donald Bruce gives an account of his own involvement in apologetics, offering an understanding of th...
Donald Bruce gives an account of his own involvement in apologetics, offering an understanding of th...
For Andrew Purves, ‘shape’ is too static a concept to delineate the theology of T. F. Torrance. Rath...
Joe Houston unfolds the subtlety of some of the fundamental aspects of Thomas Reid’s response to Hum...
Joe Houston unfolds the subtlety of some of the fundamental aspects of Thomas Reid’s response to Hum...
Decades of work in dismantling racism have not yielded the kind of results for which religious educa...
Alexander Broadie introduces us to Hume’s Dialogues, sets Hume in his context, and explains how subt...
Preceding an evening of celebrating the life of eminent human rights activist and lawyer Asma Jahang...
In a paper that challenges contemporary Reformed thinking, Donald Macleod draws our attention to Ca...
We have various strategies available to us for understanding another person’s state of mind. Cogniti...
The purpose of this paper is twofold. It is first to provide, particularly for students and those no...
Review ofWilliam H. Willimon, Conversations with Barth on Preaching (Nashville: Abingdon Press, 2006
Seventy years from the publication of Thomas Sharp’s classic Anatomy of a Village, Michael Hebbert c...
This article looks at the way in which a certain understanding of sectarian violence and discourses ...
The traditional view in epistemology is that we must distinguish between being rational and being ri...
Donald Bruce gives an account of his own involvement in apologetics, offering an understanding of th...
Donald Bruce gives an account of his own involvement in apologetics, offering an understanding of th...
For Andrew Purves, ‘shape’ is too static a concept to delineate the theology of T. F. Torrance. Rath...
Joe Houston unfolds the subtlety of some of the fundamental aspects of Thomas Reid’s response to Hum...
Joe Houston unfolds the subtlety of some of the fundamental aspects of Thomas Reid’s response to Hum...
Decades of work in dismantling racism have not yielded the kind of results for which religious educa...
Alexander Broadie introduces us to Hume’s Dialogues, sets Hume in his context, and explains how subt...
Preceding an evening of celebrating the life of eminent human rights activist and lawyer Asma Jahang...
In a paper that challenges contemporary Reformed thinking, Donald Macleod draws our attention to Ca...
We have various strategies available to us for understanding another person’s state of mind. Cogniti...
The purpose of this paper is twofold. It is first to provide, particularly for students and those no...
Review ofWilliam H. Willimon, Conversations with Barth on Preaching (Nashville: Abingdon Press, 2006
Seventy years from the publication of Thomas Sharp’s classic Anatomy of a Village, Michael Hebbert c...
This article looks at the way in which a certain understanding of sectarian violence and discourses ...
The traditional view in epistemology is that we must distinguish between being rational and being ri...