<p>This article was an attempt to (re-)read Psalms in the context of fractured cities, marked by socio-economic inequalities, woundedness, migration and exclusion. It explored urban motifs in selected psalms and considered their possible meanings in relation to both the socio-cultural contexts in which they were written but also how they could be read and understood today. It proposed the Psalms as urban poetry, and considered poems of praise, lament and resistance. It brought the Psalms into conversation both with �remixed� psalms and also with other urban poems. A �remix� is a technical term usually associated with altering, adding or changing songs or music into a new version more appropriate or suitable for a new context. It is es...
Though they were at the core of monastic prayer and a staple of contemplative practice, the Psalms a...
In this article, the author argues of the significance of Psalm singing in Calvin's Liturgy of the L...
The last 300 years have witnessed the worldwide urban population jump from just two percent in 1700 ...
This article was an attempt to (re-)read Psalms in the context of fractured cities, marked by socio...
<p>Since the psalms are religious, poetic, existential expressions of life, entailing both ext...
Where are worshipers in Christian communities to go with their experiences and observations of viole...
The Psalms feature various landscapes: many different places are mentioned or described. These depic...
This study is the account of an empirical research programme in practical theology exploring the pot...
Origen of Alexandria’s biblical exegesis has been the subject of substantial scholarly attention. H...
In many ways, the psalms fulfil a bridging function between divergent denominations that previously ...
<strong>The liturgical function of the hymns in the psalms</strong><p>In many ways...
The article attempts to compare a poetic circle David’s Psalms by Taras Shevchenko with its origin —...
Hymns are a key component of how Christians express their faith. But many of these hymns do represen...
This essay unpacks the relationship between an intercultural approach to worship and the vision of d...
Situated in the larger collection of Psalms 51–72, also known as the second Davidic Psalter, the sma...
Though they were at the core of monastic prayer and a staple of contemplative practice, the Psalms a...
In this article, the author argues of the significance of Psalm singing in Calvin's Liturgy of the L...
The last 300 years have witnessed the worldwide urban population jump from just two percent in 1700 ...
This article was an attempt to (re-)read Psalms in the context of fractured cities, marked by socio...
<p>Since the psalms are religious, poetic, existential expressions of life, entailing both ext...
Where are worshipers in Christian communities to go with their experiences and observations of viole...
The Psalms feature various landscapes: many different places are mentioned or described. These depic...
This study is the account of an empirical research programme in practical theology exploring the pot...
Origen of Alexandria’s biblical exegesis has been the subject of substantial scholarly attention. H...
In many ways, the psalms fulfil a bridging function between divergent denominations that previously ...
<strong>The liturgical function of the hymns in the psalms</strong><p>In many ways...
The article attempts to compare a poetic circle David’s Psalms by Taras Shevchenko with its origin —...
Hymns are a key component of how Christians express their faith. But many of these hymns do represen...
This essay unpacks the relationship between an intercultural approach to worship and the vision of d...
Situated in the larger collection of Psalms 51–72, also known as the second Davidic Psalter, the sma...
Though they were at the core of monastic prayer and a staple of contemplative practice, the Psalms a...
In this article, the author argues of the significance of Psalm singing in Calvin's Liturgy of the L...
The last 300 years have witnessed the worldwide urban population jump from just two percent in 1700 ...