Faculty publications and presentations
Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://hdl.handle.net/11418/205
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Item Open Access Mennonite Brethren theology: a multiple inheritance(Kindred Productions, 2002) Jost, LynnItem Open Access Fellowship in the word: Theological trends in the Pacific District(Pacific District Conference of Mennonite Brethren Churches, 1987) Janzen, EdmundItem Open Access Nuclear bomb and liberation bullet(Kindred Press, 1986) Loewen, HowardItem Open Access Judging the just war(Kindred Press, 1986) Loewen, HowardItem Open Access Theological reflections(Direction, 1985) Toews, John E.Item Open Access The politics of confession(Direction, 2009) Toews, John E.Item Open Access The nature of the church(Direction, 1989) Toews, John E.Item Open Access Reflections on confession of faith revision(Direction, 1998) Jost, LynnItem Open Access A covenanting people(Direction, 1986) Janzen, EdmundItem Open Access (Re)figuring tradition(Conrad Grebel Review, 2003) Roberts, Laura SchmidtItem Open Access Mennonite Brethren theology of baptism(Direction, 2004) Jost, LynnItem Open Access How the cross saves(Direction, 2007) Baker, Mark D.Item Open Access Which courtroom and what narrative shapes your atonement theology?(Direction, 2012) Baker, Mark D.Item Open Access The Social Trinity and the Southwest: toward a local theology in the borderlands(National Association of Baptist Professors of Religion, 2008) Kinnison, Quentin P.Considering the major social Trinitarian theologians of the twentieth century, this article investigates how themes of social Trinitarianism might encourage and challenge churches in the Southwestern U.S. toward revision of theological and ethical praxis. Specifically, it investigates the themes of perichoresis, mutuality, egalitarianism, openness to other, and love. Promoting that since human beings are created in God’s image to be socially interconnected, these Trinitarian concepts make both prophetic and ethical demands upon churches in this region regarding cultural diversity and the embracing of “the other."Item Open Access The poetry of Jean Janzen: a theological approach(Mennonite Quarterly Review, 1998-10) Roberts, Laura SchmidtThis essay explores theological themes and imagery in the recent work of Jean Janzen by considering poems from an as yet unpublished manuscript Tasting the Dust, the first section of which is a collection of poems about the San Joaquin Valley of California. I will focus on three poems from the first section of Tasting the Dust: "Claiming the Dust," "In Tule Fog" and "The Mountain." In these poems Janzen's identity as a San Joaquin Valley poet and as a Mennonite/Anabaptist poet is most visibly intertwined. The experience and geography of the valley become powerful imagery for expressing theological themes from her ethno-religious tradition.Item Open Access Life is in the blood: envisioning atonement with regards to Levitical theology(Princeton Theological Seminary, 2007) Howard, Melanie; Bair, Melanie