On the American Dream: Families, Flourishing, and Upward Mobility

Over at the Cardus Daily, our think-tank’s daily blog, I have just posted a column that engages the findings of the Equality of Opportunity Project out of Harvard and Berkeley: “Families, Flourishing, and Upward Mobility.”  Here’s a snippet: If the “American dream” is anything it is a dream of upward mobility: the dream of getting…

Naturalizing “Shalom”: Confessions of a Kuyperian Secularist

Comment magazine has just published my new article, “Naturalizing ‘Shalom’: Confessions of a Kuyperian Secularist.”  This is part autobiography, part cautionary tale.  Here’s a snippet: I’ve come to realize that if we don’t attend to the whole Kuyper, so to speak—if we pick and choose just parts of the Kuyperian project—we can end up with an odd sort…

Encountering Jesus, Encountering Scripture: “Part bombshell, part pastoral epistle”

I sat down to craft a post about my friend David Crump’s fantastic new book, Encountering Jesus, Encountering Scripture: Reading the Bible Critically in Faith (Eerdmans, 2013) because it’s a book you should read.  But then I realized that all the things I want to say about it are already said in my Foreword to the…

Reformed Gifts for the Church Catholic: My Response to Todd Billings

Since folks had inquired about the text of my response to Todd Billings’ inaugural address as Girod Professor of Reformed Theology (noted yesterday), I have uploaded a pdf of my remarks for those who might be interested.  I believe that Todd hopes to publish his lecture in some format. "Reformed Gifts for the Church Catholic:…

Natural Law and a “Christian Pragmatism”: A Note on David Bentley Hart

A long footnote appended to chapter 3 of my latest book manuscript, Who’s Afraid of Relativism? Community, Contingency, and Creaturehood, forthcoming in the Church and Postmodern Culture Series (Baker Academic, 2014), in which I obliquely engage David Bentley Hart’s recent sorties on natural law: This is also why a pragmatist account of knowledge and meaning—which…