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Paul, the Community, and Progressive Sanctification
An Exploration into Community-Based Transformation within Pauline Theology©2007 Monographs -
Communing with the Enemy
Covert Operations, Christianity and Cold War Politics in Britain and the GDR©2005 Monographs -
Holiness and Community in 2 Cor 6:14–7:1
Paul's View of Communal Holiness in the Corinthian Correspondence©2001 Monographs -
Youth Violence and Pastoral Care
Pastoral Response of the Christian Community towards the Youth who take up Violence for Justice in Post-Colonial India©2004 Thesis -
Reflections on Judaism and Christianity in Antiquity
©2021 Edited Collection -
Paul’s Community Formation Preaching in 1 Thessalonians
An Alternative to the New Homiletic©2017 Monographs -
Bible in the Christian Orthodox Tradition
This series aims at exploring and evaluating the various aspects of biblical traditions as studied, understood, taught, and lived in the Christian communities that spoke and wrote – and some continue speaking and writing – in the Aramaic, Arabic, Armenian, Coptic, Georgian, Romanian, Syriac, and other languages of the Orthodox family of churches. A particular focus of this series is the incorporation of the various methodologies and hermeneutics used for centuries in these Christian communities, into the contemporary critical approaches, in order to shed light on understanding the message of the Bible. Each monograph in the series will engage in critical examination of issues raised by contemporary biblical research. Scholars in the fields of biblical text, manuscripts, canon, hermeneutics, theology, lectionary, Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha will have an enormous opportunity to share their academic findings with a worldwide audience. Manuscripts and dissertations, incorporating a variety of approaches and methodologies to studying the Bible in the Eastern and Oriental Orthodox traditions – including, but not limited to, theological, historiographic, philological and literary – are welcome. This series aims at exploring and evaluating the various aspects of biblical traditions as studied, understood, taught, and lived in the Christian communities that spoke and wrote – and some continue speaking and writing – in the Aramaic, Arabic, Armenian, Coptic, Georgian, Romanian, Syriac, and other languages of the Orthodox family of churches. A particular focus of this series is the incorporation of the various methodologies and hermeneutics used for centuries in these Christian communities, into the contemporary critical approaches, in order to shed light on understanding the message of the Bible. Each monograph in the series will engage in critical examination of issues raised by contemporary biblical research. Scholars in the fields of biblical text, manuscripts, canon, hermeneutics, theology, lectionary, Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha will have an enormous opportunity to share their academic findings with a worldwide audience. Manuscripts and dissertations, incorporating a variety of approaches and methodologies to studying the Bible in the Eastern and Oriental Orthodox traditions – including, but not limited to, theological, historiographic, philological and literary – are welcome. This series aims at exploring and evaluating the various aspects of biblical traditions as studied, understood, taught, and lived in the Christian communities that spoke and wrote – and some continue speaking and writing – in the Aramaic, Arabic, Armenian, Coptic, Georgian, Romanian, Syriac, and other languages of the Orthodox family of churches. A particular focus of this series is the incorporation of the various methodologies and hermeneutics used for centuries in these Christian communities, into the contemporary critical approaches, in order to shed light on understanding the message of the Bible. Each monograph in the series will engage in critical examination of issues raised by contemporary biblical research. Scholars in the fields of biblical text, manuscripts, canon, hermeneutics, theology, lectionary, Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha will have an enormous opportunity to share their academic findings with a worldwide audience. Manuscripts and dissertations, incorporating a variety of approaches and methodologies to studying the Bible in the Eastern and Oriental Orthodox traditions – including, but not limited to, theological, historiographic, philological and literary – are welcome.
6 publications
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In-Between Spaces
Christian and Muslim Minorities in Transition in Europe and the Middle East©2009 Edited Collection -
Jews and Christians in Roman-Byzantine Palestine
History, Daily Life and Material CultureMonographs -
Jews and Christians in Roman-Byzantine Palestine
History, Daily Life and Material Culture©2018 Monographs -
A Reconciled Community of Suffering Disciples
Aspects of a Contextual Somali Ecclesiology©2014 Monographs -
Early Christianity and Ancient Astrology
©2007 Monographs -
For the Life of the World
An Eastern Christian Approach to Nature and Environmental Care©2019 Monographs -
Confronting the Nazi War on Christianity
The "Kulturkampf</I> Newsletters, 1936-1939- The Definitive English-Language Edition of the "Kulturkampf</I> Newsletters- Edited and translated by Richard Bonney©2010 Edited Collection -
The Traditional African Concept of God and the Christian Concept of God
Chukwu bụ ndụ – God is Life (The Igbo Perspective)©2004 Thesis -
The Ethics of Intercultural Communication
©2015 Textbook