Volume 18, Issue 3, October 2005


Articles

Poetry and Revelation: Hopkins, Counter-Experience and Reductio

Kevin Hart, pp.259-280

Reading Between Places: Participatory Interpretive Praxis

Deborah Storie, pp.281-301

The Church and the Other: Mediation and Friendship in Post-Vatican II Roman Catholic Ecclesiology

John Dadosky, pp.302-322

Christian Theology in the Post-Modern Era

Paul F. Knitter, pp.323-335

Apology without Compensation, Compensation without Apology

Zenon Szablowinski, pp.336-348

Book Reviews

The Struggle to Understand Isaiah as Christian Scripture

Brevard S. Childs
Antony F. Campbell pp.349-350

The Septuagint, Sexuality and the New Testament: Case studies on the Impact of the LXX on Philo and the New Testament

William Loader
David T. Runia pp.350-352

A Story of the Psalms: Conversation, Canon, and Congregation

V. Steven Parrish
Mary Reaburn pp.352-354

Children of a Compassionate God: A Theological Exegesis of Luke

L. John Topel
Anne Elvey pp.354-355

Roman Wives, Roman Widows: The Appearance of New Women and the Pauline Communities

Bruce W. Winter
Elaine Wainwright pp.355-357

The Earliest Gospels: The Origins and Transmission of the Earliest Christian Gospels – The Contribution of the Chester Beatty Gospel Codex P45

Charles Horton (ed.)
David Neville pp.357-359

The Church in Antioch in the First Century CE: Communion and Conflict

Michelle Slee
David Neville pp.359-362

The New Testament: An Introduction, vol. 2, Luke and Acts

Paul Nadim Tarazi
Johan Ferreira pp.362-364

The Mary Magdalene Tradition: Witness and Counter-Witness in Early Christian Communities

Holly E. Hearon
Elaine Wainwright pp.364-366

Unfailing Patience and Sound Teaching: Reflections on Episcopal Ministry. In Honor of Rembert G. Weakland, O.S.B.

David A. Stosur (ed.)
Peter Cross pp.366-368

The Critical Spirit: Theology at the Crossroads of Faith and Culture

Andrew Pierce and Geraldine Smyth (eds.),
Anthony J. Kelly pp.368-369

Living Justice: Catholic Social Teaching in Action

Thomas Massaro
Bruce Duncan pp.369-371

American Catholic Social Teaching

Thomas J. Massaro, and Thomas A. Shannon (eds.)
Bruce Duncan pp.371-373

The Liturgical Environment: What the Documents Say

Mark G. Boyer
Tom Elich pp.373-374


Contributors

KEVIN HART is Notre Dame Professor of English and Concurrent Professor of Philosophy at the University of Notre Dame, Indiana. His most recent books are The Dark Gaze: Maurice Blanchot and the Sacred (Chicago University Press), Postmodernism (Oneworld) and a co-edited collection of essays The Experience of God (Fordham University Press). His poems may be found in Flame Tree: Selected Poems (Bloodaxe Books / Paperbark Press).

DEBORAH STORIE is currently pursuing research at Whitley College, within the Melbourne College of Divinity, in the area of the intersections between biblical studies, hermeneutics, cultural studies and community development. She provides consultancy and training services in com-munity and international development, writes occasionally for TEAR Target and Zadok Perspectives, and works part-time as a veterinarian.

JOHN DADOSKY Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Theology at Regis College/University of Toronto, is author of The Structure of Religious Knowing: Encountering the Sacred in Eliade and Lonergan (SUNY Press, 2004). He is currently working on a book on the elipse of beauty and its recovery in philosophy and theology drawing on insights from the traditional Navajo notion of beauty; he is also developing an ecclesiology of friendship.

PAUL KNITTER is Professor Emeritus at Xavier University, Cincinnati, Ohio, where he has taught for the past 30 years. He continues to pursue his central academic interest: the confluence between interreligious dialogue and eco-human well-being. Among his recent works are Introducing Theologies of Religions (2003), One Earth Many Religions (1995), Jesus and the Other Names (1996), all with Orbis Books. He is presently working on a book on how his Buddhist study and practice have nourished his Christian faith.

ZENON SZABLOWINSKI SVD, following graduation as Doctor of Theology from the Melbourne College of Divinity in April 2005, has taught ethics at the Divine Word University, Madang, Papua New Guinea. His specific research interest lies in the area of religious and secular reconciliation, both on the individual and the social level.