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Posts by The Anxious Bench

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The Foundations Of Re-Enchantment I recently came across a book that resonated with so many of my interests! This was The Foundations of Re-Enchantment: Freemasonry, Theosophy, and the

The Foundations Of Re-Enchantment | Philip Jenkins

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3 weeks ago 0 0 0 0
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Why Doing History In Seminaries (and Everywhere) Is Hard We problematize the received narratives as a way of acknowledging that it is the nature of human beings in community to be problematic. This problematization constantly counsels that as Christians doi...

Why Doing History In Seminaries (And Everywhere) Is Hard | Jacob Randolph
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4 weeks ago 0 0 0 0
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Science, Superstition, And Standard Bearers I have written in the past about how invaluable cartoons and caricatures can be for historical sources, and as teaching materials. In my current project,

For your weekend:
Science, Superstition, And Standard Bearers | Philip Jenkins

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1 month ago 0 0 0 0
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God Is In The Midst Of Her God is in the midst of her; she shall not be moved: God shall help her, and that right early. Psalms 46:5 In one of the first episodes of the show

Recently at the Anxious Bench:

God Is in the Midst of Her | Michael Jimenez

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1 month ago 0 0 0 0
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Evangelical Debates The Interstices: A 19th Century Intervention Before jumping into this piece, I want to make an acknowledgement. First, Professor Sutton has a new and well-regarded book expanding his argument from Neither Sutton's political redefinition nor the ...

Evangelicalism And Interstices: A 19th Century Intervention | Wyatt Reynolds

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1 month ago 1 1 0 1
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Abuse And Ownership, Past And Present “Countries have to have ownership and you defend ownership, you don't defend leases.” (Mr. Trump as quoted in BBC Article from January 9, 2026) “When True protection has historically come through reco...

Abuse And Ownership, Past And Present

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2 months ago 0 0 0 0
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My Farewell To The Anxious Bench After five and a half years on the Anxious Bench, the time has come to say goodbye. Given my other writing commitments during the coming year (including

Daniel K. Williams gives a parting gift to the Anxious Bench with his last column on the many ways he has shaped and been shaped by the Anxious Bench over his years as a columnist.

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3 months ago 2 0 0 0
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Jack's War On Xmas To say Jack’s relationship with Xmas was tendentious is to understate it. Even in his youth, elements of the season niggled at him. He did not care for

Today at the Anxious Bench, Joey Cochran provides a detailed account of Jack’s (C. S. Lewis) war on Xmas in personal correspondence and public writing and how he reimagined Christmas and Father Christmas (Santa in the U.S.) for his Narnian audience.

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3 months ago 0 0 0 0
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The Economics Of Christmas Romance Movies ‘Tis the season for watching silly sappy movies about small town folks who work hard but haven’t made time for love in their lives until Christmas movies

"Lately I’ve decided that the greatest and possibly most insidious fiction peddled by holiday romance films is the triumph of the small business." Lisa Clark Diller on the subtle fictions of Christmas movies and true longings for community that they can enflame.
www.patheos.com/blogs/anxiou...

4 months ago 1 0 0 0
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Trondenes Kirke: The Northernmost Medieval Church It’s a stunning stone church, painted white and towering over the surrounding landscape, with the sparkling waters of the fjord and snow-covered peaks of

Today at the Anxious Bench, Lynneth Miller Renberg helps us enter into the sacred space of Trondenes Kirke, the northernmost surviving medieval church.
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5 months ago 1 1 0 0
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Everyday Evangelical Resistance For My Chicago Neighbors Historians talk about the danger of presentist history. They rarely talk about what happens when presentist history is unavoidable.

What is happening in Chicago? Historian Joey Cochran documents some of the recent protests and talks about how Chicagoans have responded to Operation Midway Blitz.

www.patheos.com/blogs/anxiou...

5 months ago 3 1 0 1
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"Nations Are Made By Men, Not Paper Constitutions" For over ten years my colleague and friend Paul Yandle and I have been comparing southern history and contemporary politics. Unlike me, he is a

What is going on in right-wing America? Historian Paul Yandle traces the similarities between dehumanizing Reconstruction-era rhetoric and the fear mongers of the new Right.
www.patheos.com/blogs/anxiou...

6 months ago 1 0 0 0
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"Pastoral Leadership In A Time Of Christian Nationalism" We hear much about Christian nationalism these days, and for good reason. Pastors, pundits, and presidents alike champion control and dominance as

How should pastors think about the rising threat of Christian nationalism? Ansley Quiros offers her reflections in response to the recent conference, "Pastoral Leadership in a Time of Christian Nationalism," held at Candler School of Theology last week.
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6 months ago 1 0 0 0
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Biblical And Christian Images In The Movie SINNERS We have a guest blog today from my good friend Kevin Barron – more properly, the Rev. Kevin Barron, as he is an Episcopal priest. Like many of us, he has

If you've seen the film SINNERS, you know how the stories of American history are woven into the the fabric of fantasy. But what about stories of Christianity? Today, Rev. Kevin Barron considers the relationship between faith and fantasy in SINNERS.
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6 months ago 1 0 0 0
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The Charlie Kirk Memorial: A Funeral, A Revival, A Rally On Sunday, September 21, 2025, thousands of people attended the Charlie Kirk Memorial at State Farm Stadium in Phoenix, Arizona. They gathered to pay

"The Charlie Kirk Memorial turned out to be a blend of funeral, revival, and rally," writes Joey Cochran. "The three features of which had so much permeability that it was tough to discern where one began and the others ended."
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6 months ago 1 0 0 1
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I’m Only Human: Sin As The Rejection Of Human Nature How should we think about our flaws and misbehavior? For some, flaws are something to be embraced: we should be loved ‘warts and all’. For others,

"I'm only human!" It seems natural to us to root our shortcomings in human frailty.

But for Origen of Alexandria, our moral faults reflect more of an animalistic rejection of human nature as created by God and perfectly displayed in Jesus Christ.
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7 months ago 1 0 0 0
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An Ecumenical Moment: Cesar Chavez & The 3 Faiths "All Jews, Christians and Moslems, the spiritual heirs of those slaves freed from Egyptian bondage, are bound by that law, whether they live in the Middle

"Why does it often take terrible spectacles of violence to get people to finally sit down and talk?"
Michael Jimenez writes on what we can learn from the interfaith embrace of Cesar Chavez's farmworkers' union in the 1970s.
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7 months ago 0 0 0 0
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Feminists, Lost Gospels, And A Lost History Of Christianity My current series of posts concerns what I call the first discovery of lost gospels and scriptures, which became a major force in both scholarship and

Today at The Anxious Bench, Philip Jenkins reveals how a 19th century fringe group of religious freethinkers, the Theosophists, were pioneers in the "rediscovery" of early Christianity's esoteric egalitarianism.
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7 months ago 0 0 0 0
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Theology, History, And Contexts For Reading Well Stepping under the 13th-century painted ceiling from the chancel of the church in Ål housed in Oslo’s Historical Museum is a breathtaking experience for a I’d argue that anyone wanting to be a thought...

What do board games have to do with the doctrine of creation? Lynneth Miller Renberg explores the visual theology of a medieval Scandinavian church, and tells us why theologians and historians need each other to understand the worlds of religion.
www.patheos.com/blogs/anxiou...

7 months ago 0 0 0 0
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James Dobson's Death Was The End Of An Era James Dobson's death last week marked the end of a particular era in conservative evangelical politics. It was certainly not the end of the Christian

James Dobson's death marks the end of a generation of conservative evangelical influencers. Daniel Williams writes that what propelled Dobson was a potent blend of Silent Generation political persuasion and Sunbelt evangelical ingenuity.
www.patheos.com/blogs/anxiou...

7 months ago 1 0 0 0
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John Mark Comer, Penal Substitution, And Evangelical Power Evangelical leaders clash over John Mark Comer’s views on penal-substitutionary atonement. Explore the debate on crucicentrism, atonement theory, and shifting centers of evangelical influence.

When John Mark Comer posted a pic in praise of Andrew Rillera’s new book on atonement, it triggered a flurry of responses from Reformed evangelical social media.
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7 months ago 3 2 0 0
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Cracker Barrel, Anglican Converts, And Tradition's Aesthetic What does Cracker Barrel's branding woes tell us about the relationship between tradition and modernity in Christianity?

What do the Cracker Barrel rebrand and the conversion of a prominent Southern Baptist theologian have to do with one another? www.patheos.com/blogs/anxiou...

7 months ago 1 0 0 0
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Rediscovering Lost Scriptures: Two Astonishing Years I have been writing about the modern rediscovery of ancient Jewish and Christian scriptures, including Lost Gospels. We usually tend to think of such

In 1896 and 1897, several breakthrough discoveries in Egypt changed the landscape of biblical studies and scholarly speculation about the figure of Jesus. Philip Jenkins continues his work on the "Lost Scriptures" of the late 19th century.
www.patheos.com/blogs/anxiou...

7 months ago 1 0 0 0
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Zion: Televangelists And Worldwide Theocracy They had removed two of the three bullets from his body, but Senior Sergeant Sauer was now refusing further treatment. “Do not touch me,” he said, “I

At the turn of the twentieth century, Alexander Dowie foresaw an apocalyptic revolution and worldwide theocracy, where Jesus Christ would personally speak his message via--what else?--the nascent power of telecommunications.
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8 months ago 0 0 0 0
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Is Faith Required For Reading The Bible Properly? Who reads the Scriptures better—Bart Ehrman or my grandmother? One is a world-renowned scholar of the New Testament and textual critic, the other has no

Who reads scripture better--an unbelieving scholar of ancient texts or an aged saint, dedicated to years of devotional reading? Adam Renberg looks at ancient Christian reading practices that point to the necessity of virtue for understanding the Bible.
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8 months ago 0 0 0 0
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The First Discovery Of The Lost Scriptures Some years back, I published a lot at this site on the general subject of Alternative Scriptures, and their rediscovery in modern times. I found a lot to

When thinking about noncanonical scriptures, we typically start with the discoveries at Qumran in the 1940s, but alternative texts had been known from as early as the 1890s. How did these texts shape biblical studies and religious piety?
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8 months ago 0 1 0 0
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Surprised By History: Telling The Story I love to tell the story; 'tis pleasant to repeat what seems, each time I tell it more wonderfully sweet.   As Dr. Daniel Williams points out in a

What do Christians have to offer the world in the "ahistoric age" in which we live?

We have a story to tell, Michael Jimenez writes--an old, beautiful, complex, surprising story.
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8 months ago 0 0 0 0
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Interview With Historian Daniel K. Williams In June 2010 I was privileged to meet Dr. Daniel Williams through a mutual acquaintance at the Policy History Conference in Columbus, Ohio. His first book

Today at The Anxious Bench, Paul Thompson interviews fellow Anxious Bench contributor Daniel K. Williams on being a professional historian and the relationship between faith and scholarship.
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8 months ago 1 0 0 0
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Les Misérables And Failed Revolutions Thirty years ago a friend introduced my husband Tommy and I to the music of Les Mis. It took us a few months to see the show—a fancy dress outing to the

Les Misérables is a story about failed revolution. It can be pretty bleak at times. But, Lisa Clark Diller writes, the musical also reminds us that human flourishing demands not only political vigilance, but self-giving love.
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8 months ago 0 0 0 0
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1893: The Long Trajectories In recent weeks, I have been writing extensively about the transformations that America experienced during the year of 1893. You won't be surprised to

Why were the early 1890s so consequential for future American activity in the areas of politics, race, and religion? Philip Jenkins offers some early reflections.
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8 months ago 1 0 0 0