Mark Greene, Executive Director of the London Institute for Contemporary Christianity, builds on the idea of creating cultures that enable Christians to be discipled for their ordinary work. He explains ...
Mick Pope explores a theology of the Imago Dei and our vocation of the soil by examining the agricultural themes in the two creation accounts. He concludes that all human ...
Ian Packer discusses how we need an approach to the professions and the concept of vocation that may both contribute to public life and perhaps aid in rehabilitating substantive moral ...
As humans continue to make the shift from economic animals to creative creatures, with beauty and possibility the new human currency, Brian Harris and Jon Bergmann argue that it is ...
Looking at work through the lenses of the person and work of the Spirit and the Christian hope sharpens our theology of work, according to Maggie Kappelhoff. Drawing on the ...
For some of us, it might seem strange to bring critical social theory and Jesus’ parables into conversation. Using Terry Eagleton as his dialogue partner, Sam Curkpatrick shows how the ...
Is it possible to put Continental philosophy to work? Sarah Bacaller says yes, yes, indeed. She argues that Hegel’s understanding of identity, the work of Christ, and of objective right, ...
Would Ecclesiastes’ Preacher have us believe that all our work under the sun ultimately counts for nothing? Andrew Matthews challenges this reading, revealing that beyond painful toil, labour can transcend ...
What place should we give to rest in our work-addicted culture? In dialogue with James K. A. Smith’s Cultural Liturgies project, Colin Noble argues that Sabbath is a foundational and ...
COLLATED COLLEGE REPORT, REPRESENTING THE NOVEMBER 1, 2018 GATHERING <REPORT QUICK-LINKS/BOOKMARKS> The Journey Thus Far: An Introduction and Overview <pp1-3> PARTICIPANTS/COLLEGES <pp4-6> EXPERIENCE (What is going on?) <pp7-12> ...