
Amy-Jill Levine
Articles
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4 weeks ago |
christiancentury.org | Mac Loftin |Liz Charlotte Grant |Amy-Jill Levine |Fleming Rutledge
What’s the Bible for? We asked dozens of writers to respond to this question in seven words or less, as well as to expand on their response in a few sentences. To see all of the responses together as they are posted, bookmark this page. Revealing the God who lives“What is the Bible for?” seems an extraordinarily obtuse question, as if it were a how-to book. Stand back! Herein is a word so alive with its author that it is capable of overturning every notion you ever had.
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1 month ago |
christiancentury.org | Mac Loftin |Liz Charlotte Grant |Amy-Jill Levine |Peter W. Marty
Photo: Jens Domschky / iStock / Getty Jesus may have been an excellent carpenter. Or maybe he wasn’t. It’s possible that he made perfectly level tables but wobbly chairs. Or, if he was a stone mason, which the Greek word translated as “carpenter” in Mark 6:3 allows for, he may have chiseled stone with great precision but laid slightly crooked walls. We can’t know these details of his early life, of course. But let’s turn to the art world to broaden our perspective.
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1 month ago |
christiancentury.org | Peter Hawkins |Mac Loftin |Liz Charlotte Grant |Amy-Jill Levine
To receive these posts by email each Monday, sign up. For more commentary on this week's readings, see the Reflections on the Lectionary page. For full-text access to all articles, subscribe to the Century. We do not know for sure what audience Isaiah had in mind with these stirring words of invitation, how close his first hearers stood either to the destruction of Jerusalem in around 586 BCE or to the return to the promised land from Babylonian captivity some 50 years later.
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1 month ago |
christiancentury.org | Mac Loftin |Liz Charlotte Grant |Amy-Jill Levine
What’s the Bible for? We asked dozens of writers to respond to this question in seven words or less, as well as to expand on their response in a few sentences. To see all of the responses together as they are posted, bookmark this page. Perplexing book(s) seeks to make revolution irresistible“The role of the artist is to make the revolution irresistible,” wrote Toni Cade Bambara.
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1 month ago |
christiancentury.org | Mac Loftin |Liz Charlotte Grant |Amy-Jill Levine
“How do I talk to my kids about God?” has always been a popular question among parents, and it seems to be even more popular now, with increasing numbers of people healing from the wounds Christianity gave them. Even for those who haven’t been harmed by the church, conversations with children about God can be difficult to navigate. Meredith Miller wrote Woven to give parents and other caregivers a paradigm for talking about faith with children.
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