Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY
/
Editor’s note
Editor’s note
Sep 13, 2025 10:17 PM

We should always look to drink deeply from the rich wells of Christian tradition and Thomas C. Oden helps us to do exactly that. Oden mitted much of his work to lifting up the voice of the Church Fathers. John Wesley, who is the founder of Oden's own Methodist tradition, proclaimed, "The Fathers are the most mentators on Scripture, for they were nearest the fountain and were eminently endued with that Spirit by whom all Scripture was given." Wesley took with him the wisdom of patristics to the great evangelical revival in 18th century England.

By treading back along the ancient path, Oden has made that path fresh and new for many followers of the Good News. As you will see in the interview, patristic sources offer wisdom and guidance to the kind of issues and problems we face today. Their voice is never a dated voice. We are confident Oden's words will be a blessing to you.

Hunter Baker, the 2011 Novak Award recipient, has written a well-reasoned article on social leveling, socialism, and secularism. Baker explains why utopian schemes or social leveling are dangerous to religious believers and warns us to "oppose it as it returns with ever softer and friendlier faces."

Rev. Johannes L. Jacobse has contributed a review of Defending Constantine by Peter J. Leithart. Constantine remains a controversial figure in the Church and Leithart works to challenge the modern and pacifist critiques of the early Christian leader. In his review, Jacobse especially praises Leithart's historical scholarship in examining "how pagan culture was, in the end, baptized."

The parable of the rich young ruler is a notable Gospel text and it monly cited because it's an important one about wealth, discipleship, and obedience. John Kelly, a financial advisor, offers a deeper analysis of the parable within the Jewish law and the ways in which wealth was acquired under the Roman system and how that is different from the creation of wealth in today's society.

The "In the Liberal Tradition" figure for this issue is Whittaker Chambers. Chambers has been forgotten by too many conservatives and proponents of liberty. When he is referenced now, it is often within the context of being a Cold War footnote because of his dramatic testimony against munist spy Alger Hiss in 1948. But because he was an intellectual of the highest degree, a man of faith, and a man who raised high the banner of truth, Chambers is a hero for any age.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY
Double-edged sword: The power of the Word - Philippians 3:21
Who, by the power that enables him to bring everything under his control, will transform our lowly bodies so that they will be like his glorious body. For many, the greatest trial of es in the form of broken bodies, the aging process, and disabilities. Sometimes a tragic event or disease can drastically change somebody's quality of life. Through the ages, many saints have used their suffering to bring glory to God and call attention to the value of...
Richard John Neuhaus
From 1936 to 2009. Consumerism is not simply the state of being well off, it is the spiritual disposition of being controlled by what one consumes, of living in order to consume, of living in order to have things. This, of course, is a great spiritual danger for rich and poor alike. Father Richard John Neuhaus sought to remind people that they are, at their essence, a child of God. Neuhaus, who was born in Pembroke, Ontario, Canada, was...
Whittaker Chambers
The crisis of the Western world exists to the degree in which it is indifferent to God. In the form of a letter to his children, Whittaker Chambers wrote in the forward to his book Witness, A man is not primarily a witness against something. That is only incidental to the fact that he is a witness for something. Chambers is best known for his dramatic role in outing U.S. State Department official Alger Hiss as munist spy in...
Saving liberalism from itself
Review of: Daniel J. Mahoney, The Conservative Foundations of the Liberal Order (ISI, 2010), ISBN: 978-1935191001. Hardback, 208 pages; $26.95. When asked why he remained a liberal, albeit a conservative one, the late Richard John Neuhaus typically responded that liberalism, despite its flaws, offered the only decent politics in the modern world. First Things, the journal he founded, was dedicated to the proposition that while liberalism was a good, neither it nor any other politics was really one of...
'Social Justice' is a complex concept
A column by Anthony M. Stevens-Arroyo, a Catholic writer for The Washington Post, makes the claim that Catholic social justice demands a redistribution of wealth. He went on to say that there can be no disagreement that unions, the government and private charities should all have a role in fighting a trend that has concentrated money into the hands of the few. In this conjecture, Stevens-Arroyo confused the ends with potential means. What Stevens-Arroyo is promoting is an attenuated...
Debt, finance, and Catholics
Debt and deficits seem to be on everyone's minds these days. Whether it be worries about the American government's fiscal woes, Europe's fragile banking system, or the debt-as-a-way-of-life culture that disfigures so many lives, many people are seeking guidance about how to release ourselves from this mess with our souls intact. In this regard, Catholics instinctively turn to Catholic social teaching for direction. Unfortunately, modern Catholic social encyclicals have relatively little to say about financial questions. Even the 2004...
Why is Acton taking on a project like the translation of Abraham Kuyper's 'Common Grace' into english?
The Acton Institute has a strong desire to build on the significant role we are playing in contributing to the intellectual capital in evangelicalism. That is why we are collaborating with Kuyper College in Grand Rapids to produce the first ever English translation of Abraham Kuyper's seminal three-volume Common Grace. That is why Acton also acquired the Grand Rapids-based book imprint Christian's Library Press in June of 2010 and created the NIV Stewardship Study Bible with the Stewardship Council...
Editor’s note
The Spring 2011 issue of Religion & Liberty leads off with an interview with Wayne Grudem, author of the new book Politics According to the Bible. The author is a giant in the evangelical world. He helps all of us to think Biblically and while the book offers a political worldview, ultimately it helps us to focus on the Word made Man. That is exactly what Grudem intends. Politics According to the Bible is a superb resource for believers...
The Church and disaster relief: Shelter from the stormy blast
Christianity proclaims the future regeneration of a disordered world. The Church is an earthly reminder of that day of restoration. The Body of Christ, gathered together on Sunday mitted to the work of regeneration at all times, offers a refuge forting place for questions of Why? especially during disasters and trial. Through the ages, it has held to the hope of a brighter day. After springtime tornadoes tore through Alabama, the Rev. Kelvin Croom at College Hill Baptist Church...
Government and God's people
An Interview with Wayne Grudem Wayne Grudem is the research professor of theology and biblical studies at Phoenix Seminary in Arizona. He previously taught at Trinity Evangelical Divinity School for 20 years. He has served as the President of the Council on Biblical Manhood and Womanhood, as President of the Evangelical Theological Society (1999), and as a member of the translation mittee for the English Standard Version of the Bible. He also served as the general editor for the...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved