ANGLICAN THEOLOGICAL REVIEW
Volume 100, Number 3, Summer 2018
The Love of Learning and the Desire for God
Celebrating 100 Years
Guest Editors
Roger Ferlo and Jason A. Fout
Authors in This Issue
Essays by Evelyn Underhill, Samuel M. Shoemaker, Nathan A. Scott Jr., William Stringfellow, David F. Ford, John Webster, Kelly Brown Douglas, and Sofia M. Starnes. Introductions by Kathleen Henderson Staudt, Ian Markham, Richard A. Rosengarten, Bill Wylie-Kellermann, Jason A. Fout, Brad East, and Kelly Brown Douglas.
Review Article by Daniel Wade McClain.
Poetry by Kataryn R. Gabriella, Sarah Rossiter, R. S. Thomas, Shane McCrae, Robert C. Schwartz, Scott Colburn, Betty Sue Flowers, and Brett Foster.
About the ATR
The Anglican Theological Review is a quarterly journal of theological reflection within the Episcopal Church USA and the Anglican Church of Canada. Its aim is to foster scholarly excellence and thoughtful conversation in and for the church. The journal is committed to creative intellectual engagement with Christian tradition and interdisciplinary inquiry that includes literature and the arts, philosophy, and science.
Description of the Summer 2018 Issue
"The Love of Learning and the Desire for God" celebrates the theme of this centenary issue of the ATR. Theology and spirituality lie at the heart of the articles selected for this edition, drawn from throughout the last century of the journal. These essays reveal the ever-widening points of view, styles, and concerns of the ATR's writers throughout the decades, and show how Anglican writing has become more attentive to global voices, to issues of inequality, and to the imaginative richness of poetry. A team of editors and colleagues selected representative articles from hundreds of options, seeking the best work of the last century from the ATR. The pieces selected were written for lay as well as academic audiences, range from topics of evangelism to literature to womanism, and include samples of the best poetry found in these pages.
This ATR edition contains a thoughtful review article on how two recent books attempt to mine the doctrine of the Trinity for practical results, and as always, the issue includes reviews of the latest noteworthy books in the fields of theology and ethics, pastoral theology, historical theology, biblical studies, religion and culture, interreligious studies, poetry, and liturgics.