The Unhappy Narcissism of Missionary Modernity: A Review of Jocelyn Cesari’s We God’s People
Jocelyn Cesari is a name anyone interested in religion and international relations should know. She is already a household name in the—admittedly
Jocelyn Cesari is a name anyone interested in religion and international relations should know. She is already a household name in the—admittedly
Deservedly or not, critics sometimes caricature just war thinking as jingoism or (increasingly) pacifism by another name—in other words, they
If one adheres to the view that the various secularization theses of twentieth-century sociology—by which at least the advanced industrial world is
Editor’s Note: The following article looks at Abraham Kuyper’s foreign policy when he served as prime minister of the Netherlands. To read this
Abraham Kuyper (1837–1920) was many things in life: journalist, editor, pastor, theologian, the founder of a university, a founder and leader of a
In the Decalogue, the moral heart of the Law in the Old Testament, the first commandment reads, “Thou shalt have no other gods before me.”
In Christian Faith, Philosophy, and International Relations: The Lamb and the Wolf, Simon Polinder and Govert Bujis advance a new school of