Box 64
Contains 20 Results:
“Favorite Poems,” translation and commentary in The Christian Century, vol. 120, no. 7, April 5, 2003
The Max L. Stackhouse papers contain correspondence, research, and writings collected during his career at Andover Newton Theological School and Princeton Theological Seminary. The collection also includes some mixed media and personal ephemera.
“The Offices of Christ and the Question of a ‘Pax Americana,’” unpublished essay for The Churches’ Center for Public Policy, May 1, 2003
The Max L. Stackhouse papers contain correspondence, research, and writings collected during his career at Andover Newton Theological School and Princeton Theological Seminary. The collection also includes some mixed media and personal ephemera.
“Sources and Prospects for Human Rights Ideas: A Christian Perspective,” (contribution) in The Idea of Human Rights: Traditions and Presence, ed. by Jindrich Halama, 2003
The Max L. Stackhouse papers contain correspondence, research, and writings collected during his career at Andover Newton Theological School and Princeton Theological Seminary. The collection also includes some mixed media and personal ephemera.
“Spheres of Management: Social, Ethical, and Theological Reflections,” (article) in Theology Today, vol. 60, no. 3, October, 2005
The Max L. Stackhouse papers contain correspondence, research, and writings collected during his career at Andover Newton Theological School and Princeton Theological Seminary. The collection also includes some mixed media and personal ephemera.
“Business, Economics, and Christian Ethics,” (article) in The Cambridge Companion to Christian Ethics, ed. by Robin Gill, 2001
The Max L. Stackhouse papers contain correspondence, research, and writings collected during his career at Andover Newton Theological School and Princeton Theological Seminary. The collection also includes some mixed media and personal ephemera.
“Public Theology and Political Economy in a Globalizing Era,” (article) in Studies in Christian Ethics, vol. 14, no. 2, 2001 (also published in the Seigakuin University General Research Institute Bulletin, no. 26, 2002; and in Public Theology for the 21st Century, ed. by William F. Storrar and Andrew R. Morton, 2004
The Max L. Stackhouse papers contain correspondence, research, and writings collected during his career at Andover Newton Theological School and Princeton Theological Seminary. The collection also includes some mixed media and personal ephemera.
“Covenantal Justice in a Global Era,” online article for The Institute for Reformed Theology, January, 2002
The Max L. Stackhouse papers contain correspondence, research, and writings collected during his career at Andover Newton Theological School and Princeton Theological Seminary. The collection also includes some mixed media and personal ephemera.
“The Moral Roots of the Common Life in a Global Era,” (article) in The Expository Times, vol. 113, no. 5, February, 2002 (republished in Loving God with Our Minds, ed. by Michael Walker and Cynthia Jarvis, 2004
The Max L. Stackhouse papers contain correspondence, research, and writings collected during his career at Andover Newton Theological School and Princeton Theological Seminary. The collection also includes some mixed media and personal ephemera.
“Theologies of War: Comparative Perspectives,” (article) in The Princeton Seminary Bulletin, vol. 23, no. 1, 2002 (republished in Strike Terror No More: Theology, Ethics, and the New War, 2002
The Max L. Stackhouse papers contain correspondence, research, and writings collected during his career at Andover Newton Theological School and Princeton Theological Seminary. The collection also includes some mixed media and personal ephemera.
“Art, Artists, Audiences: ‘The Salt Must Not Lose Its Savor,’” (article) in CSEE Connections, vol. 21, no. 6, February, 2002
The Max L. Stackhouse papers contain correspondence, research, and writings collected during his career at Andover Newton Theological School and Princeton Theological Seminary. The collection also includes some mixed media and personal ephemera.