Box 66
Contains 17 Results:
“On ‘Public Theology:’ An Interview,” (article) in Ministry and Theology, vol. 11, (in Korean), November, 2007
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.
“Globalization and Christian Ethics,” (contribution) in The Globalization of Ethics: Religious and Secular Perspectives, ed. by William M. Sullivan and Will Kymlicka, 2007
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.
“Social Graces: Christianity and Globalization,” (article) in The Review of Faith and International Affairs, vol. 5, no. 3, , Fall, 2007
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 Sources of Human Rights Ideas: A Christian Perspective,” (article) in Christianity and Human Rights: Influences and Issues, ed. by Frances S. Adeney and Arvind Sharma, 2007
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.
“Natural Law Theory and its Relatives,” (article) in Liberty University Law Review, vol. 2, no. 3, Spring 2008
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.
“How and Why We Go Public,” (article) in Transforming Praxis: God, Community and Church: Essays in Honor of Dr. I.J. Mohan Razu, ed. by C.I. David Joy, 2008 (originally published as “Reflections on How and Why We Go Public,” in International Journal of Public Theology, vol. 1, no. 3-4, 2007
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.
"A Biographical and Intellectual Sketch,” (article) in James Luther Adams: Prophet to the Powerful, ed. by Herbert F. Vetter, 2008
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.
“John 12:1-11,” “John 12:20-36,” and “John 13:21-32,” (articles) in Feasting on the Word: Preaching the Revised Common Lectionary, ed. by David L. Bartlett and Barbara Brown Taylor, 2008
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.
“For Business Leaders in a Global Era,” in Prayers for the New Social Awakening: Inspired by the New Social Creed, ed. by Christian Iosso and Elizabeth Hinson-Hasty, 2008
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.
“Why Theology in International Affairs?” (article) in The Review of Faith and International Affairs, vol. 7, no. 1, Spring 2009
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.