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Union Seminary Quarterly Review
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Union Seminary Quarterly Review (USQR) was founded in 1939 as a platform for inspired and socially-engaged religious thought. Over the years, USQR expanded its vision to embrace a multicultural outlook in theology and an interdisciplinary approach to the study of religion. Although editorially independent of Union Theological Seminary, USQR was managed by doctoral students of Union, with support and participation from faculty and administration.
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2. Typologies and Meanings of Prayer Among Patients
3. Multidimensional Understanding Of Religiosity/spirituality: Relationship To Major Depression And Familial Risk
4. Spectrum of Spirituality: On the Religious and Spiritual Experiences of Black Men and Their Relation to the Decline of the Black Church
5. Understanding Self-reported Importance Of Religion/spirituality In A North American Sample Of Individuals At Risk For Familial Depression: A Principal Component Analysis
6. Neuroanatomical Correlates Of Familial Risk-for-depression And Religiosity/spirituality.
7. The Relationship of Attachment to Religiosity, Spirituality, and Mindfulness in Secular and Religious Populations in Israel
8. Ann Belford Ulanov: Professor
9. A Post-9/11 Reflection on Mourning, Splitting, and the Failure of the Good Object, Preceded by Musings on Doctoral Work under Dr. Ann Belford Ulanov
10. Complex Multiplicity and the Multiplicity Complex: A Relational Reflection in Honor of Ann Belford Ulanov
11. Editor’s Introduction
12. Guest Editor’s Introduction: “THIS!”: A Word on Repaying Our “Debts of the Spirit”
13. Neoliberalism’s Eschewal of Dependency: Putting the Work of Ann Ulanov in Conversation with Economic Theory
14. “No More a Stranger, Nor a Guest, But Like a Child at Home”: Hostility and Hospitality in a “Non-Religious” Pastoral Encounter in Hospice
15. On Being Seriously Funny: What We Can Learn about Humor from Ann Ulanov
16. Reimagining in Order to Reimage God: A Depth Psychological Look at the Book of Job in Relation to the Deuteronomistic History and Its Application for Today
17. Religious And Spiritual Importance Moderate Relation Between Default Mode Network Connectivity And Familial Risk For Depression
18. Uncovering Desire: Explorations in Eros, Aggression, and the Question of Theosis in Marriage
19. Caitanya Vaishnavism as Liberation Theology: The Matrix of Material and Spiritual Liberation
20. Union Seminary Quarterly Review, volume 65, issue 3-4 (2015)
21. Waiting for One Another at The Table of Hospitality: A Pauline Confrontation with the Anxiety of Food Self-Righteousness
22. Apophasis and the Trinity: On the Enduring Significance of Revelation for Theology
23. Approaching Calvin Today in “The Spirit of the Explorer”
24. Beyond Consolation: The Significance of Failure for Faith
25. Chapel Reflections on the Start of the Iraq War
26. Editor’s Introduction
27. Faith for Faithful Disbelievers: Christopher Morse as Systematic Theologian
28. Faithful Disbelief: Christopher Morse Between Foucault and Barth
29. Hearing the Music of the Festschrift: A “Listening Guide”
30. Jesus and the Divine Name
31. Moving Heaven and Earth: A Womanist Dogmatics of Black Dance as Basileia
32. Neuroanatomical Correlates Of Religiosity And Spirituality: A Study In Adults At High And Low Familial Risk For Depression
33. Sed Contra, Ergo, Responsio: Honoring the Legacy of Christopher Morse as a Teacher of Christian Theology
34. Testing the Spirits
35. The Coming Cloud
36. The Difference Christopher Morse Makes: A Dogmatics for the Practice of Ministry
37. The Humanity of Divinity
38. The Problem of Universal Salvation in the Theology of Emil Brunner
39. The Strange Worlds of Apocalyptic, Christian Ethics, and Princeton Theological Seminary
40. Tribute to Dr. Christopher L. Morse
41. Union Seminary Quarterly Review, volume 65, issue 1-2 (2014)
42. All for One or One for All? Liberation Theology and the Quest for Self- Determination in Latin America, Israel, Palestine, and the United States
43. A Poststructuralist Liberation Theology?: Queer Theory and Apophaticism
44. Book Review: Chaos and Grace: Discovering the Liberating Work of the Holy Spirit by Mark Galli
45. Book Review: Radical Political Theology: Religion and Politics After Liberalism by Clayton Crockett
46. Book Review: Reading from the Edges: The Bible and People on the Move by Jean-Pierre Ruiz
47. Book Review: The Universe Bends Toward Justice: Radical Reflections on the Church, the Bible, and the Body Politic by Obery M. Hendricks
48. Breaking the Chains of Chattel Teamwork: The Future of Black Liberation Theology
49. Can Theatre be a Project of Liberation Theology?: Explorations in the Case of a Collaboration in Tanzania
50. Christianity, Capitalism, and Desire: Can Religion Still Make a Difference?
51. Disability Studies as a Liberatory Project: Implications for the Classroom
52. Economic Crisis, Economic Justice, and the Divine Commonwealth
53. Editor’s Introduction
54. Editor’s Introduction
55. Getting Back to Idolatry Critique: Kingdom, Kingdom, and the Triune Gift Economy
56. Liberating Deconstructions: The Messianic in James Cone and Jacques Derrida
57. Liberation and Postliberalism
58. Organizing as the Occupation of Liberation Theology
59. The Competing Philosophical Frameworks Apparent in the Neo-Arian Thoughts of the Late Fourth Century C.E.: A Case Study
60. The Dreamlife of Junkspace: Utopia, Globalization, and the Religious Imagination
61. The “Queer” God(s) of Mormonism: Considering an Inclusive, Post-Heteronormative LGBTQI Hermeneutics
62. Tiny Drops: Henri de Lubac, S.J., Dorothy Day, and Anti-Triumphalism as Radical Praxis
63. Union Seminary Quarterly Review, volume 64, issue 1 (2013)
64. Union Seminary Quarterly Review, volume 64, issue 2-3 (2013)
65. Union Seminary Quarterly Review, volume 64, issue 4 (2013)
66. Voyeur Bodies, Liberating Identities
67. Why Support the Occupy Movement?
68. “With what can we compare the kingdom of God?” Latin American Liberation Theology and the Challenge of Political Projects
69. A Tribute to John A. McGuckin
70. Beholding Beauty In Nicetas Stethatos’ Contemplation of Paradise
71. Book Review: After the Smoke Clears: The Just War Tradition and Post War Justice
72. Book Review: Disruptive Grace: Reflection on God, Scripture, and the Church
73. Book Review: Generous Justice: How God’s Grace Makes Us Just
74. Book Review: Seducing Augustine: Bodies, Desires, Confessions.
75. Book Review: Spirit and Trauma: A Theology of Remaining
76. Book Review: The Dawkins Letters: Challenging Atheist Myths
77. Book Review: The Difference Heaven Makes: Rehearing the Gospel as News
78. Book Review: Toward Mutual Recognition: Relational Psychoanalysis and the Christian Narrative
79. Gregory Nazianzus’ Poemata Arcana: A Poetic, Musical Catechism?
80. Liberation: Challenges to Modern Orthodox Theology from the Contextual Theologies
81. Maximus the Confessor and John of Damascus on Gnomic Will (γνώμη) in Christ: Clarity and Ambiguity
82. Published Works of V. Rev. Professor John Anthony McGuckin
83. Reading Origen of Alexandria from the Perspective of Contemporary Semantics
84. Religiosity And Major Depression In Adults At High Risk: A Ten-year Prospective Study
85. Revelations from the Apparatus Criticus of the Book of Revelation: How Textual Criticism Can Help Historians
86. Union Seminary Quarterly Review, volume 63, issue 3-4 (2012)
87. Interpreting the Vajra Rosary: Truth and Method Meets Wisdom and Method
88. A Clouded View: How Language Shapes Moral Perception
89. Challenges to Authority: Understanding Critiques of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change
90. Delta Change
91. Denaturing Nature
92. Ecological Management, Cultural Reform, and Religious Creativity
93. Editor’s Introduction
94. Glimpses of Earth: Sustainability in the Crucible of Experience
95. Islamic Environmental Stewardship: Nature and Science in the Light of Islamic Philosophy
96. Is Sustainability A Fact?
97. Jainism, Dharma, and Environmental Ethics
98. Response to “The Humble Heart”
99.
Review of Thomas Merton, A Book of Hours, edited with an Introduction
by Kathleen Deignan, Foreword by James Finley, illustrations by
John Giuliani
100. Should Ecological Science Be Ethical?
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