Kevin Considine is Assistant Professor of Theology at Calumet College of St. Joseph (Whiting, IN). He is the author of Salvation for the Sinned-Against: ‘Han’ and Schillebeeckx in Intercultural Dialogue (Eugene, OR: Pickwick, 2015). His research has been published in Black Theology: An International Journal, Horizons, New Theology Review, and Tijdschrift voor Theologie (online).
Reading Scripture as a Political Act: Essays on the Theopolitical Interpretation of the Bible (Fortress, 2015)
May 2016: Living in the Shadow of Empire (Volume 16 Issue 5)
[1] It is a challenging task to provide a clear and fair evaluation of a volume of collected essays. This is doubly true when the volume includes contributions from more than a dozen different authors whose diverse interests coalesce around an emerging theme still being defined. In this instance, a reviewer more closely resembles a […]
We Are Who We Think We Were: Christian History and Christian Ethics (Fortress, 2013)
July/August 2014: Book Review Issue (Volume 14 Issue 7)
Aaron D. Conley. We Are Who We Think We Were: Christian History and Christian Ethics (Minneapolis, Fortress: 2013), 224 pages, $59.00. Emerging Scholars Series
The Morally Divided Body: Ethical Disagreement and the Disunity of the Church (Cascade Books, 2012)
July/August 2014: Book Review Issue (Volume 14 Issue 7)
The Morally Divided Body: Ethical Disagreement and the Disunity of the Church. Pro Ecclesia Series. Editors: Michael Root and James J. Buckley. Eugene Oregon: Cascade Books, 2012, p. 145.
Many Colors: Cultural Intelligence for a Changing Church. Chicago: Moody, 2010
March 2014: Government (Volume 14 Issue 3)
Book Review: Soong-Chan Rah. Many Colors: Cultural Intelligence for a Changing Church. Chicago: Moody, 2010. 208pp. $14.99.
Book Review: Volker Küster, A Protestant Theology of Passion: Korean Minjung Theology Revisited
December 2013: Immigration (Volume 13 Issue 8)
[1] Christian minjung theologies arose in the 1970s and 1980s in South Korea. They were articulated by a small group of Protestant pastors and intellectuals who became part and parcel of the late 20th century minjung movement—a cultural phenomenon led by artists, students, labor organizers, and intellectuals—that included a retrieval of traditional artistic forms, a […]
Triune Atonement: Christ’s Healing for Sinners, Victims, and the Whole of Creation
May/June 2013: Mental Illness (Volume 13 Issue 3)
[1] Andrew Sung Park is one of a handful of theologians in the U.S. who have tried to bring the Korean understanding of han into Christian doctrine. He is a Korean-American theologian who thinks that in order for Christianity to become more intelligible, it must rely upon non-Western sources as well as Western ones. [2] […]