She’s really here. #HellHathNoFury (Image description: tired but giddy brunette wearing a green sparkly houndstooth blazer and green clover earrings holds a copy of a green book, that she wrote). https://t.co/ODCuY8WWBl
Delighted that my Routledge book on crucifixion is now available in paperback (and currently on sale). It is also available free to download as an open access ebook via the same link. 1/2
https://t.co/eQf14v9fMe
COVER REVEAL!!
This volume provides an introduction to slavery in the New Testament and is written accessibly for undergraduate and graduate students (or interested readers!). If you teach a class on these topics, you’ll want a copy!
It should be out by April 2025!
Excellent new issue out; great contributions from a variety of angles on domestic violence in antiquity. I’m glad to have contributed something on the Apocryphal Acts!
UNC Press sent me the first printed copy! Thank you to everyone at @UNC_Press press for making such a wonderful book and thank you to everyone to helped and inspired me along the way! Looking forward to it arriving in people’s mailboxes soon!
What a time for my book to be coming out (official pub date 11/26) Here's a link to pre-order sites: https://t.co/fbWM6qTMua I'm so grateful to those who read and endorsed: Dan-el Padilla Peralta, @jaxhidalgo, Willie James Jennings, and Tat-siong Benny Liew. @yalepress
Be sure to enter our giveaway for @HenningMeghan and Nils Neumann's book, Vivid Rhetoric and Visual Persuasion: Ekphrasis in Early Christian Literature (@eerdmansbooks). Give us a follow, share the episode post, and comment to enter!
#Giveaway#theology#christianhistory
In this week's episode, @HenningMeghan and Nils Neumann discuss their new book, Vivid Rhetoric and Visual Persuasion: Ekphrasis in Early Christian Literature @eerdmansbooks
Listen: https://t.co/C4j2doWl6F
Subscribe: https://t.co/N5Pg3qlC22
#theology#podcast#earlychristianity
Share @BridgingTheol's post for a chance to win a copy of Vivid Rhetoric and Visual Persuasion, edited by @HenningMeghan and Nils Neumann! 🤩 Be sure to check out their podcast episode while you're at it!
@womeninchurch Thanks! I have too, and I think it’s because this is one of those places where the ableism of our own world lines up a little too neatly with the bodily norms of the ancient world.
I’m arguing that Martha’s worry is a disability that is manufactured by unjust labor structures that purposefully assign worry to some people and not others. A longer version of this argument is forthcoming in Harvard Theological Review.