2017-06-02T00:55:57-04:00

In October 1656, James Nayler rode into the English city of Bristol, accompanied by a small band of men and women who sang hosannas. Understood to have recreated Christ’s triumphal entry into Jerusalem, and accused of claiming to be Jesus Christ, Parliament convicted Nayler of “horrid blasphemy.” Nayler was scourged with the whip, his flesh flayed and dirtied. His forehead was branded with a “B” for blasphemy, and his tongue was bored with a red-hot iron. A bare recitation of... Read more

2017-06-06T12:37:36-04:00

If you're traveling in the western United States this summer, consider visiting some more of our bloggers' favorite historical sites. Read more

2017-06-06T11:00:14-04:00

It’s good to be back at the Anxious Bench after a spring semester hiatus. As guests published a series of terrific posts in my place, I read them from Thailand, where my family and I spent over two months. We drove on the other side of the road, bathed elephants in mud pits, watched minor-league Thai soccer, canoed to an island in the Gulf of Thailand, ate fried bugs on the streets of Bangkok, and went to some amazingly low-cost... Read more

2017-06-05T23:53:39-04:00

Let The Anxious Bench help you plan your summer travels, as we share some of our favorite historic sites in the eastern United States. Read more

2017-06-04T17:57:57-04:00

Step away from that soundtrack! Last month Library of America released The Essential Hamilton by Yale professor Joanne B. Freeman, who has been writing and teaching about Alexander Hamilton and colleagues for over two decades. John Williams’s recent New York Times mention of the book describes it as “Hamilton Minus Music,” or, “a more direct (if less rhyming) way to learn about Alexander Hamilton.” I think that is meant as a compliment and the book certainly merits compliment. Freeman likely... Read more

2017-06-02T10:24:48-04:00

I have been posting on the modern discovery of Biblical Pseudepigrapha and Apocrypha, and suggesting that such texts were actually widely known and discussed long before the discovery of the Dead Sea Scrolls, or of the Nag Hammadi library. In fact, the existence of these texts was amazingly mainstream public knowledge. How mainstream? Well, how about the Women’s Home Companion, which during the 1930s had a paid circulation of some four million? In June 1939, the Companion published a knowledgeable... Read more

2017-05-30T21:45:05-04:00

 Today we welcome Will Katerberg to the Anxious Bench. Will is Professor of History at Calvin College, where he also serves as Associate Dean and Director of the Mellema Program in Western American Studies.  The classroom reminds me about what’s possible. And what seems impossible. This year I taught a section of Developing a Christian Mind (DCM), a core course that Calvin College students usually take in their first year. The course combines learning the basics of Christian theology with... Read more

2017-05-31T09:17:57-04:00

Several months ago I heard a catchy phrase preached in a sermon. But it wasn’t until recently, when I began to compare popular medieval bible verses with popular modern bible verses (thanks Bible Gateway!), that I began to think about the phrase more critically. So what is the phrase? “Information does not equal transformation.” Not especially earth shattering….. Well, just give me a few minutes. Because of the church context of the sermon, I assumed the phrase might originate with John... Read more

2017-05-29T09:39:48-04:00

When Vice President Mike Pence told Naval Academy graduates on Friday that they should "submit... to the authorities," he revived an old American tradition of bringing Romans 13 into public discourse. Read more

2017-05-29T08:51:10-04:00

I have been posting about the astonishing wave of scriptural and Bible-related discoveries at the turn of the twentieth century, and their cultural impact. Although not quite as sensational as the find of a new alternative gospel, one moment in particular demands our attention for what it suggest about the nature of the Bible and its canon. The text in question was the book that the King James version calls Ecclesiasticus, and which Catholic and other Bibles call Sirach (or... Read more

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