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Eugene F. Rogers [7]Eugene F. Rogers Jr [2]
  1. Aquinas and the Supreme Court: Race, Gender, and the Failure of Natural Law in Thomas’s Biblical Commentaries.Eugene F. Rogers - 2013 - Hoboken: Wiley-Blackwell.
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  2. Aquinas on Natural Law and the Virtues in Biblical Context Homosexuality as a Test Case.Eugene F. Rogers Jr - 1999 - Journal of Religious Ethics 27 (1):29-56.
    Marriagelike homosexual relationships expose a division among ethicists following Aquinas. Those emphasizing natural law may call such relationships unnatural; those emphasizing the virtues may approve of relationships fostering love and justice. Natural law, the virtues, and homosexuality all show up in Aquinas's "Commentary on Romans"--untranslated and hardly cited. Romans 1:18 opens a discussion of justice. Verse 20 provides Aquinas's chief warrant for natural law. Verse 26 applies virtue and law to "the vice against nature." But Aquinas's account also depends on (...)
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  3.  72
    The sociology and theology of creationist objections to evolution: How blood marks the Bounds of the Christian body.Eugene F. Rogers - 2014 - Zygon 49 (3):540-553.
    The staying power of creationist objections to evolution needs explanation. It depends on the use of “blood” language. Both William Jennings Bryan and, a century later, Ken Ham connect evolution with the blood of predation and the blood of apes, and both also connect evolution with the blood of atonement. Drawing on Mary Douglas and Bettina Bildhauer, I suggest that blood becomes important to societies that image the social body on the human body. Blood reveals the body as porous and (...)
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  4.  8
    Blood Theology: Seeing Red in Body- and God-Talk.Eugene F. Rogers Jr - 2021 - Cambridge University Press.
    The unsettling language of blood has been invoked throughout the history of Christianity. But until now there has been no truly sustained treatment of how Christians use blood to think with. Eugene F. Rogers Jr. discusses in his much-anticipated new book the sheer, surprising strangeness of Christian blood-talk, exploring the many and varied ways in which it offers a language where Christians cooperate, sacrifice, grow and disagree. He asks too how it is that blood-talk dominates when other explanations would do, (...)
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  5.  26
    Supplementing Barth on Jews and Gender: Identifying God by Anagogy and the Spirit.Eugene F. Rogers - 1998 - Modern Theology 14 (1):43-81.
    Karl Barth leaves room by his own principles for further, even different thinking about Jews and gender than he records in the Dogmatics. Now that Marquardt, Klappert, Sonderegger, Soulen, and others have offered sympathetic critiques from a generally Barthian point of view, and Eberhard Busch has exhaustively laid to rest any biographical questions of Barth’s relation to the Jewish people in his 1996 book, Unter dem Bogen des einen Bundes: Karl Barth und die Juden 1933–1945, the way lies open to (...)
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  6.  18
    Thomas and Barth in convergence on Romans 1?Eugene F. Rogers - 1996 - Modern Theology 12 (1):57-84.
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  7.  33
    The Kindness of God: Metaphor, Gender, and Religious Language – By Janet Martin Soskice.Eugene F. Rogers - 2009 - Modern Theology 25 (3):519-521.
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  8.  31
    The Mystery of the Spirit in Three Traditions: Calvin, Rahner, Florensky Or, You Keep Wondering Where the Spirit Went.Eugene F. Rogers - 2003 - Modern Theology 19 (2):243-260.
    Nineteenth‐ and twentieth‐century North Atlantic theology has seen a succession of Trinitarian revivals. Some observers take as an index of a theologian's success whether he or she has much interesting to say about the Holy Spirit, and some, including Robert Jenson, have also noted a tendency to announce the Spirit and talk about the Son. While Rogers shares that concern, he qualifies the characterization to note that authors in three traditions sometimes admit the charge and demur, claiming that is how (...)
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