This guide was created to address topics related to SPU's 2017 Day of Common Learning and is no longer being updated.
It remains up for the informative essay on the history of the phrase Semper reformanda primarily.
Martin Luther in the Age of Print
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The French Book: Religion, Absolutism, and Readership, 1585-1715
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Poets, Patrons, and Printers: Crisis of Authority in Late Medieval France
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Pedagogy, Printing, and Protestantism
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"The Myth of the Electronic Church: Evangelical Appropriations of the Technological Sublime"
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"Either/Or?: A Response to Joseph A Kim"
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American Evangelicals and the Mass Media
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(Always to be reformed according to the Word of God with the aid of the divine machine)
"auxilio machinae divinae" is an allusion to the book by Eisenstein, below.
Digital Wisdom: Conversations at the Intersection of Technology, Theology, and Culture
Theologians and Philosophers Using Social Media
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"Faith in the Visual Age: Can You See God?"
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Growing Down: Theology and Human Nature in the Virtual Age
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"The Gospel of Creation and the Technocratic Paradigm: Reflections on a Central Teaching of Laudato Si'"
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"Homo Faber and/or Homo Adorans: On the Place of Human Making in a Sacramental Cosmos"
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"The Meaning of the Human in a Technological Age: Homo Faber, Homo Sapiens, Homo amans"
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Theology and Technology: Essays in Christian Analysis and Exegesis
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