KLC offers two in-house routes to publication via our open-access journals: Ethics in Conversation, which is aimed at a popular audience and has been in continual publication since 1996, and Nuances, which is published occasionally and is aimed at an academic audience. KLC additionally ran two seasons of a podcast, though there are currently no plans to do a third.
Ethics in Conversation offers book reviews and succinct, insightful Christian perspectives on a range of contemporary public-theological and ethical issues.
Nuances in Public Theology is an occasional journal, usually developed in connection to a significant gathering or academic workshop.
On this page, you can find episodes of our Christianity for the Everyday podcast. Note that our podcast is not producing new episodes until further notice.
Ethics in Conversation (EiC) offers succinct, insightful Christian perspectives on a range of contemporary ethical issues, as well as book reviews and conversations with authors or practitioners. You can find the most recent articles below, or click the button to visit the archive, where we have three decades’ worth of back issues.
by Bruce R. Ashford
29.2 Biblical Critical Theory – by Bruce R. Ashford
29.1 The Art of Living in Season – Julie Canlis
28.7 Power and a Powerless Church: A Reflection Essay on Not So With You: Power and Leadership for the Church – Michael Wagenman
28.6 Haitians in Springfield: Holding on to a fragile hope – Karen J. Harding
28.5 The Imperative to “Make America Great Again”: A Brief History – J. David Stark
28.4 Get Out and Vote: The 30th Anniversary of South Africa’s Democracy – Craig G. Bartholomew
28.3 Old Testament Wisdom and Politics – Craig G. Bartholomew
28.2 Book Review: The Servant Lawyer by Robert F. Cochran, Jr. – David McIlroy
28.1 Book Review: 1 Corinthians (Brazos Theological Commentary on the Bible series) by Kimlyn J. Bender – William Olhausen
KLC believes that a distinctive of good scholarship is that it attends to the nuances of life and our world. This is our aim with this series, and thus it is called Nuances in Public Theology.