Worth reading, part VI

Wednesday, January 13, 2010


I want to conclude this series of blog posts by recommending one more periodical in the Wesleyan/Methodist world. It is the Asbury Journal, which is the official publication of Asbury Theological Seminary.

The Asbury Journal is a biannual publication, which means it comes out two times per year (in April and October). Like some of the other academic periodicals I've recommended, the Asbury Journal is a peer-reviewed publication. That means all its articles have been read, critiqued, and approved by scholars. And that, in turn, means that it is going to offer solid content on topics in the Wesleyan and Methodist tradition. That's good news for you, the prospective reader!

Here's the description of the AJ offered on the journal's title page: "The Asbury Journal publishes scholarly essays and book reviews written from a Wesleyan perspective. The Journal's authors and audience reflect the global reality of the Christian church, the holistic nature of Wesleyan thought, and the importance of both theory and practice in addressing the current issues of the day. Authors include Wesleyan scholars, scholars of Wesleyaniusm/Methodism, and scholars writing on issues of theological and theological education importance."

My sense of reading articles from the AJ is that they are often aimed at the point of intersection between theory and practice. The above description mentions that emphasis, and what it means is that articles will often look at some aspect of Wesleyan theology or Methodist history with an eye to how it can inform current ecclesial practice. So in that sense, the AJ's articles have relevance for both the professor and the pastor, the seminary student and the church member.

The AJ is the successor journal to both the Asbury Seminarian and the Asbury Theological Journal. The latter title, in particular, was on the masthead until just a few years ago. So don't let that confuse you. From what I can see, the Asbury Journal is essentially the same publication and I imagine taking the word "theological" out of the title was simply to encourage the submission of articles beyond the realm of theology & doctrine (e.g., in history, various areas of practical theology, etc.).

I'll admit that the Asbury Journal is the one publication I've recommended in this blog series to which I do not personally subscribe. But that's mainly because the Duke Divinity School library subscribes to the AJ, and I can have access to its most recent issue anytime I like. It's an important periodical for our tradition, and I highly recommend it.

The subscription price for individuals is $20 per year, and you can find information for ordering a subscription at this link. So take advantage of it - then read, and enjoy!

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Worth reading, part V

Monday, January 11, 2010


Another great periodical I want to highlight for reading in the Wesleyan & Methodist tradition is the publication of the Wesleyan Theological Society, an organization that I wrote about last year after attending its annual meeting in Anderson, Indiana.

The quarterly journal of the WTS is called the Wesleyan Theological Journal. Probably more than any periodical I've posted about in the past few days, The Wesleyan Theological Journal (or WTJ) represents a wide spectrum of folks who consider themselves Wesleyan.

What I mean by that is that its contributors and readers aren't just Methodists. In fact, probably the majority of them come from the Holiness tradition - a branch of Wesleyanism that includes the Church of the Nazarene, the Wesleyan Church, the Free Methodist Church, the Church of God (Anderson, IN), and the Salvation Army, among others.

There are quite a few United Methodists who are involved in the work of the WTJ as either contributors or subscribers as well (I'm one of them!). But it is also very refreshing to read the work being done by Wesleyan Christians in other denominational bodies (just like it is refreshing to interact with them at the annual WTS meeting in March).

The content of the Wesleyan Theological Journal is diverse. Its articles cover a great range of topics - across the sub-disciplines of systematic theology & doctrine, historical theology, ethics, practical theology, and even occasionally biblical hermeneutics. The unifying aspect of the journal is that all its articles supposedly connect with the Wesleyan tradition in some way (and that's largely true).

As with periodicals such as Methodist Review and Methodist History, the WTJ is essential reading for any serious student of the Wesleyan theology and/or Methodist doctrine. And just like the way that joining the Historical Society of the UMC will get you an Methodist History subscription, joining the Wesleyan Theological Society will get you a subscription to the WTJ. Plus, there's a discount for current students.

The Wesleyan tradition is rich with resources for theological reflection, as well as example and guidance for practical ministry. By 'joining in the conversation' through engaging with journals like the WTJ, we can both invigorate and extend that tradition.

So read ... and enjoy!

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Worth reading, part IV

Saturday, January 09, 2010



My last two posts featured periodicals in the Wesleyan & Methodist tradition that fall by and large on the scholarly or academic side. Today I want to highlight a more popular-level publication. The United Methodist Reporter, in my opinion, is the best news source available for current events and commentary related to the life of the United Methodist Church.

Okay, okay, first a disclosure. I am a columnist for the Reporter, where my articles appear bi-weekly. I did take a sabbatical from writing over much of the fall, but my columns will return to the pages of the Reporter later this month. Then again, the only reason I write for the Reporter is because I think it's a great publication!

The Reporter is both a traditional newspaper and an online news site. The newspaper is used by many annual conferences as its printed source of conference news. UMR Communications - the parent company - partners with annual conferences to tailor their own editions. So for instance, you might see the Memphis Conference Reporter if you live in that annual conference, featuring local news combined with stories related to the larger Methodist connection.

What this basically offers the Church is a journalistic organization dedicated to covering and reporting on the United Methodist connection, but one that is also independent and thus able to maintain the objectivity that comes along with being its own entity.

Along with news reporting, you'll find a great deal of special features in the pages of the Reporter. Each issue usually highlights a cutting edge ministry or important initiative going on somewhere in the Church. In the opinion section, I write an op/ed column, alongside other regular columnists like Don Haynes and Bishop Woodie White. You'll also see a lot of special contributors writing commentaries on various topics. And there are regular features on film, Christian music, and hymnody.

If your annual conference uses the Reporter and you'd like to subscribe, go through your conference office. If you want to subscribe to the national edition (this is the type of subscription I have, for instance), then go to this link.

As with my previous posts, I would urge you to think about a print subscription to support the ministry periodicals like the Reporter are carrying on. Even if you prefer to read stories online (which you can through the UM Portal, the Reporter's online presence), getting the print edition is a way to further the work of an important ministry that helps keep the connection, connected!

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Worth reading, part III

Thursday, January 07, 2010


The next periodical I'd like to highlight is a print-based journal entitled Methodist History. This journal - which I'll abbreviate as MH - is the official historical journal of the United Methodist Church and is published by the General Commission on Archives and History. As such, it is an important publication for articles covering the historical interpretation of Methodism.

I've been a subscriber of MH for several years, and I've always been impressed at the breadth of its subject matter. It's common to see articles in a given year that look at aspects of the life of John Wesley, the history of 18th-century Methodism in England, the development of Methodism in America in the 19th century, and any number of biographical studies of Methodist figures both well-known and obscure from the past 250 years.

MH is printed four times per year and has a discount rate for current students.

I'd highly encourage subscribing to MH for those who care about the history of Methodism and want to learn more about it. Like Methodist Review - which I surveyed in my last post - Methodist History is a peer-reviewed journal. But because it is an academic journal published by the church, MH also tries, to a significant extent, to publish articles that are relevant to more than just a narrow slice of academic historians.

MH is solely print-based, so subscribing will get four bound issues per year delivered to your mailbox. But while you're at it, I'd actually recommend joining the Historical Society of the United Methodist Church. A Historical Society membership is only $30 per year ($20 for students) and it gets you an MH subscription plus other benefits. (You can find out more information here.) I think that our participation in such organizations (and their publications) is key to the continued vitality of the Wesleyan tradition.

So sign up, read, and enjoy!

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Worth reading, part II

Tuesday, January 05, 2010



Earlier this week I explained that I am going to spend the next few posts looking at a number of great resources - both in print and online - that specialize in the Wesleyan tradition and contemporary Methodism.

I want to point first to an interesting new online journal by the name of Methodist Review. I highlighted MR back in August in this post. MR is the successor to Quarterly Review, which was published for about 25 years by the General Board of Higher Education and Ministry of the UMC as a journal of theological resources for ministry.

Basically, that meant that its articles tried to bridge the gap between the academy and the church. Its authors included scholars as well as pastors and laity within the church. And its articles represented a wide variety of topics in theology and ministry. By the way, the entire QR archive is available for free online at this link.

I'm excited about Methodist Review for a number of reasons. First, it fills a need that was created by the demise of QR after it ceased publication five years ago. We need a journal that is committed to publishing broadly in the area of Wesleyan and Methodist Studies, particularly around issues of practical theology and ministry that find purchase in both academy and church.

Second, MR is free! All that is required is a quick and easy online registration. After that, subscribers have access to all of MR's content, which can be read from your computer or printed out in pdf format.

Third, MR is a "peer-reviewed" journal, which means that submissions are read and judged in a blind review process to determine suitability and fitness for publication. So while MR, as a journal, wants to fit a niche not occupied by most scholarly journals, it is committed to maintaining a high level of quality in the articles it accepts because of the peer-review process. That also means it can serve as an outlet for publication for those of us who write essay-length works in Wesleyan theology or Methodist history - both because it helps to distribute our ideas to an audience and because it can help in securing teaching positions and tenure status.

Fourth and finally, as an online journal, MR is at the front end of a trend in academic publishing in general, which is moving away from expensive print formats and going to online publishing. Some people see that as lamentable, and it may well be. But academic journals are expensive to print and have to rely on notoriously small subscriber bases. So going online is really about developing a model that is sustainable for the future. In that sense, MR is helping to give shape in an area of academic publishing that, no doubt, many other journals will be moving into in the coming years.

One reason I started with Methodist Review in this blog series is that I think it could be of significant interest to a wide variety of committed Wesleyan Christians. Look, for instance, at the table of contents for Volume 1, which was published last year. The articles range from a consideration of the nature of Wesleyan theology, to a retrospective look at the UMC's first 40 years, to an analysis of certain aspects of John Wesley's thought.

Those are all topics with relevance both to academic theological reflection and grounded Christian practice!

And as an added bonus related to MR's online format, I was glad to find out that it is not limited either in page length or publishing date. That means it can feature articles both longer and shorter than that which would be standard in a print-based journal. And articles can also be added to a given volume throughout the year by simply continuing with sequential pagination. Those two innovations, in and of themselves, show immediate benefits to having a specifically online journal in the world of Wesleyan theology and Methodist history.

So read and enjoy!

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Worth reading, part I

Sunday, January 03, 2010


I'd like to spend a few posts pointing my readers to excellent resources for reading in the Wesleyan & Methodist tradition. Here's why:

-- While there are a lot of good Methodist-related blogs these days (see Shane Raynor's Wesley Report for a regular rundown of solid content), it's important to read deeper than what you can get in a blog post. Christians identify with a particular tradition because of the understanding that it offers of the Christian faith. The Wesleyan tradition, I believe, offers a compelling account of certain key parts of the Christian life: the doctrine of salvation; the understanding of grace; the nature and work of the Holy Spirit; the evangelistic calling of Christian ministry; the nature of sanctification; and the importance of participation in the means of grace. Learning to grow as a disciple of Jesus Christ within such a tradition means immersing oneself in that tradition's resources.

-- I often get requests about where to go to find information on this or that topic. While you can and should look for guidance on specific topics when they arise, I think a better way to come to a mature understanding of Wesleyan theology and Methodist history is to read regularly out of the best resources available. That will often come through new books that are written by pastors and theologians in the Wesleyan tradition. But it can also come through regularly engaging top periodicals and journals.

-- There are good resources available to us on both an academic and popular level - and I'll be recommending resources from both categories. Increasingly, these resources are available in both print and online editions. I have no doubt that most (if not all) will eventually be available primarily in online formats. The cost of printing and distribution is simply so high that it is driving print-based publications out of business. (And the move for academic journals, which have very small circulations, to go online has already started.) But the problem is that nobody has figured out how to make money with web-based publishing yet - and after all, making money is essential if a publication is going to survive. So in the resources I am going to recommend, I'm going to advocate not just free online reading, but actual subscriptions. That may sound a bit controversial, but I think it's important. If we want these publications to keep on going, we need to support them as they continue to evolve and develop publishing models that are sustainable for the future. For the sake of full disclosure, I'll let you know the ones for which I have subscriptions myself.

-- Many of us see the potential for revival of the Wesleyan tradition these days. In fact, in some ways a revival has been going on since the development of modern critical Wesley Studies in the 1960s. But for that revival to have a wide impact, it needs to be engaged by a breadth of interested laity, committed pastors, and dedicated scholars. So I'm going to be an advocate for that, here and in the posts to come.

Questions? Comments? I hope you'll stay tuned.

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