Skip to main content

Research Repository

Advanced Search

All Outputs (30)

Space matters (2018)
Journal Article
O 'Loughlin, T. (in press). Space matters. Anaphora,

Facing a liturgy-starved church: do we need to think afresh about the basics of ministry? (2018)
Journal Article
O'Loughlin, T. (2019). Facing a liturgy-starved church: do we need to think afresh about the basics of ministry?. New Blackfriars, 100(1086), 171-183. https://doi.org/10.1111/nbfr.12441

The Catholic Church cannot, at present, find sufficient clergy to staff its parishes and this is provoking a massive pastoral, and so a liturgical, reorganization. However, these changes are not primarily driven by the demography of the actual church... Read More about Facing a liturgy-starved church: do we need to think afresh about the basics of ministry?.

“Historical-Critical Ministry? The Biblical Studies Classroom as Restorative Secular Space” (2018)
Journal Article
Parks, S. (2019). “Historical-Critical Ministry? The Biblical Studies Classroom as Restorative Secular Space”. New Blackfriars, 100(1086), 229-244. https://doi.org/10.1111/nbfr.12446

This article revisits the past decades of scholarly use (or rather non-use) of Bernadette Brooten’s _Women Leaders in the Ancient Synagogue_ to reveal that citation practices in biblical studies—or any field—can be inherently political (e.g. mis... Read More about “Historical-Critical Ministry? The Biblical Studies Classroom as Restorative Secular Space”.

God & the Gothic: Religion, Romance, & Reality in the English Literary Tradition (2018)
Book
Milbank, A. (2018). God & the Gothic: Religion, Romance, & Reality in the English Literary Tradition. Oxford University Press (OUP). https://doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198824466.001.0001

God and the Gothic undertakes a complete reimagining of the Gothic literary canon to examine its engagement with theological ideas, tracing its origins to the apocalyptic critique of the Reformation female martyrs, and to the Dissolution of the Monas... Read More about God & the Gothic: Religion, Romance, & Reality in the English Literary Tradition.

Joyful liturgies?: why? (2018)
Journal Article
Thomas, O. (2018). Joyful liturgies?: why?. Liturgy (Liturgy Centre, Catholic Diocese of Auckland), 43(3), 13-18

For a biblical regeneration of our Eucharistic practice (2018)
Journal Article
O'Loughlin, T. (2018). For a biblical regeneration of our Eucharistic practice. The Japan Mission Journal, 72(2),

The church is semper reformanda: always in need of regeneration and renewal, not only of its ideas, but more importantly of its practices in order that it can become more fully what it is called to be: the voice and active presence of the Christ in t... Read More about For a biblical regeneration of our Eucharistic practice.

Reading “House of Jacob” in Isaiah 48:1–11 in Light of Benjamin (2018)
Journal Article
Quine, C. (2018). Reading “House of Jacob” in Isaiah 48:1–11 in Light of Benjamin. Journal of Biblical Literature, 137(2), 339-357. https://doi.org/10.15699/jbl.1372.2018.292881

Isaiah 48:1-11 has been described as a difficult passage due to a perceived discord between its harsh tone and the message of comfort espoused elsewhere in Isaiah 40-55. This paper analyses this passage with regard to four groups of arguments, namely... Read More about Reading “House of Jacob” in Isaiah 48:1–11 in Light of Benjamin.

One or two cups? The text of Luke 22:17–20 again (2018)
Book Chapter
O'Loughlin, T. (2018). One or two cups? The text of Luke 22:17–20 again. In Liturgy and the living text of the New Testament: papers from the tenth Birmingham colloquium on the textual criticism of the New Testament (47-64). Gorgias Press

Reading Micaiah’s heavenly vision (1 Kgs 22:19–23) and 1 Kings 22 as interpretive keys (2018)
Journal Article
Quine, C. (2018). Reading Micaiah’s heavenly vision (1 Kgs 22:19–23) and 1 Kings 22 as interpretive keys. Zeitschrift für die Alttestamentliche Wissenschaft, 130(2), https://doi.org/10.1515/zaw-2018-2006

This paper argues that Micaiah’s heavenly vision (1Kgs 22:19–23) and 1Kgs 22 as a whole function as interpretive keys which explain subsequent material to the reader. Micaiah’s heavenly vision explains that the following Aramean victory and the death... Read More about Reading Micaiah’s heavenly vision (1 Kgs 22:19–23) and 1 Kings 22 as interpretive keys.