Liturgy is a quarterly resource for studying, preparing, and celebrating Christian worship. It offers practical help and reflections for educators, musicians, pastoral ministers, and parish liturgy committee members as well as professors and seminarians. With each issue focusing on a different theme, Liturgy is prepared by a broad range of pastors, leaders, scholars, and writers who worship in faith.Recent themes includeWorship with Justice (Volume 17, Issue 1) Assembly Song (Volume 17, Issue 2) From Ashes to Fire (Volume 17, Issue 3) Heritage Meets Hope (Volume 17, Issue 4) No Peace in Bethlehem (Volume 18, Issue 1) The Future of Denominational Liturgical Resources (Volume 18, Number 4) Children in Worship (Volume 19, Number 1) Fortieth Anniversary of the Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy (Volume 19, Number 2) The Liturgy's Texts (Volume 19, Number 3) Worship Wars (Volume 19, Number 4) Public Worship and Civic Religion (Volume 20, Number 1)To subscribe to Liturgy or to request a free sample copy, please contactJournals Customer Service Taylor & Francis325 Chestnut Street, Suite 800Philadelphia, PA 19106Tel: (215) 625-8900, x216 or Toll Free in the U.S. (800) 354-1420, x216Fax: (215) 625-8914Email: customerservice@taylorandfrancis.comPeer Review Policy:All essays in this journal have been solicited for this publication and reviewed by the editors.Publication office: Taylor & Francis, Inc., 325 Chestnut Street, Suite 800, Philadelphia, PA 19106.
A Journal of Catholic Thought and Culture is an interdisciplinary quarterly committed to exploring the beauty, truth, and vitality of Christianity, particularly as it is rooted in and shaped by Catholicism. We seek a readership that extends beyond the academy, and publish articles on literature, philosophy, theology, history, the natural and social sciences, art, music, public policy, and the professions. Logos is published under the auspices of the Center for Catholic Studies at the University of St. Thomas, St. Paul, Minnesota.
Medieval Encounters promotes discussion and dialogue across cultural, linguistic and disciplinary boundaries on the interactions of Jewish, Christian and Muslim cultures during the period from the fourth through to the sixteenth century C.E.
Method & Theory in the Study of Religion (MTSR) publishes articles, notes, book reviews and letters which explicitly address the problems of methodology and theory in the academic study of religion. This includes such traditional points of departure as history, philosophy, anthropology, psychology, and sociology, but also the natural sciences, and such other approaches as feminist theory, discourse analysis, and ideology critique. Method & Theory in the Study of Religion also concentrates on the critical analysis of the history of the study of religion itself.
We are entering a new and exciting era of microbiological study and application. Recent advances in the now established disciplines of genomics, proteomics, and bioinformatics, together with extensive cooperation between academic and industrial concerns, have brought about an integration of basic and applied microbiology as never before. Microbial Physiology aims to reflect this development by publishing original research papers from all areas of microbiology and biotechnology. It also features written symposia on selected topics, timely reviews, and mini-reviews. Theoretical approaches and descriptions of novel, microbiologically relevant software are also considered. Contributions and ideas from large segments of the scientific community are welcome to make Microbial Physiology a viable, much needed, and up-and-coming forum for current basic and applied microbiological research.
The aim of Mission Studies is to better enable the International Association for Mission Studies to expand its services as a forum for the scholarly study of biblical, theological, historical and practical questions related to mission.