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      • The Princeton Theological Review is a student-run academic journal that serves both the Princeton Theological Seminary student body and the theological community at large. It promotes a free and open exchange of ideas in order to challenge, inform, and equip its audience to become more effective and faithful witnesses to the Lord Jesus Christ.
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  1. Nov 4, 2019 · The Princeton Theological Review is a student-run academic journal that serves both the Princeton Theological Seminary student body and the theological community at large. It promotes a free and open exchange of ideas in order to challenge, inform, and equip its audience to become more effective and faithful witnesses to the Lord Jesus Christ.

    • Archive

      Book Reviews. Matthew V. Novenson, The Grammar of...

    • About

      The Princeton Theological Review is a student-run academic...

    • Awaiting The King

      Pastor-ethnographers, by taking liturgical audits, help...

    • Book Reviews

      Reading Nahum-Malachi: A Literary and Theological...

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  3. The Princeton Theological Review is an annual academic journal published by students of Princeton Theological Seminary. It was first published with the title Biblical Repertory in 1825 by the Princeton Seminary graduate and professor, Charles Hodge.

    • Theology
    • Contacting The Editors
    • Subscription Inquiries
    • Reprinting from The Princeton Theological Review
    • Editors

    Your responses to the materials published in the Princeton Theological Review are a critical part of the journal’s success. We welcome and appreciate your ideas. Please send all correspondence to ptr@ptsem.edu or Princeton Theological Review, P.O. Box 821, Princeton, NJ 08542.

    We are not currently accepting subscriptions, but if you or your institution would like a hard copy of our journal, please contact us at ptr@ptsem.edu. All of our articles and book reviews area also available on the Read page.

    If you want to photocopy material from the Princeton Theological Review, please follow these guidelines: For personal use or use in congregations or classrooms, we grant permission for fifty copies to be made, provided the copies are distributed at no charge and you include the following information: “Copyright (year) (author). Reprinted from Princ...

    Leadership

    Executive Editor: Heidi Biermann, Princeton Theological Seminary Executive Editor: Katherine Ellis, Princeton Theological Seminary Executive Editor: Patrick Haley, Princeton Theological Seminary Administrative Editor: Bailey Simpson, Princeton Theological Seminary Managing Editor: Madeline Gold, Princeton Theological Seminary Production Editor: Olivia Patterson, Princeton Theological Seminary

    Associate Editors

    Holly Bailey, Princeton Theological Seminary Michelle Bostic, Princeton Theological Seminary Brooke Caton, Princeton Theological Seminary Micah Cronin, Princeton Theological Seminary Stephen DiTrolio, Princeton Theological Seminary Rachel Douglass, Princeton Theological Seminary Laura Ellis, Boston University Naomi Ketchens, Princeton Theological Seminary Garrett Lane, Princeton Theological Seminary Jennifer Lewis, Boston University Daniel May, Princeton Theological Seminary Davis Meadors, Un...

  4. Princeton Theological Review is a student-run, annual and online journal that exists to serve students within the Princeton Theological Seminary body as well as the wider theological community. It is distributed to well over 100 libraries worldwide.

  5. The Princeton Theological Seminary Journals collection contains periodicals published by, or closely associated with, Princeton Theological Seminary from 1825 to the present. Browse the collection or search within this collection using the search box at the top of this page.

  6. Book Reviews. Matthew V. Novenson, The Grammar of Messianism: An Ancient Jewish Political Idiom and Its Users. Nathan C. Johnson. Eric Barreto, ed. Thinking Theologically and Writing Theologically. Melissa A. Martin. Jeremy Morris, ed. Oxford History of Anglicanism, Volume IV: Global Western Anglicanism. Matt Rucker.

  7. The Princeton Theological Review began publication in 1903, supported by a subsidy provided by the Board of Trustees of Princeton Theological Seminary. The journal ended in 1929 with its twenty-seventh volume, when the Seminary’s Trustees, acting under financial constraint, terminated this subsidy. In scope and content, the journal’s ...

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