Maxine Hancock is Professor Emerita of Interdisciplinary Studies and Spiritual Theology at Regent College. Among her books are several on family relationships, including Living on Less and Liking in More, Re-evaluating Your Commitments and Creative, Confident, Children, as well as a study on John Bunyan in A Key in the Window: Marginal Notes in Bunyan's Narratives. She received the Word Guild's Leslie K. Tarr Award in 1990 for her contribution to Christian writing in Canada, and the Leading Women's Award in Communications and Media in 2004 for her leadership in communicating the Christian faith in Canada.
Literacy, Literature & the Christian Faith (CTC II Winter 2006)
Speaker(s): Maxine Hancock
Date: Winter 2006
Length: 1:19:59
Product ID: RGDL3605J
Purchase Options:
MP3 Download - $5.00 |
Description
This is a single lecture from the Christian Thought & Culture I course which is intended to provide a historical, theological and cultural complement to Old Testament and New Testament Foundations. The aim is to provide students with the opportunity, within an historical framework, to reflect upon Christian faith and character and upon Christianity and culture. By the end of the course the student should grasp something of the comprehensiveness of our life in Christ as displayed in the Christian tradition.
See All Audio by Maxine Hancock

Related Audio
"Lookit the Train!": A Two-Person Drama Solving Some of Life's Theological Challenges
Speaker: Jeff Barker, Karen Barker
CONTEMPORARY POETRY AND THE COMPLEXITIES OF HUMAN EXPERIENCE
Speaker: Chad Wriglesworth
Costly Grace & Severe Mercy: Theological Resonance in Louise Penny's "Three Pines" Mystery Novels
Speaker: Maxine Hancock
God in the Painted Caves: Prehistoric Art & the Quest for Meaning
Speaker: Iwan Russell-Jones
How Then Shall We Live?
Speaker: Loren Wilkinson, Mariam Kamell, Paul Williams, … (see details for all)
Imagining Our Neighbours As Ourselves: The Arts, Empathy, and The Christian Imagination
Speaker: Mary McCampbell
La Sagrada Familia, El Mundo Sagrado: The Wild Christian Architecture of Antoni Gaudi
Speaker: John Stackhouse
Lunchtime Lecture: On Martin Luther's hymn A Mighty Fortress is Our God
Speaker: Evan Kreider
Lunchtime Lecture: Thinking about History and Beauty in a Post-Secular World: Some Potential Intersections between the Digital Humanities and Theology
Speaker: John Bonnett
Lunchtime Lecture: This is the Way the World Ends: The Apocalypse in Contemporary Film, Fiction & Television
Speaker: Mary McCampbell
Nailin' It to the Church: Religious Satire and the Gospel According to: The WittenburgDoor
Speaker: Murray Stiller
Poetry and the Word: Roundtable Discussion
Speaker: Lynn Cohick, Malcolm Guite, Phil Long