•  27
    Social Justice and Liturgical Practice
    Praxis: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Faith and Justice 3 33-55. 2020.
    In North America, across the political spectrum, we have a strong tendency to reduce religion to nothing more than a tool to promote our own socio-political views. This is a natural consequence of our hyper-polarized culture and our impoverished view of “religion.” It is also, however, a problem—particularly for those inspired by the call to renewal through an integration of the quest for social justice and the pursuit of the spiritual life. By focusing on the value of participating in religious…Read more
  •  125
    Materiality and the Sacred in Anatheism
    In Richard Kearney & Matthew Clemente (eds.), The Art of Anatheism, Rowman & Littlefield. pp. 211-220. 2017.
  • From Up in the Air to the Roots of Pandora’s Tree of Souls
    Cinema: Journal of Philosophy and the Moving Image 4 (2013): 28-43. 2013.
  •  83
    Religion, Metaphysics, and the Postmodern (review)
    Teaching Philosophy 34 (2): 166-170. 2011.
  •  163
    Conviction, Self-renunciation, and Passion in Teresa and Derrida
    In Luís António Umbelino & Andrzej Wiercinski (eds.), Conviction: Finitude, Freedom, and the Hermeneutics of Selfhood, Brill. pp. 147-168. 2025.
  •  60
    ABSTRACT In The Concept of Anxiety, Kierkegaard makes a powerful phenomenological distinction between fear and anxiety; one fears this or that thing, but one is anxious of “nothing.” Kierkegaard understands this terror before the nothing as a revelation of freedom. This is correct but incomplete. Anxiety does, indeed, transcend fear of this or that possibility to encounter possibility itself. But it also transcends guilt about this or that sin, to encounter sinfulness itself, or the general brok…Read more
  •  59
    Ligatio ex Nihilo: Original Sin and the Hope for Redemption
    International Philosophical Quarterly 55 (1): 85-100. 2015.
    In pointing out the strange phenomenological structure of anxiety, Kierkegaard re-opens the door to reflection on “nothingness.” This tradition has been fruitful, but it has remained wedded to interpreting this nothingness in light of the distinction between anxiety and fear. Thus, anxiety is understood exclusively as the transcendence of this or that possibility towards an encounter with the freedom of possibility itself. Kierkegaard’s original formulation, however, states that anxiety is “alto…Read more