• Christian Platonism and natural science
    In Alexander J. B. Hampton & John Peter Kenney (eds.), Christian Platonism: A History, Cambridge University Press. 2020.
  •  30
    Exploring the meeting of mystical and philosophical theology, Partakers of the Divine shows that Christian philosophical and contemplative practices arose together and that throughout much of Christian history, philosophy, theology and contemplation remained internal to one another. In this compelling volume, Jacob Holsinger Sherman demonstrates that the relation of philosophy, theology and contemplation to one another provides theologians and philosophers of religion today with a way forward be…Read more
  •  36
    No Title available: Book reviews (review)
    Religious Studies 46 (3): 415-420. 2010.
  •  104
    Postscript: a new ritual turn?
    International Journal of Philosophy and Theology 79 (3): 341-347. 2018.
    ABSTRACTAs a postscript to this special issue, the author offers a set of concluding thoughts about the prospect of a new ritual turn within philosophy and theology and the relationship of this contemporary development to the previous ‘ritual turn’ of the early twentieth century. Where early twentieth-century scholars tended to treat ritual as repetitive symbolic behavior, and thus as something that needed to be decoded in order to be understood, the author suggests that a contemporary ritual tu…Read more
  •  82
    The Participatory Turn: Spirituality, Mysticism, Religious Studies (edited book)
    with Jorge N. Ferrer
    State University of New York Press. 2008.
    The contributors to this volume argue that we can, and they offer a new way: the "participatory turn," which proposes that individuals and communities have an ...
  • The Participatory Turn: Spirituality, Mysticism
    with Jorge N. Ferrer
    Religious Studies. forthcoming.
  • A genealogy of participation
    In Jorge N. Ferrer & Jacob H. Sherman (eds.), The Participatory Turn: Spirituality, Mysticism, Religious Studies, State University of New York Press. 2008.
  •  69
    René Girard is something of a Janus for philosophers and theologians interested in the question of sacrifice. On the one hand, few thinkers in any century have made such a compelling case for the importance and centrality of sacrifice within all human culture. On the other hand, Girard has steadfastly insisted that sacrifice be understood in exclusively anthropological terms thus foreclosing the metaphysical and theological questions that prima facie seem to attend any robust consideration of sa…Read more