Contributor
E.J. Hutchinson is Associate Professor of Classics at Hillsdale College, where he also directs the Collegiate Scholars Program. He is the editor and translator of Niels Hemmingsen’s On the Law of Nature: A Demonstrative Method.
Filed under
E.J. Hutchinson is Associate Professor of Classics at Hillsdale College, where he also directs the Collegiate Scholars Program. He is the editor and translator of Niels Hemmingsen’s On the Law of Nature: A Demonstrative Method.
E. J. HutchinsonPoetry
A poetic reflection on Paul's discourse on love
E. J. HutchinsonMusicTheologyChurch
Here you can read in English for the first time a translation of a hymn of St Ambrose's that was much loved by both St Augustine and Martin Luther.
E. J. HutchinsonPoetry
“Every Christian is, of course, both Pilate and Caiaphas.” ~ W.H. Auden
E. J. HutchinsonPoetry
Brief wisdom on how to work by the 17th century Danish poet Henrik Harder
E. J. HutchinsonPoetryJournal 6Journal
a translation of Claudian's poem 'De Salvatore', a poem that has not previously been translated into English
E. J. HutchinsonCurrent EventsPoetry
A poetic warning about presuming to know the mind of God
E. J. HutchinsonTheologySociety
That ours is an age of despair is plain. Martin Luther and Philip Melanchthon can help us understand why.
E. J. HutchinsonFeatured
For the church in the West, July 2nd has traditionally marked the church’s remembrance of the Visitation of Mary to her cousin Elizabeth. Both were with child under fearful and threatening circumstances. And in Elizabeth’s womb John the Baptist leaped […]
E. J. HutchinsonFeaturedCurrent Politicshealth
We must do our work. We must do it in unfavorable conditions. We must do it before the specter of Death’s hooked and gnarled finger.
E. J. HutchinsonFeatured
There are no extra points for thanking God for the salvation offered to us in Christ in meter; but there is extra pleasure.
E. J. HutchinsonFeatured
Keats's reflection on translation and Homer is a helpful meditation that helps us understand what translation can—and can't—do.
E. J. HutchinsonFeaturedHistory
Debates over Shakespeare's personal faith are pointless. But it is worth noting that he grew up and worked in a deeply Protestant world.