Contributor
Nadya Williams is the Managing Editor at Mere Orthodoxy. She holds a PhD in Classics from Princeton University and is the author of Cultural Christians in the Early Church; Mothers, Children, and the Body Politic: Ancient Christianity and the Recovery of Human Dignity; and Christians Reading Classics (forthcoming Zondervan Academic, 2025). She and her husband Dan joyfully live and homeschool in Ashland, Ohio.
Filed under
Nadya Williams is the Managing Editor at Mere Orthodoxy. She holds a PhD in Classics from Princeton University and is the author of Cultural Christians in the Early Church; Mothers, Children, and the Body Politic: Ancient Christianity and the Recovery of Human Dignity; and Christians Reading Classics (forthcoming Zondervan Academic, 2025). She and her husband Dan joyfully live and homeschool in Ashland, Ohio.
Nadya WilliamsFamilyBook Reviews
Cam Shaffer's new book is a vital and sobering reminder of the fact that for Christian children faith is often caught more than it is taught.
Nadya WilliamsFamily
We continue our interview series on family and the intellectual life with a conversation with John and Katelyn Shelton.
Nadya WilliamsFamily
We were made to seek wisdom together. Books keep alive that wisdom for generations. We’re called to keep the flame alive, and become flame ourselves.
Nadya WilliamsBook Reviews
Beeson Divinity School professor Frank Thielman discusses his new book on St Paul, which is a kind of theological biography of the apostle.
Nadya WilliamsBook Reviews
A recent award-winning novel tells the story of two modern-day desert saints.
Nadya WilliamsBook Reviews
A recent award-winning novel tells the story of two modern-day desert saints.
Nadya WilliamsChurchBook ReviewsFormation
The new edition of Plough's Lent and Easter reader features 96 texts that will help us remember the strange anticipation and hope of the Christian faith.
Nadya WilliamsBook Reviews
A conversation with historian John Wilsey on his latest book, how to learn from the past, and America's 250th anniversary
Nadya WilliamsBook Reviews
A conversation with historian John Wilsey on his latest book, how to learn from the past, and America's 250th anniversary
Nadya WilliamsFamilyCulture
Abigail Favale's new novel suggests a vision of what the sanctity of life means in a society that has lost all regard for it.
Nadya WilliamsBook Reviews
The personal lives of 17 Anglican clergy during World War I serve as a powerful reminder to us about many things, including the centrality of prayer.
Nadya WilliamsFamilyTechnologyHealth & Medicine
The Free Birth Society is a dangerous reaction to the many ways that hospitals fail to care well for pregnant women.