Fred Sanders

Probably the world’s greatest systematic theologian cartoonist.

Recent Essays

Cranmer Prays to the Trinity

Fred Sanders | Theology | 07.02.2009

Can you pray to the Trinity? Of course, the very definition of Christian prayer is that it is trinitarian: We pray to God the Father, in the name of Jesus the Son, by the power of the Holy Spirit. That's the logic of media... Read More...

Martin Hengel (1926-2009)

Fred Sanders | Theology | 07.02.2009

TheoBlog reports that Martin Hengel, New Testament scholar, has died in Tübingen at the age of 82. Hengel's scholarly accomplishment was great. His 1973 inaugural lecture in Tübingen was published in English in expanded ... Read More...

Why I Don’t Pray for Celebrities

Fred Sanders | Culture, Theology | 07.02.2009

I don't pray for celebrities because they aren't real people. Celebrity deaths come in threes, they say, and recently Ed McMahon, Farah Fawcett, and Michael Jackson have died. There have been obituaries and retrospectives,... Read More...

When in Doubt, Sing

Fred Sanders | Theology | 07.01.2009

When I was in graduate school, one of the most important groups I was involved with was a small group of doctoral students who were in the same phase of the program. We studied together, arranged special tutoring sessions on... Read More...

Review: Re-Thinking Rahner’s Rule and Revelation

Fred Sanders | Theology | 07.01.2009

In the current issue of the International Journal of Systematic Theology, you can read my review of Dennis Jowers' recent book on the Trinity, Karl Rahner’s Trinitarian Axiom: ‘The Economic Trinity is the Immanent Trinity... Read More...

Czeslaw Milosz’ Birthday

Fred Sanders | Literature | 06.30.2009

Czeslaw Milosz, the Polish poet who lived his last decades in California, was born on this day, June 30, in 1911. I am told on good authority that we should pronounce his name "Chess-wov Mee-woash," but I can't get used to... Read More...

Elizabeth Barrett Browning Was One Theological Poet

Fred Sanders | Theology, Literature | 06.29.2009

Elizabeth Barrett Browning died on this day, June 29, in 1861. She was the most famous female poet of the Victorian age, easily outpacing other luminaries like Christina Rossetti and Jean Ingelow (who?). During her lifetime, ... Read More...

Holy Holy Holy

Fred Sanders | Theology | 06.29.2009

All Christians believe in the Trinity, but some Christians believe in the Trinity better than others. There are some Bible-believing Christians who have all the basic biblical materials for trinitarian theology stored in thei... Read More...

Cyril of Alexandria

Fred Sanders | Theology | 06.27.2009

June 27 is the day Cyril of Alexandria (d. 444) is remembered in the Western churches. For many years, he wasn't widely remembered in the Western churches at all, at least in English-language theological circles. For example,... Read More...

Doddridge Day

Fred Sanders | Theology | 06.26.2009

Philip Doddridge (born this day, June 26, 1702; died 1751) is remembered today, if at all, for his book The Rise and Progress of Religion in the Soul. This book was very famous in its time, and was translated into seven langu... Read More...

Everything You Think About Contentment is Wrong

Fred Sanders | Theology | 06.25.2009

Tim Challies hosts a "Reading Classics Together" blog event, and the book he's working through now is The Rare Jewel of Christian Contentment, by Jeremiah Burroughs (1600-1646). This week's reading is the second and third ser... Read More...

Bernard Founded Clairvaux

Fred Sanders | Theology | 06.25.2009

June 25 is the day, according to tradition, that Bernard (1090-1153) founded a new Cistercian monastery in Clairvaux in the year 1115. The monastery was such a success, and he was so linked with it, that "of Clairvaux" is now... Read More...
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Miscellaneous Notes

Contact Me!

Collected Quotations

"Yahweh does not stand above the covenant, but in it, yet He is also not under it."
Karl Barth
"The things of the gospel are depths.... the things of the gospel are the deep things of God."
Thomas Goodwin
"God has appeared glorious to me, on account of the Trinity."
Jonathan Edwards
"Don't be a try baby... be a do baby."
Peggy Hill



Top 5 Movies

1. O Brother Where Art Thou

2. The Ninth Configuration

3. The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe

4. The Muppet Christmas Carol

5. Day of the Locust

Biographical Sketch

Lecturer and Speaker

Dr. Sanders will talk to anybody anytime about the Trinity. He also speaks to a variety of audiences about Christian doctrine, the Bible, evangelicalism, art, and apologetics.

Fred Sanders' Curriculum Vitae
PDF (110KB)

Biographical Sketch

Fred Sanders is an evangelical Protestant theologian with a passion for the great tradition of Christian thought. He holds a degree in art from Murray State University and an MDiv from Asbury Theological Seminary in Kentucky, with a PhD from the Graduate Theological Union in Berkeley. Since 1999 he has taught in the Torrey Honors Institute at Biola University.

Publication Overview

Dr. Sanders has published four volumes of theological comic books, Dr. Doctrine's Christian Comix (InterVarsity Press, 1999). This probably makes him the world's greatest systematic theologian cartoonist. His monograph The Image of the Immanent Trinity: Rahner's Rule and the Theological Interpretation of Scripture (Peter Lang, 2005) sorted out that whole Trinity thing to the satisfaction of all 50 people who read it. He co-edited Jesus in Trinitarian Perspective: An Introductory Christology (Broadman & Holman, 2007). His articles have appeared in Dialog: A Journal of Theology, Cultural Encounters: A Journal for the Theology of Culture, Southwestern Journal of Theology, and the Oxford Handbook of Systematic Theology. He has reviewed books in Theology Today, Scottish Journal of Theology, and First Things.

Fred and Family

Fred and his wife Susan have known each other since sixth grade, and yes, their story is as sweet as you think it is. They have two children, Freddy and Phoebe.

Top 10 Books

There ought to be a lot more fiction and poetry on a list like this, but if you just go for the top ten and don't ask for diversity of genre, my list is bound to be dominated by theology. If I couldn't read Christian doctrine for a career, I'd do it as my main hobby.

1. Ephesians

It is OK to have favorite books of the Bible, especially if your favorite book is Ephesians. It is not OK to have least favorite books of the Bible. Shame on you.

2. Church Dogmatics Volume IV (Karl Barth)

I can't agree with every move he makes, but reading Barth makes me feel like a natural theologian (apologies to Aretha Franklin).

3. The Hidden Life: Thoughts on our Communion with God (Adolph Saphir)

When I discovered the works of Adolph Saphir in 2001, I reestablished contact with everything that is great about evangelicalism.

4. Tie: The Spirit of Christ or With Christ in the School of Prayer (Andrew Murray)

These things are for sale anywhere with cheesy "I'm A Devotional Book" covers. But this is where they keep the good stuff.

5. Mere Christianity (C. S. Lewis), especially Book Four, "Beyond Personality."

This gripped my imagination when I was 17, still impressed me after I'd earned a doctorate on the Trinity, and is a model of clear communication that I aspire to today.

6. A Compendium of Christian Theology (William Burt Pope)

If all Methodists did theology like this, I'd become Methodist and never look back.

7. The Principles of Theology (W. H. Griffith-Thomas)

If all Anglicans did theology like this, I'd become Anglican and never look back.

8. Calvin's Institutes

If all Calvinists did theology like this... well. Others may provide you with a useful handbook of theology, but Calvin is a master who apprentices you in the craft. There is no better way to become a theologian than to work straight through the Institutes. I've been through it five times, three with students, and can't wait to do it again.

8. The Heidelberg Catechism (Ursinus and Olevianus)

Read, mark, note, inwardly digest.

9. Tie: The Gospel Mystery of Sanctification (Walter Marshall), or The Life of God in the Soul of Man (Henry Scougal)

I can't decide between the somewhat ponderous Marshall on how God's grace empowers obedience, or the zippy little Scougal on the essence of Christianity.

10. Golly, it's an Eight-Way Tie: Centuries of Meditations (Thomas Traherne), Communion with God (John Owen), Religious Affections (Jonathan Edwards), Pilgrim at Tinker Creek (Annie Dillard), Holiness (John Webster), Pilgrim's Progress (John Bunyan), The Doctor &c. (Robert Southey), and On the Incarnation (Athanasius)

Plus whatever I'm teaching in the Torrey Honors Institute this week.