Fred Sanders

Probably the world's greatest systematic theologian cartoonist.

Recent Essays

Not Your Old New Trinitarianism, A New New Trinitarianism

| Theology | 01.25.2012

"Remythologizing" is a mouthful of a word, and it may scare people a few away from Kevin Vanhoozer's fascinating book Remythologizing Theology: Divine Action, Passion, and Authorship (2010: Cambridge University Press). Vanho... Read More...

Close Attention to How God Says What He Says

| Theology | 01.20.2012

Vanhoozer says “My wager is that this brief detour into the dispute over the meaning of Dostoevsky’s authorship will yield theological dividends for understanding God’s communicative relation to the world.” (p. 311) ... Read More...

Whatever God Makes Humans FLIRSH

| Theology | 01.20.2012

Reading in modern liberal theology, you begin to notice some recurring themes. Especially when liberal theologians get around to describing God, they tend to emphasize a few characteristics. You find these pervasive patterns ... Read More...

God who Writes Like Dostoevsky

| Theology | 01.18.2012

English metaphysical poet Thomas Traherne (1636-1674) insisted that in spiritual matters, “the manner is always more excellent than the thing.” This has great implications for the idea of God as author. When Kevin Va... Read More...

Communicative Theism

| Theology | 01.16.2012

A short post here before plunging into the next major topic in Kevin Vanhoozer's 2010 book Remythologizing Theology (coming out in paperback this year, they say). That next major topic is how God speaks. But first a word abo... Read More...

John 3:16

| Theology | 01.15.2012

It's one of the most famous verses in the Bible, the hit single everybody knows even if they don't listen to the rest of the album. You can wave it on a banner, paint it in your eyeblack, or print it underneath your In-N-... Read More...

A Couple of Christology Resources

| Theology | 01.12.2012

Here are two books I recommended when I was talking Christology on the Frank Pastore show on Jan 12. The single best book on the deity of Christ is Putting Jesus in His Place (Kregel, 2007). The authors, Bowman and Komosze... Read More...

Getting our Anthropomorphisms in Order

| Theology | 01.11.2012

Does God speak? Does he have a mouth that words come out of? Does God suffer? How does he feel the feelings he feels? Does God do things? Does he have hands that reach out and accomplish his will? Do we have a personal relat... Read More...

Subverting that Theism, Conserving this Theism

| Theology | 01.05.2012

Cultural critic Neil Postman wrote two books whose titles picked a fight with each other: Teaching as a Subversive Activity (1971), and Teaching as Conserving Activity (1982). Well, which is it, teacher, are you subverting o... Read More...

More than Merely Method

| Theology | 01.03.2012

Kevin Vanhoozer has developed a reputation for reflecting deeply and at length on theological and hermeneutical prolegomena; perhaps too much at length. In the Preface to Remythologizing Theology, he admits that he has been ... Read More...

Honest to God, a Voice from Heaven! Vanhoozer’s Remythologizing Theology

| Theology | 01.02.2012

Kevin J. Vanhoozer published a very important book in 2010, entitled Remythologizing Theology. It's a long book (500 pages), and though Vanhoozer is a clear writer, his target audience here is people who have already read a ... Read More...

Finishing Up With “On This Day” In This Year

| Misc. | 01.02.2012

Since 2009 I've been noodling away at the "On This Day" essays here at Scriptorium Daily. I started them on a lark during Christmas break 2009, got around to describing my goals for the series sometime in March, and kept at i... 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.