Skip to main content
Loyola University Maryland
Department of Theology
Loyola.edu
Home
Home
Undergraduate
Degree Requirements
Core Requirement
Course Catalogue
Course Descriptions
Sample Course Descriptions
Learning Aims
Undergraduate Essay Competition
Graduate
Master of Theological Studies
Learning Aims
Degree Requirements
Accelerated Program
Course Descriptions
Typical Course Sequence
Facilities
FAQs
Certificate in Theology and Ministry
Learning Aims
Degree Requirements
Course Descriptions
Typical Course Sequence
Facilities
Program Success Disclosures
Non-Degree Coursework
Course Catalogue
Events and Info Sessions
Apply
Cost/Financial Aid
Scholarship and Awards
Faculty & Staff
Career Information
News & Highlights
Tuition & Financial Aid
Undergraduate
Graduate
Graduate Scholarships & Awards
Request Information
Apply
Home
Faculty & Staff
Claire R. Mathews McGinnis
Claire R. Mathews McGinnis
Recent Publications
“Jonah” in
The New Jerome Biblical Commentary,
edited by John J. Collins, et. al. Bloomsbury/T&T Clark (forthcoming, online, October, 2020).
“Amos” in
The Paulist Biblical Commentary, e
dited by José Enrique Aguilar Chiu, et. al. Mahwah, N.J.: Paulist Press, 2018.
“The Scriptures of Israel” in S
cripture: A Global, Ecumenical Introduction to the Bible and its Interpretation
, edited by Michael J. Gorman, 57-94. Baker, Academic, 2017.
"The Hardening of Pharaoh’s Heart in Christian and Jewish Interpretation,"
Journal of Theological Interpretation
6.1 (2012): 43-64.
"Stumbling Over the Testaments: On Reading Patristic Exegesis and the Old Testament in Light of the New,"
Journal of Theological Interpretation
4.1 (2010): 15-32.
"
As Those Who Are Taught": The Reception of Isaiah from the LXX to the SBL
. SBL Symposium Series. Co-edited with Patricia Tull (Scholars Press and Leiden: E.J. Brill, 2006).
"The Child in Exodus," in
Biblical Perspectives on the Child
, eds. Beverly Gaventa and Terence Fretheim (Grand Rapids, MI: Wm. B. Eerdmans, 2008), 24-44.
Students
Julia
For Julia, the meaningful relationships she formed with professors has made Loyola feel like home
Economics, Theology