I’ve started
reading Rod Dreher’s The
Benedict Option, which is already generating significant controversy
and mostly along political lines. There have already been several reviews by
people who haven’t read it, and reviews by people who have. One of the best
reviews I’ve seen is by Karen Swallow Prior, and it’s linked below. And related is Peter Breinart's article at The Atlantic, "Breaking Faith." And another related
story: Patrick Deneen on how a generation lost its common culture.
“The Shack” is
now a movie, and I’m sure the producers are hoping for lots of controversy –
controversy sells. I haven’t seen it, but I did read the book several years
ago. I’ve already seen people on Facebook criticizing it and defending it, and
again sentiment tends to divide along political lines. (Is everything now political?)
I didn’t like the book. It was well written and engaging, and it is fiction,
but it is also a mishmash of all kinds of religions.
Jack Baumgartner
makes a walnut mantelpiece. A flower pot at Blenheim Palace turns out to be a
Roman coffin. Winston Churchill wrote a poem as an adult – the only one known
to exist. Nancy Parker Brummett rediscovers church basements (aka Fellowship
Halls). And if you ever wondered what being at the edge of a solar storm looked
like, someone has now filmed it.
Faith
What Does “The Shack” Really Teach? “Lies
We Believe About God Tells Us”
– Tim Challies. And Unshackled: The God of WM. Paul Young – David Steele at Veritas et Lux.
The Place – Eileen Knowles at The Scenic Route.
Polite Persecution – Daniel Philpott at First Things Magazine.
The Story Behind The Lost Sermons of C. H. Spurgeon – Christian George via Tim Challies.
5 Reasons Why Christians Should Study
(Church) History – Chris
Gehrz at The Anxious Bench.
Our Middlebury Moment – Samuel James at Mere Orthodoxy.
Revisiting Church Basements – Nancy Parker Brummett.
Art and Photography
“I Don’t Want That Crap in My Gallery” – Daniel Grant at Commonweal.
September Sky – Tim Good at Fine Art America.
Walnut Timber Mantelpiece – Jack Baumgartner at the School for the
Transfer of Energy.
British Stuff
In 1703, Britain was struck by possibly
its worst ever storm –
Lucy Jones at BBC (Hat Tip: J of India).
Working behind the scenes at Westminster
Abbey – in pictures –
Gareth Cattermole at The Guardian.
Life and Culture
The
Benedict Option: What It Is and Isn’t – Karen Swallow Prior at the Ethics
& Religious Liberty Commission. Related: Christians in the Hands of Donald Trump - Ross Douthat at The New York Times.
How Academe Helped Elect Trump – J.M. Anderson at The James Martin
Center for Academic Renewal.
How a Generation Lost Its Common Culture – Patrick Deneen at Minding the Campus.
How Faith and Free Markets Can Save
Education – John Zmirak
at The Stream.
Breaking Faith - Peter Breinart at The Atlantic.
Breaking Faith - Peter Breinart at The Atlantic.
Writing
Appreciating Cervantes’s Innovations, 400
Years after His Death – Richard
Brookhiser at National Review.
Fake News and the Christian Author – Dan Balow at The Steve Laube Agency.
Poetry
Our goodbyes – Nancy Marie Davis at A little somethin.
Jacob Polley: “I’m a fool as a writer –
you have to take risks”
– Aida Edemairam at The Guardiahn.
Revealed: the only known poem by an adult
Winston Churchill – The Telegraph.
At the Edge of the Solar Storm – AD
Photography
Painting: Reading to a Young Man, oil on
canvas by Josef Nassy, New Gallery Shots, Haarlem, Netherlands).
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