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Crown Arts-and-Culture

Items related to arts, literature, culture, and the media

Podcast on P. D. James: A December edition of Ken Myers’ podcast covers the work of mystery novelist P. D. James, the author behind this month's feature film, Children of Men. It's worth your time, particularly if you've never read James. One-half hour. (Mars Hill Audio)

Tue 12 Dec 2006 from TTF Staff • Link & Comments

God Rest Ye Merry: “Our Christmas carols are among the most precious shared possessions of our fragmenting, fraying culture, and for all that we abuse them and demean them, they seem to remain imperishable.” A lovely editorial on the darkness of Christmas from one of our new Senior Fellows. (This album from the Taverner Consortalso on iTunes—has a lovely version of the carol that may help you hear it anew.) (Wilfred M. McClay, Touchstone)

Wed 06 Dec 2006 from TTF Staff • Link & Comments

Banker and Poet: “John Barr is both a poet and a banker and he says he’s better at both because of it, as reported by Jia Lynn Yang and Jerry Useem in Fortune (10/30/06).” (Here's the Fortune article: “Cross Train Your Brain”) (Reveries magazine courtesy Brewing Culture)

Fri 10 Nov 2006 from TTF Staff • Link & Comments

Louise Cowan on the Classics: Mars Hill Audio has released an "audio reprint" of "The Necessity of the Classics," an introductory essay by Louise Cowan from our Invitation to the Classics. Louise argues that the classics offer "a kind of knowing different from philosophy or history and yet occupying an irreplaceable position in the quest for wisdom." (Read by Ken Myers, Mars Hill Audio)

Thu 09 Nov 2006 from TTF Staff • Link & Comments

The big questions: an interview with Doris Betts: “How long can you go on telling stories if human beings don't matter, and how long will you be read, since there is also a great shift to preferring nonfiction?” Her novel, Souls Raised from the Dead, is worth your attention. (FindArticles, from The Christian Century, 1997)

Mon 30 Oct 2006 from TTF Staff • Link & Comments

Facing Facing the Masses:Facing the Giants from any serious perspective is a fantasy film. Its message is very dangerous for Christians, and scandalous for pagans. Adult Evangelical Christians watching Facing the Giants is like sex addicts watching the Spice Channel.” A spectacular and spot-on rant about one film and the “Christian” movie industry. (Barbara Nicolosi, Church of the Masses blog)

Thu 26 Oct 2006 from Peter Edman • Link & Comments

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Show me the man you honor, and I will know what kind of a man you are, for it shows me what your ideal of manhood is, and what kind of man you long to be.

Thomas Carlyle

Featured Trinity Forum Resource

How Much Land Does a Man Need? (Audio) by Leo Tolstoy, foreword by Os Guinness.

David Aikman narrates this Trinity Forum Reading selection that helps us think about greed, money, and success.

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Gleanings Quick Links

John Piper explains Why Calvinists are so Negative: This, with the item below from Frederica, offer two timely perspectives on appropriate humility—which could also be approached with profit from the perspective of strategy. “I must tell you that whenever I have had a profound experience of God through reading his word or encountering God in worship or community, it tends to just humble me, and make me want to say something like what Joni Mitchell said about love—‘it’s love’s illusions I recall; I really don’t know love, at all.’ I have barely touched the hem of the Master’s garment, I hardly know him though I long to know him better. In the face of the divine-human encounter, even Barth’s Dogmatics appear to be little more than a good start to understanding God.” (New Testament scholar Ben Witherington III • 2008 11 19)

Confessions of an Obnoxious Orthodox: Salutary. “Most people like to be polite and get along, so they highlight our commonalities. But every church must have its distinctiveness, or we’d all be in the same church. At the time, I was so occupied with comprehending this strange thing called Orthodoxy that I emphasized the differences, and was impatient with kindly big-tent suggestions.” (Frederica Mathewes-Green, Beliefnet • 2008 11 19)

Finding Home: A worthwhile meditation on place: “My parents have moved a lot in their lives, and view towns and cities as places to go for opportunities, not places to live for love of the place itself. They still pressure us occasionally to move closer to them.  Maybe someday we will; as I said above, I know I would find things to love wherever we lived. But after all the moves of my childhood, I find myself warmly grateful to this city for being a place where I can send my roots down deep, grateful that I have at last found my home.” (Veronica Mitchell, Toddled Dredge • 2008 11 18)

The Obama Dilemma: “Which of these factions in evangelicalism’s divided house is more reflective of its essential character? In truth, both have a strong claim. Evangelicalism has always been centrally concerned with social reform as the necessary expression of spiritual regeneration. It is not merely a religion of inwardness. Nor is it a religion devoted to maintaining the status quo and propping up social elites. Instead, it challenges settled arrangements and champions the lowly and the marginalized.” (Senior Fellow Wilfred M. McClay, The Wall Street Journal2008 11 01)

Stephen Fry in America (2008 10 10)
Give Me Liberty and Give Me Death (2008 09 30)
Give Me That Old-Time Religion (2008 09 29)
The Real Digital Revolution (2008 08 27)
Après Lewis (2008 08 15)

more . . .

Other Resources from the Fellows

Cover image via AmazonThe Masterless: Self and Society in Modern America by Wilfred M. McClay.

A treatment of the long-standing tension between individualism and social cohesion in conceptions of American culture.