Consumption Junction, What’s Your Function? A Review of William Cavanaugh’s Being Consumed
This is a review of William T. Cavanaugh’s Being Consumed: Economics and Christian Desire.
This is a review of William T. Cavanaugh’s Being Consumed: Economics and Christian Desire.
This essay explores issues of meaning and divine providence in the context of Mary Doria Russell’s THE SPARROW.
In this poem, Christopher Mulrooney offers an amusing contrast between belief and disbelief.
In this book review, Allen Yeh discusses Roger Olson’s “How to Be Evangelical without Being Conservative.”
In this poem, Marjorie Maddox considers the potential for salvation in catastrophe when we open our eyes to change.
In this essay, Nicholas Wolterstorff discusses the love of God as central to the love of learning.
Jude Joseph Lovell describes his evolving relationship with the music of the Innocence Mission.
In this poem, Jan Lee Ande reminds us that even on “ordinary mornings” we can learn from nature, “that other text written by the finger of God.”
In this poem, Luci Shaw metaphorically considers the cycles of collapse and reformation that define the spiritual life.