So, I graduate in one day. This is what we read this morning, in a simple service by the Charles River - just thought I would share. Adapted from the Book of ...
I live out in the middle of nowhere. It's a great transition from the urban environment that I usually inhabit when I'm up in Cambridge--it's quiet, it's peacef...
Normally, working with The Ichthus is an incredibly rewarding experience. Of course, with any great job, there will be boring tasks that need to be fulfilled. O...
In Marilynne Robinson's unforgettable novel Gilead, the congregationalist (and unapologetically Calvinist/Barthian!) pastor John Ames pens this provocative refl...
Hello again! We're so glad to still be running this summer. Not sure if our sister journals will be running also, but we'll see!
The Dartmouth Apologia - Faith...
and pausing there she looked out to meet the stroke of the Lighthouse, the long steady stroke, the last of the three, which was her stroke, for watching them in...
Recently, I have been reflecting on the concept of magic - on the face of it, a profoundly un-Christian and un-philosophical subject, but one which I have fou...
I have found Ecclesiastes a deeply comforting book. Yes, I am talking about the same book of the Bible—the one from which comes the familiar cry, “Vanity, vanit...
"Are you tired? Worn out? Burned out on religion? Come to me. Get away with me and you'll recover your life. I'll show you how to take a real rest. Walk with me...
Caedmon, a middle-aged stablehand, was at a festive dinner with his friends, where each man played a tune and sang in turn; however, he was scared and left as h...