Wonder on the Web

Links to amazing stuff

Imaginations on Parade

We’d all do well to read more children’s stories. Alice's Adventures in Wonderland is one of those that seems perennially to capture imaginations and inspire new artistic renderings. For the classic’s 150th birthday (several months ago), Maria Popova at Brain Pickings compiled some of the best illustrations used in various editions of the book through the decades, a parade of both individual creativity and generational style.

Look Up

You never know what you might see if you just look up. A few lucky folks doing so around 4:45 A.M. on February 17 witnessed a rare, 500-pound meteor barreling over Pittsburg. Lucky for you, three of NASA’s cameras also caught the fireball, and you can see it here.

About That Poem. . .

Given that this issue released during Holy Week, we were happy to feature Christina Rossetti’s poem Good Friday. For a wonderful reflection on it, here’s a sermon from renowned preacher Fleming Rutledge. She not only provides poetic commentary, but also devotional thoughts on Ezekiel and the hardness of our hearts.

The Grace of Naps

Benjamin Franklin wrote that wine is “proof that God loves us, and loves to see us happy.” We’d say the same is true for naps. Here is a two-minute video presenting “nap hacks you need in your life.” Bite-sized science, applicable to your life. Our favorite trick: the coffee nap.

(P.S. Though that Ben Franklin saying is often misquoted—many times connected with beer—he actually did write it. And it’s found in his study of the miracle at Cana, within a letter where he “beg[s] to edify you by some Christian, moral, and philosophical reflections” on drinking.)

Also in this issue

The Behemoth was a small digital magazine about a big God and his big world. It aimed to help people behold the glory of God all around them, in the worlds of science, history, theology, medicine, sociology, Bible, and personal narrative.

Our Latest

Public Theology Project

Jeffrey Epstein and the Myth of the Culture Wars

Some leaders of different political stripes teach us to hate each other, but they’re playing for the same team.

We Become Our Friends’ Enemies by Telling Them the Truth

Our corrupt political and racial discourse teaches us to judge by identity and ideology instead of honestly testing the spirits and assessing the fruit.

News

Fighting in Nigeria Leaves Christian Converts Exiled

Emmaneul Nwachukwu

Muslim communities often expel new Christians from their families. One Fulani convert is urging churches to take them in.

I Long for My Old Church—and the Tree Beside It

Leaving a beloved church doesn’t mean ever forgetting its goodness, its beauty, and the immense blessing it was in one’s life.

The Russell Moore Show

Sharon Says So on Teaching Civics in an Age of Misinformation

Step into the classroom with America’s government teacher.

The Bulletin

Racist Memes, Vance at the Olympics, Epstein Files, and the Vanishing Church

Mike Cosper, Clarissa Moll

Trump posts racist meme about Obamas, JD Vance booed at Olympics, new Epstein file revelations, and young men in the church.

Analysis

Shutting Down an Addiction Supermarket

Even in San Francisco, some change is possible: The Tenderloin neighborhood is improving.

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