Wonder on the Web

Issue 34: Links to amazing stuff.

Every Image of the Solar System You’ve Ever Seen Is Inaccurate

Because, planets, it turns out, are microscopic compared to the distances between them, which are pretty much impossible to represent in an image. So, yep, you guessed it, we’re going to offer a model that is accurate—and beautiful cinematography to frame it all. Prepare to feel small. And then go back and read Mark Galli’s essay again.

Speaking of Whales

This issue’s whale fall essay and poem point to the incredible ways whales can serve their ecosystems, even in their death. Enjoy also this lovely Memory Palacepoem/podcast considering what it might be like to be an aging bowhead whale. And this video of humpback whales playing under the Aurora Borealis off the coast of Norway. Okay. We’ll stop there. As you might expect for a magazine called The Behemoth, we could do whale stuff all day long.

Doodling in Church: Allowed

We may have been raised on the idea that “God’s house” demands a level of respect that does not make much room for play—no running, no shouting. But according to Christian illustrator John Hendrix, play is at act of worship.

Kids play all the time—it’s their work. For adults, play is very difficult. Sitting down and having fun and trying to enjoy that act of creation—that’s an act of worship. That’s what God was doing when he made things. That’s something I try to cultivate.

And it’s to our great benefit that he does this weekly, doodling along with the sermon. He shares some of these illustrations in a new book—and in a subsequent Christianity Today feature you don’t want to miss.

Botanical Bats

Looking at this collection of “vanity shots” of bats, we couldn’t help thinking how their noses and ears, intricately folded and whimsically shaped, resemble plant life. “Your works are wonderful, I know that full well” (Ps. 139:14).

Also in this issue

The long, weighty future of a whale’s body, God’s childlike attention, and hip op.

Our Latest

Public Theology Project

When Christians Contemplate Assisted Suicide

Answering a reader’s tragic question requires more than a sound theology of hell.

I Failed to Mature as an Artist—Until I Learned to See

Drawing is a way of entrusting what I can see to the care and attention of God.

We Are Obsessed with Gender

With incoherent language trickled down from academic theorists, we think and talk about gender incessantly—and to our detriment.

The Russell Moore Show

Charles Marsh on Bonhoeffer’s 120th Birthday

What does it mean to follow Jesus when the state is demanding your loyalty—and the church is tempted to comply?

How A Pastor’s Book Inspired a New Rom-Com

Mike Todd’s book, Relationship Goals, gets a spotlight in a film aimed at both Christian and secular audiences.

Jesus Did Not Serve Grape Juice

Why reopen debate about what we serve for Communion? Because it matters that we follow God’s commands.

Bracing for ICE Raids, Haitians Get Temporary Reprieve

A federal judge on Monday extended deportation protections for Haitian immigrants. While they waited for the ruling, pastors in Springfield, Ohio, gathered and prayed.

How ChatGPT Revealed a False Diagnosis

Luke Simon

A devastating cancer diagnosis wrecked a young couple. But after five years of uncertainty, a chatbot changed everything.

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