Editor’s Note from June 09, 2016

Issue 50: Lightning bugs, beating hearts, and golden spirals.

There’s a jarring photo in Sara Lewis’s delightful new book on fireflies, Silent Sparks. It’s not of a firefly. It’s of a cockroach. And a blister beetle, a longhorn beetle, a net-winged beetle, a moth, and a soldier beetle.

It surprised me because they all look very similar to fireflies—a couple specs of brownish orange near the head or thorax, two black antennae, and a long, black abdomen. If I saw any of them, I’d probably say, “Yikes, a bug.” I’d be as likely to squish it as to save it in Mason jar. I’d probably do the same if I saw a firefly in the middle of the day. They just look like … bugs. (Sorry, little dudes.)

It’s that dramatic difference that draws our attention each summer (and several times in this issue). That delightful, brief, green glow. For many subjects, we can find wonder and awe by shining more light and looking more closely. Fireflies remind us that sometimes we need things to get a little darker before we can truly behold, before we’re reminded of how breathtakingly beautiful the world—or a little bug—can be.

I’m sure each of those other insects is delightful in its own way. We could assign a Behemoth article on any of them and surely find awe and wonder inside. (Okay, to be honest, there’s little chance I’m going to assign an article on cockroaches, so this may be my only opportunity to tell you that a cockroach can hold its breath for 40 minutes underwater and survive without its head for at least a week.) But our goal at The Behemoth isn’t to explain everything about our subjects. It’s not always about bringing everything to light. Sometimes it’s just about getting us to go outside in our yards at dusk and wait. And then to gasp, and then to praise.

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.

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The Bulletin

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Persecution in Nigeria, Marjorie Taylor Greene resigns, Mamdani and Trump have a friendly meeting, and listeners give thanks.

Excerpt

You Know Them As Fantasy Writers. They Were Soldiers Too. 

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An excerpt from ‘The War for Middle-Earth: J.R.R. Tolkien and C.S. Lewis Confront the Gathering Storm, 1933–1945.’

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Why Scripture talks of our entreaties to God as rising like incense.

From Outer Space to Rome

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May Cause a Spontaneous Outburst of Festive Joy

8 new Christmas albums for holiday parties, praise, and playlists.

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Meet CT’s New President

The Bulletin with Nicole Martin and Walter Kim

Nicole Martin seeks to mend evangelical divides and uphold biblical truth.

The Christmas Cloud

Dave Harvey

Christmas feels decidedly unmerry when our emotions don’t align with truth.

Night Skies and Dark Paths

Scott James

God is our unwavering guide through incomprehensible darkness.

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