Wonder on the Web

Issue 36: Links to amazing stuff.

Poland’s Crooked Forest

There’s no real consensus about why all of the trees in this grove—about 400 of them—grow with a 90-degree bend at the base, facing due north. The prevailing explanation is more practical than phenomenal: farmers in the 1930s bent the saplings for a specific construction project, shipbuilding. But it certainly does make you wonder. And these eerie photos from Kilian Schönberger are just too cool to pass up. (via Colossal)

Tokyo Reverse

Here’s a day’s worth of “slow TV” footage of one guy walking around Tokyo. He peruses an outdoor market, strolls through a park, takes selfies with strangers, rides an escalator, etc. Sounds less than thrilling, except that everyone and everything else (i.e.: the traffic) is moving backwards. What’s it like to go against the grain? This video illustrates it well—and offers a pretty unique tour of Japan’s capital city.

Glamour Shots of Spiders

If you haven’t had your fill of close-ups of bug life in previous issues, a photo series promises to “show a whole new side of spiders.” Michael D. Kern has photographed thousands of them in his career, and his portfolio showcases spider traits you’d probably never notice in their usual shadowy setting, like the fact that many spiders have remarkably iridescent underbellies.

Pleiades in Person (More Cool Stuff from Tokyo)

Greek philosophers (and a lot of early Christian writers, too) used dance as a metaphor for the harmony of the cosmos—heavenly bodies moved in intricately choreographed orbits, preserving the order of the universe in a great celestial dance. In this video, Tokyo-based performance company Enra brings a constellation to life, thanks to amazingly synchronized dancing and interactive lighting technology that makes it seem like the light is coming from the dancers themselves. You might even find yourself feeling wistful, à la C. S. Lewis in The Weight of Glory:

We do not want merely to see beauty … [we want] to become part of it. … [I]f we take the imagery of Scripture seriously, if we believe that God will one day give us the Morning Star and cause us to put on the splendor of the sun, then we may surmise that both the ancient myths and the modern poetry, so false as history, may be very near the truth as prophecy.

Our Latest

The Russell Moore Show

 Tim Keller on Hope in Times in Fear (Re-air)

A conversation with Tim Keller from 2021, in honor of his 75th birthday

Melanie Penn Sings the Resurrection Story

The Broadway actress turned singer-songwriter talks about her new album and the value of sacred music outside of Sunday mornings.

News

Church Discipline Is Still the Exception

But it’s making a comeback in some circles, including among Reformed congregations that emphasize church membership.

Review

Anxiety Isn’t Unnatural—or Unfaithful

Blair Linne’s memoir of mental illness shines light on why it occurs and how God can redeem it.

Kierkegaard Is for the Deconstructor

The missionary to Christendom is also a missionary to modernity.

Excerpt

Pro-Life’s Future: More Than Just Abortion

Clarissa Moll and Jonathan Liedl discuss a new pro-life mission and identity for a violent world.

Testimony

Was It Really God’s Perfect Plan to Amputate My Foot?

A tragic accident jump-started my relationship with God. It also made me question his goodness.

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