Wonder on the Web

Issue 40: Links to amazing stuff.

Packer’s Puritan Publications Published

The John Richard Allison Library in Vancouver has just digitized its entire collection of rare Puritan texts—and made them available to read online for free. Not only do you get to see high-res scans of the originals, old-school bibliophiles also get the satisfaction of virtually flipping each page (thankfully, you can turn off the page-flip sound effects). Exhibit A: Jeremiah Burroughs’s “treatise shewing that true blessedness consists in pardon of sin.” (Amen, Burroughs.) Many of these documents came from the private library of theologian J. I. Packer, who has written more than 40 books of his own.

The Early History of Autism in America

Autism, a developmental disorder we just talked about in our article on synaptic pruning, is usually considered to have been first recognized in the 1940s by child psychiatrist Leo Kanner. But Smithsonian suggests that social reformer and physician Samuel Gridley Howe (whose wife, Julia Ward Howe, wrote the famous “Battle Hymn of the Republic”) was studying autism even before the Civil War. In 1848, “Howe expressed hope … that his data would be of use to future generations trying to understand mental disability.”

Four Elusive New Elements

2015 brought a lot of new things, including the addition of four new elements to the periodic table: elements 113, 115, 117, and 118, temporarily known as ununtrium, ununpentium, ununseptium, and ununoctium. The names aren’t the only temporary characteristics of these elements—samples may only stick around for less than a thousandth of a second, and as of now they can only be observed in lab conditions. Looks like the seventh row of the table is finally complete. All high school chemistry textbooks and Tom Lehrer’s classic song are officially out of date.

Machimosaurus Rex

Paleontologists working in the Tunisian desert have just made a discovery of truly behemoth proportions: the fossilized remains of Machimosaurus rex, the largest crocodilian ever to swim the oceans. Based on the size of the skull, it was probably over 30 feet long—10 feet longer than the largest modern croc. Crikey!

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

News

Iranian Christian Freed Nine Months After Border Patrol Arrest

Video of agents arresting him and his wife in Los Angeles went viral, and their church has been praying for his freedom.

Public Theology Project

Why John Perkins Stood (Almost) Alone

The civil rights leader treated love of God and love for others as inseparable.

The Russell Moore Show

Doug McKelvey on Rites of Passage and the Sacredness of Ordinary Life

Every Moment Holy author Douglas McKelvey on writing prayers for the moments both sacred and mundane.

From a Galaxy Far, Far Away to Carol Stream, Illinois

CT tracked cultural changes while going through several of its own.

What Loving South Africa Taught Me About Patriotism

Christina Stanton

Attachment to another country didn’t diminish my affection for America. It showed me God’s love for all peoples.

Wonderology

Owner’s Manual Part One: The Instructions

What if our bodies came with operating instructions—and we could finally read them?

The Bulletin

IDF and Lebanon, Ukraine’s Fears, AI Data Centers, and a Korean Messiah

Mike Cosper, Clarissa Moll, Russell Moore

Israel fights Hezbollah, Ukraine left behind, US builds data centers, and North Korea’s Evangelical roots.

Review

Trashing Evangelicals Is No Way to Fight Conspiracism

Jared Stacy’s new book correctly identifies a serious problem. But his depiction of evangelicalism is overblown and unreasonable.

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