Today’s Christians Can Learn from Yesterday’s Pagans
Classicist Nadya Williams argues for believers reading the Greco-Roman classics.
The Paris Olympics’ Altar to an Unknown God
The organizers deny their tableau referenced Da Vinci’s Last Supper. But the imagery speaks volumes about the spiritual needs of our confused society.
Most of Perpetua’s Life Is a Mystery. Not Her Love for Her Church.
But Sarah Ruden’s new biography of the martyr dismisses her Christian community as misogynist.
The Christian Liberal Arts Tradition Can Appeal to Christians and Non-Christians Alike
Its main rivals seek truth without transcendence, or justice without redemption. And both flatten the meaning of human existence.
Great Books Need More Than Good Apologists
Even the ablest defenses of classical Christian education can lose sight of what gives it life.
The Church Outside Serving the Church Inside
Reading Philippians from Paul’s prison context should encourage the church to care better for the incarcerated.
Ezekiel’s Visions, AI’s Revisions
I asked ChatGPT to illustrate passages from the Old Testament prophet, and the results raise important questions for the church.
Qi Gong: A Form of Exercise or a Doorway into the Spiritual World?
Christian leaders from mainland China, Hong Kong, Malaysia, and Singapore weigh in on the ancient Chinese practice—which includes tai chi—and its physical and divine connotations.
Was Paul a Slave?
The surprising argument that Saul of Tarsus was born into bondage.
¿Era Pablo un esclavo?
Documentos históricos antiguos indican que Saulo de Tarso nació en una familia de esclavos.