|
(Remember Your Servants, O Lord) |
|
Front page
Please buy
Commentary on religion, politics, morality, education, and the arts Email me: wmluse at yahoo.com ________ Site Feed ________ Archives ________ Archived Works: Full Listing by Category Click Here Inspired by my Children: Or Click Here The Chronicles of Terri Schiavo Remember Family Life: or Here Sunday Thoughts More Things Catholic: More Memory, Grace, the Necessary Things More Poetry on Sundry Occasions See All Film and Television A Few More Reviews The Culture and its Wars (More) The Mystery of Evil Or Here The Natural World Do Dogs Go To Heaven? - Animal of the Month: Cedar Cook Your Food A Croc of... Animals of the Month: leech on life Animal Sex Animal of the Month: in love and war All the animals TSO's Page...and.. Parody is Therapy St. Flannery's blog Places I like to visit:
Touchstone's Mere Comments ------------ Boy Blogs:
Jeff Culbreath Good Women The Summamamas: Micki, Terry, Kirsten For Movie buffs: Susan's Reviews |
Sunday, November 14, 2010
My Friend, Sam.
What I do when I should be doing something else:
Posted
10:43 PM
by William Luse
2 Comments
EmailThis!
Saturday, November 13, 2010
The current issue of The Christendom Review...
...is now online, wherein you can read a fine essay by Tim McGrew (related to Lydia, by marriage, in fact), who describes the spiritual evolution of perhaps the most prominent evolutionist of his time, George John Romanes. Another beautiful reflection comes from sometime W4 (and Apologia) commenter Beth Impson, who looks back at a not-quite-forgotten little classic by John Gardner, and in the process reminds us of the first impulse and final purpose that gives (or ought to give) birth to art that is true and lasting. Painter, novelist, poet and screenwriter William Mickelberry takes apart Peter Taylor's "Venus, Folly, Cupid, and Time," and one of Beth's former students, Millie Jones, shows great promise as a poet, proving that very good things can come out of a Christian college. And then there are the magnificent paintings of Chicago resident Nanci Mertz-King, who seems to me a master of color and value, among other things. There's some other good stuff, too. Andy Nowicki attempts to reconcile a scriptural difficulty with Christian morality, and an excerpt from Rick Barnett's forthcoming novel describes a world in which the government has "gone Darwin." Enjoy.
Posted
4:42 PM
by William Luse
3 Comments
EmailThis!
|