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Minds in the Making

Glittering Vices

Author: Rebecca Konyndyk DeYoung
Brazos Press

Rebecca Konyndyk DeYoung explores the seven deadly sins from a historical and biblical perspective.

Posted in: Religion & Philosophy on Oct 6, 2009

Chasing Emily: A Review of ‘Emily’s Ghost’

Author: Jennifer Holberg, Professor of English
Books & Culture online

Emily Brontë hears dead people.

Or at least she does according to the latest entry in the Brontë family literary sweepstakes, Denise Giardina’s Emily’s Ghost. To be fair, Emily only gets all Sixth Sense-y in the beginning and ending sections of Giardina’s novel (somehow, I guess, the otherworldly presences just aren’t as convenient or necessary in the vast middle chapters of the novel). And lest the reader believe that these voices are evidence of schizophrenia or a matter of purely imaginative inner dialogue (the latter a possibility that Anne Brontë raises at one point in the novel), Giardina has her Emily affirm quite forcefully the reality of her auditory companions. What’s more, Giardina’s Emily is ardently and actively political (a Chartist, no less); strongly and nobly rebellious against everything well-established in early Victorian society; and the participant in a passionate, if unconsummated, romance. Throw in a pinch of plot elements taken from Jane Eyre and a dash of Jo March-style hair-chopping, and you begin to get the idea of the portrait of Emily Brontë this book gives us.

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Posted in: Arts & Literature on Sep 22, 2009

How does your work shape your view of human nature?

Author: Nathan L.K. Bierma, Calvin Institute of Christian Worship
ThinkChristian

The View from Inside an Ambulance,” originally published in Esquire, is a powerful essay by paramedic Chris Jones on his experiences dealing with death on a daily basis. His work both confronts him with, and numbs him to, human fragility. His closing story about reviving a man presumed dead, in front of the man’s son, has a hint of resurrection in it.

The article reminded me that our line of work—the way we use our God-given gifts—shapes our view of human nature

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Posted in: Lifestyle on Sep 18, 2009

Harvard for Homeschoolers?

Author: Katelyn Beaty, Class of 2006
Books and Culture

cover of book Right: Portraits from the Evangelical Ivy LeagueWhen did conservative Christians become odd, fascinating creatures to bring under the journalistic lens?

Posted in: Religion & Philosophy on Sep 1, 2009

Talking healthcare

Author: Interview with Doug Koopman, professor political science and Ruth Groenhout, professor of philosophy
Calvin News and Stories

Recently, Calvin professor of philosophy Ruth Groenhout and Calvin professor of political science Doug Koopman discussed healthcare in America: what’s wrong, what’s right, what could fix the system and who’s going to pay.

Posted in: Nation & World on Jul 31, 2009

A cheery Happy 500th Birthday to a non-dour Reformer: John Calvin

Author: Nathan Bierma, Minds co-editor
ThinkChristian.net

The problem with turning 500 is that you start to sound old. John Calvin, who was born 500 years ago today, will be remembered by many today as a dour old codger who loved to talk about sin and depravity, someone who was always in a bad mood. It’s true that Calvin had his grumpy moments—although I probably would too if I suffered from constant intestinal disorders and a battery of other chronic ailments, as Calvin did. And it’s true that Calvin spared few words when talking about the severity of our condition as a result of sin—though I don’t think Paul or Augustine were much less blunt about our depravity. (The less said about the nasty names Calvin called the Pope, meanwhile, the better.)

I’ve been learning lately that Calvin actually lived, thought, and wrote with a palpable pastoral heart and a vivid vision of God’s goodness and grace—and that without this part of the picture of who Calvin was, all you get is a caricature.

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Posted in: History: Religion & Philosophy on Jul 10, 2009


Featured Book

Glittering Vices by Rebecca Konyndyk DeYoungIn Glittering Vices, Rebecca Konyndyk DeYoung carefully parses the meanings and attractions of the seven deadly sins. Historically and biblically informed, her explorations lead readers to meditate on personal participation in these sins. She doesn’t forget to provide a way out of these meditations. If the first part of each chapter describing one of the sins—envy, vainglory, sloth, avarice, anger, gluttony and lust—is a mirror, then the end of each chapter is a window on the other side of which is Christ, armed with the power to transform even the deadliest of vices into virtues.

Read more about Glittering Vices by Rebecca Konyndyk DeYoung >>

Featured Article

Toni Morrison's new novel, A MercyJane Zwart, professor of English at Calvin College, reviews Toni Morrison’s new novel, A Mercy, for Books and Culture magazine. "Indeed, A Mercy is a novel, to borrow from one its characters, about 'piecing together scraps' as 'a way to be in the world,' she writes. The review is part of Books and Culture's celebration of Black History Month.

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