Democrat Paradise

Though it appeared in May, I just had opportunity to read Jonathan Franzen’s New Yorker story, “Agreeable.” It seems to me that Franzen could be seen as something like the heir to Updike, not as a stylist, but in terms of his commentary on suburban, middle-class America. This story is a snapshot of Patty, a…

Hitchens’ Faith

Amid the hype over Christopher Hitchens’ ‘memoir,’ Hitch 22, I think Ian Buruma’s review in the New York Review of Books nails it. Entitled “The Believer,” Buruma’s rightly notes the provincialism of Hitchens’ supposedly contrarian and cosmopolitan perspective. But most importantly, he points out the fundamentalist irrationalism lurking behind Hitchens’ black-and-white universe wherein anything “religious”…

Wilde Theology

“In every sphere of life, form is the beginning of things. […] Forms are the food of faith, cried Newman in one of those great moments of sincerity that made us admire and know the man. […] The Creeds are believed, not because they are rational, but because they are repeated.” ~Oscar Wilde, “The Critic…

What I’m Listening To: Edward Sharpe & the Magnetic Zeros

I have to thank my brother-in-law, Luke, for putting me onto a new favorite: Edward Sharpe & the Magnetic Zeros, specifically “Up from Below” (get the deluxe version with bonus tracks and video if you can). What whimsical profundity; what lighthearted sobriety; what cheerful terror; what enchanting haunting! Their sound emerges from a delightful array…

Thinking in Tongues / Science and the Spirit

Well, I got to see my first, real live copy of Thinking in Tongues: Pentecostal Contributions to Christian Philosophy this week–in the bookstore at here Regent College in Vancouver. (I’m out here teaching a two-week course, which has been delightful.) As usual, Eerdmans has done a great job of design–I think it’s really sharp. They’ve…