Russell Shaw Discusses Writing the Way

“I guess all of us live a double life in a sense or at least we are tempted in that direction.  We split our lives in two between the religious part and the everday part.  Escriva’s message is that it is all meant to hang together as a life lived in the service of God and other . . . . Continue Reading »

A Question of Intergenerational Justice

The writers of the recent  A Call for Intergenerational Justice have come Late to the Debt Party , writes David Mills in his “On the Square” column today. The writers, representing the Evangelical Left, have issued a vague statement that for the first time takes seriously the . . . . Continue Reading »

Y’all Come

Readers of this blog who live in the greater Atlanta metropolitan area (is there anywhere in North Georgia to which this appellation does not apply?) might enjoy the following two events, taking place at Oglethorpe University on Monday, March 14 (today). At 4 p.m., Professor Michael DeBow of the . . . . Continue Reading »

Psalms 128 and 88: promise and affliction

In my ongoing Genevan Psalter project, I have just completed versifications and arrangements for two more psalms: 128 and 88. The tune for Psalm 128 I first heard more than 30 years ago when I was a graduate student at Toronto’s Institute for Christian Studies. Senior Member Calvin Seerveld . . . . Continue Reading »

Jane Eyre: the Movie

Bottom Line: the new Jane Eyre film is the best movie adaptation yet, but has some serious flaws.My wife loves Jane Eyre enough to have named a daughter Jane. It is my favorite English novel and saved our marriage from my Wuthering Heights view of romance.This our twenty-fifth anniversary and we . . . . Continue Reading »