Greek and Roman Sacrifice

Greek and Roman Animal Sacrifice, edited by Christopher Faraone and F.S. Naiden, is divided into four sections: modern treatments of sacrifice, Greek and Roman sacrificial practice, representations in visual arts, and sacrifice in Greek comedy and tragedy.Bruce Lincoln opens with an informative . . . . Continue Reading »

Sleepless in Silicon Valley

People who work in the tech industry pride themselves on their long hours and work ethics. It may backfire, warns Michael Thomsen.He cites studies that link sleep deprivation with declines in “divergent” thought, “weakened long-term memory, impaired decision-making . . . . Continue Reading »

Crime Rats

A tidbit from E.P. Evans’s Criminal Prosecution and the Capital Punishment of Animals(18-19).“It is said that Bartholomew Chassenee, a distinguished French jurist of the sixteenth century . . . made his reputation at the bar  as counsel for some rats, which had been put on . . . . Continue Reading »

Singing the City

Barbara Kowalzig (Singing for the Gods, 5) observes that “Choral song was everywhere in the Greek world, and even if we attempt to avoid the risk of viewing the entirety of Greek civilization through the choral lens, it is nevertheless clear that dancing in the Greek khoros was a ubiquitous, . . . . Continue Reading »

McCarthy’s Gnosticism

A TLS review of two books of the Cambridge Companion to Cormac McCarthy notes the hints of holiness in his novels:“Often in his work, however, there are residual glimmers of the numinous. McCarthy, who was raised a Roman Catholic, is often read as an unconventional religious writer, or . . . . Continue Reading »

Among Children

Stephen Walsh’s Musorgsky and His Circletells the story of the moguchaya kuchka the “Might Little Heap” of Russian intellectuals surrounding Musorgsky - César Cui, Alexander Borodin, Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov, and Mily Balakirev.In his TLS review of the book, Paul Griffiths . . . . Continue Reading »

What Happened in Waco?

Malcolm Gladwell’s lengthy essayon the Branch Davidians normalizes and humanizes a group that even to American Christians was a strange, unnerving cult. Gladwell presents a damning indictment of the FBI response to the extreme Adventist community that was destroyed near Waco in . . . . Continue Reading »

Chiasm of Defects

Trevaskis (Holiness, Ethics, and Ritual in Leviticus) proposes a chiastic outline of Leviticus 21-22:Priestly defects (Lev. 21.16-24) A. [4 defects] blind, lame, disfigured, an ‘overgrown limb’ (????) (v. 18) B. [2 defects] impaired leg, impaired hand (v. 19) C. [6 . . . . Continue Reading »

Theocracy and Toleration

Van Ruler is an advocate of “theocracy,” but he at the same time insists that toleration is “an absolute necessity in the state” (Calvinist Trinitarianism and Theocentric Politics, 186).It is necessary because every people is religiously mixed, because intolerance invariably . . . . Continue Reading »

Nature or Nurture?

Bad question, says Justin Barrett (Cognitive Science, Religion, and Theology, 26):“No aspect of our biological development, let along our cognitive development occurs without important contributions from both our biological endowment and our environment. Cells don’t divide and multiply . . . . Continue Reading »