The current Friday Feature
duration 56:28
If you’re a member, you can select this (or any other) Friday Feature, and download it to our app for later listening. Here’s the listing of Features.
Latest wisdom from Sound Thinking
- The hospitality of the cross (and empty tomb)Hans Boersma on the divine transcendent warrant for our human responsibility to be hospitable
- Banquet invitations for the poorDavid and Ruth Rupprecht on Jesus’ command for radical hospitality
- Openness, welcome, listening to GodJean Vanier on the shape of love in community
- Reflecting God’s graciousness to strangersChristine Pohl on the character of hospitable communities
- Edith Stein and the power of spiritual autobiographiesFr. Pier Giorgio Pacelli, O.C.D. and Br. John-Mary Winter, O.C.D. on the fascinating mind and spiritual journey of Edith Stein
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Touchstone is a Christian journal, conservative in doctrine and eclectic in content, with editors and readers from each of the three great divisions of Christendom—Protestant, Catholic, and Orthodox. It provides a place where Christians of various backgrounds can speak on the basis of shared belief in the fundamental doctrines of the faith as revealed in Holy Scripture and summarized in the ancient creeds of the Church. The magazine features cultural criticism and editorials that tackle tough issues, learned and fresh Bible commentary, interviews, book reviews, news of the Church across denominational lines and around the globe, and more.
On this page, you can browse a listing of essays and lectures that Touchstone has made available as Features for Mars Hill Audio members.
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A recent Bonus Feature
In this lecture, Bishop Robert Barron explores the anthropological crisis at the heart of the modern university. A misanthropic and inherently unstable view of human nature comprised of ideas from Marx, Nietzsche, Foucault, and Sartre has estranged students from learning that aligns with a genuine human capacity to seek truth and experience wonder. The result is an intellectual life “transformed from a common search for truth into a contest of competing identities and narratives.” Barron praises Josef Pieper for recalling us away from a pedagogy of despair and toward a Christian humanism that addresses and honors the fullness of our being and of reality. Students today need this renewed vision, Barron argues. Pieper counters the reigning “pedagogy of despair” with “an alternative picture that rings truer” and that leads to real human flourishing.
The 18 most recent Conversations and Features we’ve released are described here.
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Our most recent Journal
Guests on Volume 167
- NICHOLAS CARR, author of Superbloom: How Technologies of Connection Tear Us Apart, on how social media affects our brains and our relationships
- THOMAS WARD, author of After Stoicism: Last Words of the Last Roman Philosopher, on Boethius — the Christian — and Stoicism
- JOSEPH STUART, author of Christopher Dawson: A Cultural Mind in the Age of the Great War, on Dawson’s forgotten legacy
- STEVEN KNEPPER & ROBERT WYLLIE, authors of Byung-Chul Han: A Critical Introduction, on key themes in the contemporary philosopher’s work
- EPHRAIM RADNER, author of Mortal Goods: Reimagining Christian Political Duty, on the flawed modern narrative of ‘‘betterment”
- ANDREW WILLARD JONES, author of The Church Against the State: On Subsidiarity and Sovereignty, on reality, friendship, and analogical participation











