A Carl F. H. Henry Center Partner Feature

released 10/14/2025

In this May 2024 lecture, Christina Bieber Lake explains how poetry is an invitation to experience the beauty and goodness of Creation as gift. There is no substitute, she says, for what the literary arts can do: reveal the wonder and form of the world and help people to slow down and become receptive to it. Drawing on the work on Hans Urs von Balthasar and Harmut Rosa, Lake argues that man is most himself when he responds in fitting form to revealed truth, goodness, and beauty. Poetry, as all art, is an experience, not an argument; as such, it invites us to “taste and see” what is wonderful. When we slow down and open ourselves to poetic experience, we experience a possibility of transformation that might enlarge and enliven our souls. This call to a poetic, rather than a prosaic, life is only ever available to us in the present moment.

This lecture is provided courtesy of the Carl F. H. Henry Center for Theological Understanding.

44 minutes

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