released 8/1/2025
Ken Myers introduces listeners to our guests on Volume 165 of the Journal, released on this date. Enjoy a sample of each interview: Jeffrey Bilbro on how we read, write, and share words in ways that support community; Daniel McInerny on art as mimesis; Joseph Minich on why Christianity doesn’t “feel like” reality to many today; Carl Elliott on whistleblowers and institutional culture; Nadya Williams on seeing human beings as image-bearers; and Don W. King on C. S. Lewis’s brother, Warren Hamilton Lewis. Mars Hill Audio members can enjoy listening to these conversations in their entirety on Volume 165.
32 minutes
PREVIEW
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Related reading and listening
- Williams, Nadya — FROM THE GUEST PAGE: Nadya Williams, PhD, is a homeschooling mother, books editor, and author.
- Showing as meaning — Daniel McInerny on how the arts convey meaning
- The temptations of talismanic technologies — Jeffrey Bilbro on the persistence of techno-utopianism
- Mars Hill Audio Journal, Volume 165 — FEATURED GUESTS: Jeffrey Bilbro, Daniel McInerny, Joseph Minich, Carl Elliott, Nadya Williams, and Don W. King
- Living in a tool-i-fied world — Joseph Minich on how the ubiquity of technology makes atheism entirely plausible
- Archaic, but still compelling — Carl Elliott on the persistence of honor as a motivation for speaking out
- Still connected to the land — Nadya Williams on the inescapably earthy character of human flourishing
- The amplification of distraction — FROM VOL. 152 Jeffrey Bilbro advocates a Christian posture toward our contemporary digital media ecosystem that addresses its disorienting and disintegrating effects. (23 minutes)
- The reciprocity of all things — FROM VOL. 148 Jeffrey Bilbro explores the importance of sustainability through the essays, poetry and fiction of Wendell Berry. (13 minutes)
- What are students for? — FROM VOL. 140 Drawing from Wendell Berry’s works, Jack Baker and Jeffrey Bilbro discuss a vision of higher education that respects a multidimensional notion of place. (23 minutes)
- “The greatest works of art are endless” — Daniel McInerny argues that more robust reflection about how we attend to art enables us to discover deeper meaning in it and to experience greater sensory and intellectual joy. (16 minutes)
- Medical tools and the shaping of identity — C. Ben Mitchell and Carl Elliott examine how we form judgments about bioethical questions, and how various medical capabilities form us. (27 minutes)
- Bilbro, Jeffrey — FROM THE GUEST PAGE: Jeffrey Bilbro is Associate Professor of English at Grove City College and Editor-in-Chief at the Front Porch Republic.
- Elliott, Carl — FROM THE GUEST PAGE: Carl Elliott trained in medicine before completing a PhD in philosophy. He is currently a professor of philosophy at the University of Minnesota.
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