In the image of an Imaginer
Dorothy L. Sayers on the inevitability of analogical language about God (and everything else)
Teaching for wonderfulness
Stratford Caldecott on why education is about how we become more human, and therefore more free
A George MacDonald symposium
Excerpts from four interviews talking about the work of George MacDonald: Michael Di Fuccia, Marianne Wright, David Fagerberg, and Daniel Gabelman. (28 minutes)
George MacDonald on the imagination
Readings from two essays by George MacDonald about how the human imagination is “made in the image” of God's imagination. (20 minutes)
The story of the demotion of stories
Malcolm Guite on the Enlightenment’s rash dismissal of poetic knowledge
Faith born of wonder
Theologian Andrew Davison echoes a theme in the work of G. K. Chesterton, describing the work of apologetics as awakening a sense of wonder in the reality of Creation as a beautiful gift. (23 minutes)
How myth speaks to deep desires in the human heart
Rolland Hein explains that George MacDonald is a writer of myth functioning rightly, and that such myth affects people a-rationally, stirring something in them much deeper than intellect or emotion alone. (15 minutes)
Thomas Howard on Charles Williams
From a 1995 interview, literary scholar Thomas Howard describes the texture and depth of the “metaphysical thrillers” of Charles Williams. (16 minutes)
Mars Hill Audio Journal, Volume 144
FEATURED GUESTS:
Jonathan Mcintosh, Kevin Vost, Malcolm Guite, R. David Cox, Grant Brodrecht, and Peter Bouteneff
On children’s literature and gardening
Vigen Guroian discusses profound fairy tales and the pleasures of gardening. (20 minutes)
Alison Milbank: Imaginative Apologetics beyond C. S. Lewis
Alison Milbank offers an approach to defending the Christian faith that restores the imagination as a faculty inseparable from reason. (61 minutes)
Mary Midgley, R.I.P.
Philosopher Mary Midgley (1919–2018) was a tireless critic of the reductionist, atomistic claims of modern science. (16 minutes)
Vigen Guroian: “Awakening the Moral Imagination: Teaching Virtues through Fairy Tales”
Vigen Guroian contrasts the features of character and virtue with those of what is more modernly called “values,” and examines how these different approaches to moral consideration reflect conflicting ways of understanding self-formation. (48 minutes)
Mars Hill Audio Journal, Volume 109
FEATURED GUESTS: Douglas Coupland, Charles Mathewes, William T. Cavanaugh, William Dyrness, Steven Guthrie, and Susannah Clements
Mars Hill Audio Journal, Volume 107
FEATURED GUESTS: Victor Lee Austin, Ellen T. Charry, Anthony Esolen, Ferdinand Schlingensiepen, Allen Verhey, and Calvin Stapert
Mars Hill Audio Journal, Volume 103
FEATURED GUESTS: Steven D. Smith, David Thomson, Adam McHugh, Glenn C. Arbery, Eric Miller, and Eric Metaxas
Alan Jacobs on The Narnian
Alan Jacobs discusses C. S. Lewis’s view of the imagination and his deep conviction that the shaping of the conscience requires the training of the imagination. (53 minutes)
Mars Hill Audio Journal, Volume 76
FEATURED GUESTS: D. H. Williams, Catherine Edwards Sanders, Ted Prescott, Martin X. Moleski, Stephen Prickett, and Barrett Fisher
The arts and public funding
Ken Myers answers a letter from a high school student asking about whether Christians should support the idea of federal funding for the arts.
