To be at home in the world

To be at home in the world

D. C. Schindler examines how rituals enable us to experience time in a meaningful way — how they actually make time habitable for us. (41 minutes)
How music blesses and teaches

How music blesses and teaches

FROM VOL. 64
Theologian and musician Jeremy Begbie explores what we learn about time, theology, and the structure of Creation from the experience of music. (28 minutes)
The amplification of distraction

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)
Immediately yours

Immediately yours

Todd Gitlin on the effect of media on our sense of time
When time loses its shape

When time loses its shape

Dorothy Bass explains how practicing a Christian way of living each day, week, and year helps to reorient us to time in ways that honor creation, our communities, and our embodied lives. (22 minutes)
A poet's relationship to time

A poet’s relationship to time

FROM VOL. 57
Poet Wilmer Mills (1969–2011) discusses how his agricultural and cross-cultural childhood in Brazil shaped his imagination and his relationship with modernity. (11 minutes)
The burden of creating meaning

The burden of creating meaning

George Parkin Grant on the insatiability of the modern will
Mars Hill Audio Journal, Volume 64

Mars Hill Audio Journal, Volume 64

FEATURED GUESTS: Paul Berman, Jean Bethke Elshtain, Hadley Arkes, Ralph C. Wood, and Jeremy Begbie
Mars Hill Audio Journal, Volume 57

Mars Hill Audio Journal, Volume 57

FEATURED GUESTS: John Hare, Clifford Putney, Andrei S. Markovits, Wilmer Mills, Steve Bruce, Colleen Carroll, Michael Budde, and Robert Brimlow
Mars Hill Audio Journal, Volume 42

Mars Hill Audio Journal, Volume 42

FEATURED GUESTS: Michael Kammen, Philip Fisher, John Horgan, William Dembski, Steven Garber, Dorothy Bass, Paul Vitz, J. Budziszewski, and David Aikman