Isaac Hans, photographer, is the
Winter 2024 Feature Artist in
Anselm Society's new column.
Viewing entries in
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Isaac Hans, photographer, is the
Winter 2024 Feature Artist in
Anselm Society's new column.
Pages, Pints, and Pours pairs
a legendary drink with a
foodie-actor’s memoir.
Hope, like a candle in a window,
can draw travelers out of the
dark into the light of Christ.
The story goes like this. A
woman got brave and started a
book club. How did it turn out?
(You can read all about it here.)
Christina Brown on the poet’s—
and our—cathedral-shaped
journey toward union with God.
Painting as a Pastime by the
great Churchill: really? Yes,
and Queen Mum loved her
Drinkypoo (recipe included)
Gianna Soderstrom
muses on the ministry of second
breakfasts -- and the power of
inviting others into our homes.
Creating alongside others
for half a day is a sweet hint of
heaven. Elisa Lambert shows
us how to make it happen.
Read a review on Ted Hughes’s Poetry in the Making and pair it with a Breakfast Martini (recipe included).
There is an inextricable link between joy and being known.
You heard you’re not supposed to love the world. You heard wrong.
Read a review on Annie Dillard’s The Writing Life and pair it with a High Tide (recipe included).
Read a review on Neil Postman’s Amusing ourselves to Death and pair it with a comfort collins (recipe included).
You’re too busy, too tired, and too distracted. But that doesn’t need to be the end of the story.
Read a review on Robert Farrar Capon’s The Supper of the Lamb and pair it with a Sweet Martini (recipe included).
Read a review on Francis Schaeffer’s Art and the Bible nd pair it with a homemade hot cocoa (recipe included)!
What to read? What to sip while reading? Annie Nardone answers both questions in this piece on how to pair books and beverages.
Read a review on Madeleine L’Engle’s Walking on Water and pair it with a proper pot of tea (recipe included)!
A threefold theology of how to fix our relationship with material reality.
Paintings, sculptures, and murals once pointed to godliness, says scholar John Skillen. Could it happen again?