Deep Down Things
Nicodemus, Doug Weaver
Pentecost 2012 issue.
Friday Links
with Seth Wieck, Jess Sweeney, and A sonnet for Ascension Day from Malcolm Guite
Join Dappled Things as an Associate Editor!
We are looking to add three new editors. Come work with us!
The benefits of leaving Ur
Thinking through the difficult question of whether to change parishes.
Friday Links
with Nick Ripatrazone, Stephen Schmalhofer at First Things , Joshua P. Hochschild on Caryll Houselander, Chris Beha, Ron Hansen, and Greg Wolfe at New York Encounter 2023, An interview with Benjamin Myers
The things we do for love
Anything worth doing is worth doing badly
Friday Links
with Collegium Institute, James Matthew Wilson, Christian Wiman & Gwendolyn Brooks, Tod Warner and Michael Stevens, Paul Pastor and Janille Stephens
Abiquiu
Amy Welborn on the mystery of doorways.
Confessing my Childhood: Carlos Eire’s Waiting for Snow in Havana
Join Collegium Institute and Dappled Things: A Quarterly of Ideas, Art, and Faith for our online Global Catholic Literature Seminar on Carlos Eire’s Waiting for Snow in Havana.
Friday Links
with Wendy Hoashi-Erhardt in Plough; a new book from Plough: The Gospel in Gerard Manley Hopkins; Anthony Esolen: Spring; and Megan Hunter-Kilmer on Servant of God Claire de Castelbajac
The Restoration of Romance
The poem makes no pretense of its intentions: “If I had three lives, I’d marry you in two.” Does the poet hold back this third life for one of self-absorption?
Friday Links
with Daniel Larson in Front Porch Republic, Christian Lorentzen, a review of Denys Turners’ Dante, The Theologian by Peter Blair and Sara Holston in Fare Foreward, Art, the Sacred, and the Common Good: Scala Foundation Conference 2023
Words enfleshed
Man prides himself on his abstractive ability, on his detachment from earth, on his noetic flight—until his bowels growl.
Friday Links
with B.D. McClay in Commonweal, Alan Jacobs in Hedgehog Review, Dana Gioia on Charles Baudelaire, Kevin Perrotta
Whatever You Do for the Least of My Brethren: Social Justice Starts at Home, and at Church
Neediness is a social sin in our society, treated as if it was leprosy. But Christians are supposed to give sacrificially to those in need.
Taxpayer-funded programs to help the needy would be much less needed if we all gave Christian love and care to the ones God has given us to love in our daily lives.
And shouldn't we be doing whatever we can to make sure nobody feels left out? Perhaps we should give sacrificially of our time and concern and friendship too?
The land of spices; something understood
Reading George Herbert’s The Temple with Michael Yost.
Friday Links
with Three poems for Good Friday from Plough, CUA Chamber Choir: Jan Dismas Zelenka – Miserere I, Black Catholic Messenger on Dom Chrysostom’s final vows, Mark Baker
Shark Tooth Hunting
“Let the anxieties, frustrations, doubts, dreads, dreams, fears, and plans ebb, ebb, and ebb. Fully present to the present. Fully alive to and aware of the moment. Conscious of and rejoicing at the incarnation of it all. The stuff-ness of life. The this-ness of it. Its particularity. Its physicality. Skin, rocks, shells, water, salt, heat, cold, wet, dry, bones. Teeth. And part of the joy, the delight in it, is the very waste of it. The excess. Its non-utilitarian function. I mean, who really needs several hundred fossilized shark teeth?”
Friday Links
with Numinous Strangers by Lisa Wells, The Camino Voyage Documentary, Greg Wolfe on Dante’s Indiana, Randy Boyagoda with Jennifer Frey, John Donne’s Holy Sonnet 14, and the winners of The Søren Kierkegaard Poetry contest
Announcing the winners of the Kierkegaard Poetry Competition
Announcing the winners of the Kierkegaard Poetry contest
For all of you who don’t want to write anymore
Welcome to the blessed rage