Author: Fred Sanders

  • Retirement Plan: Staring at Everything

    One of my favorite G. K. Chesterton Poems, entitled “A Second Childhood.” When all my days are ending And I have no song to sing, I think that I shall not be too old To stare at everything; As I stared once at a nursery door Or a tall tree and a swing. Wherein God’s…

  • Dragon Attack!

    St. George: Distract him, li’l Bullet Head! Li’l Bullet Head: Booga booga! Booga booga! Looky here! Dragon: Check out all of my majesty! St. George: Ha! Smiting shall I smite thee, and smitten shalt thou be! Dragon: rrrrRRRAWRrr! Li’l Bullet Head: Your consummate Vs can’t save you now! St. George: Where are all the dragons?…

  • Thinking in Commentary

    It is hard for people today to respect commentary as an actual exercise of the intellect. We can’t help thinking that great minds, when engaged in worthwhile thinking, must surely strike out on their own. If you want ideas, you should look to modes of thought such as argument, analysis, persuasion, polemic, enquiry, or advocacy,…

  • “I swear that boy goes through jeans like he was wearing sandpaper underwear!”

    I wouldn’t believe this if it didn’t come straight from the prolific and estimable Ben Witherington. He has been working hard equipping churches to respond intelligently to the DaVinci Code as the movie release draws near. On his blog he reports that Andy Griffith and Ron Howard recently chatted about the movie: …I was privy…

  • Augustine on History

    Augustine’s City of God is a thick brick of a book, provoked by the troubled geopolitics of late imperial Rome, but ranging over all of human history and, before it’s over, providing the first classic attempt at a full-fledged Christian philosophy of history. The book’s cultural and political legacy is equally vast, as it has…

  • Big Red Knight

    Title: Untitled (#2,621 in a series) Artist: Freddy Size: 11″ x 17″ Medium: Marker on high-acid paper Provenance: Southern California, early 21st century Now in the collection of: Private owner The paintings of the artist known only as Freddy reflect, especially during his ongoing “knights” period, reflect the influence of the 11th century Bayeux tapestry…

  • Updike Poke at Feckless Profs

    From John Updike’s The Carpentered Hen, published 1958. Professor Varder handles Dante With wry respect; while one can see It’s all a lie, one must admit The “beauty” of the “imagery.” Professor Varder slyly smiles, Describing Hegel as a “sage;” But still, the man has value—he Reflects the “temper” of his “age.” Montaigne, Tom Paine,…

  • Who is the Holy Spirit?

    Who is the Holy Spirit? What is his characteristic personhood, which distinguishes him from the Father and the Son? How is it that he isn’t simply interchangeable with the ascended Jesus Christ, or on the other hand interchangeable with the invisible Father, or on the other other hand, identical with the one divine essence? He…

  • Søren Tender from Fearen Trembling

    Thoughts after six hours of discussing Søren Kierkegaard’s beautiful, terrible little book Fear and Trembling, which puts forward Abraham as “the knight of faith,” who is greater than all the wise and strong of the world: great with that power whose strength is powerlessness, great in that wisdom whose secret is folly, great in that…

  • God Died on the Cross

    Charles Wesley wrote: O Love divine, what has thou done! The immortal God hath died for me! —which is a bold thing to say, because it claims so much. “God…died.” The Bible itself says it that bluntly in a few places, such as Acts 20:28, “God purchased the church with his own blood.” This is…

  • Teddy Bear Sunflower

    . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Lean to me, Teddy, As brown as the line of earth, As I lean to you. The marker runs out Burnt umber, then sepia, At last, sienna. The negative space Into…

  • What the Resurrection Proves

    What the resurrection proves is more important than proving the resurrection. R. A. Torrey (1856-1928), at the height of his fame as world-traveling evangelist, published a book called The Bible and its Christ. Of the book’s ten chapters, the first four provided reasons for believing the Bible to be God’s word, the next four were…