microblog
Thomas Watson has some good advice on how to read and search the Scriptures.
This is my former professor, W. Robert Godfrey, as drawn by my seven-year-old. Note the handsome striped tie. He’s giving a lecture on the ancient church, in case you can’t tell.
It’s been fifteen months since the accident. But after many repairs, Matt Haimovitz is getting his cello back. No more waiting, but now, it’s like watching a loved one come out of a coma.
No school today and it was raining. So while the ground was easier to dig, the kids expanded our backyard rainbasin.
I’m bad about overusing the word like. The Linguistic Evolution of ‘Like’ helps explain why.
This one is for @MichaelHorton_:
“Connected with this general view are the facts that he “learned obedience by the things which he suffered,” his “strong crying” and “tears,” the fact at the “entreated,” that he “was heard” and that he was God-fearing.” These things are a marvelously constructed drama dealing with us.”
💬 Gregory of Nazianzus, Oration 30.6
Charm, writes Joseph Epstein, is “a disappearing luxury”. Which is sad because charm makes our world brighter, lighter, and sweeter. Perhaps it’s not too late?
The dictionaries won’t tell you this, but when a scream and squeak have a baby, it’s called a screak. A screak is the high-pitched sound an un-oiled hinge makes when you open it. It’s the sound that gives you goosebumps when a fork scratches a plate the wrong way. And it’s also the sound my youngest makes to entertain herself.
If you do work that benefits your community, you can dramatically increase your impact by collaborating with other helpers. Learn more about the collaborative impact approach. It’s important.
I’m trying to get faster at arranging a little pile of Hebrew Strong Verbs into a chart. I give myself bonus points when the kitten is involved.
It’s #NationalPoetryDay and my son, Samuel, is about to turn twelve. Time moves so fast! Here he is reciting a poem shortly after his third birthday. So precious! I love my son! ❤️
I’m learning Latin so that I can read untranslated books. But, as this video shows, there are many good reasons to learn Latin.
The U. S. economy is massive. The GDP for just the Tucson metro area—where I live—was $39 billion in 2017. If we were a country, according to the same data sets used in the article, we’d rank right behind Tunisia in GDP.
Wouldn’t it be great if you could read an conversation between Bryan A. Garner and David Foster Wallace about language and writing? Well, you can! It’s called Quack This Way. I finished it this morning, and it‘s as good as it sounds.