the YALE LOGOS

an undergraduate journal of Christian thought.

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(The) Divine Sight
Bible & Theology The Yale Logos Bible & Theology The Yale Logos

(The) Divine Sight

Sept 14, 2020 | By Timothy Han SM ‘22+1

Lodged at the heart of the New Testament’s first book, the first version of the Christ story one encounters, is a thorny passage about the accessibility of God. After another of Christ’s sermons via parable, the disciples ask Jesus, “Why do you speak to them in parables?”

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Beholding Mystery:&nbsp; Tintoretto’s Last Supper</em> and Magnifying the Divine
Arts & Culture The Yale Logos Arts & Culture The Yale Logos

Beholding Mystery:  Tintoretto’s Last Supper and Magnifying the Divine

Sept 14, 2020 | By Sharla Moody BK ‘22

Upon the first viewing, Tintoretto’s Last Supper is wholly disorienting. The painting is a conglomeration of people, color, and mystery grouped under a title that immediately ties it to da Vinci’s older, more famous depiction of the same event. But Tintoretto imagines a less formal, more enigmatic scene. Like da Vinci’s painting, Christ is still central, but the rest of the painting crowds in on all sides, overwhelming the eye and mind. There are angels! And a cat! And so many people!

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When Wonder Is Not Enough
Topical & Events The Yale Logos Topical & Events The Yale Logos

When Wonder Is Not Enough

Sept 14, 2020 | By Bradley Yam SY ‘20

It moves us not. Great God! I’d rather be 

A Pagan suckled in a creed outworn; 

So might I, standing on this pleasant lea, 

Have glimpses that would make me less forlorn; 

Have sight of Proteus rising from the sea; 

Or hear old Triton blow his wreathèd horn.

– Wordsworth, The World is Too Much With Us

With a pithy sestet Wordsworth summarizes the wonder of the wilderness wrapped in mythological glory: Proteus rising from the sea, Triton blowing his horn. Wordsworth wrote during the Industrial Revolution when the divisions between the civilized city and the natural wilderness became sharply defined.

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Broken Bridges of a Beautiful World
Bible & Theology The Yale Logos Bible & Theology The Yale Logos

Broken Bridges of a Beautiful World

Sept 14, 2020 | By Daniel Chabeda ES ‘22

The natural world is beautiful. On a grand scale, the mountains arch toward the sky in their millennia-long and mile-high morning stretch. On the smallest scale, quantum theory invites us into a nanoscopic world where particles can teleport (quantum teleportation), exist in multiple places at once (quantum superposition), and physically pass through other objects (quantum tunneling). The most powerful microscopes in existence today, Scanning Tunneling Microscopes, are able to clearly resolve individual atoms to show us that even the quantum world is visually stunning.

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Love Thy Neighbor
Topical & Events The Yale Logos Topical & Events The Yale Logos

Love Thy Neighbor

Sept 13, 2020 | By Shi Wen Yeo MC ‘23

It was just after midnight last night. There were raucous shouts coming from Cross Campus. I craned my neck out the window and beheld throngs of college students mere inches from each other, merry-making, to celebrate the end of their two-week quarantine. I can almost imagine the conversations going on (at a distance of less than six feet, of course). “I was SO bored during quarantine. I want to live the full, real college life that I deserve, not this subpar quarantined version.”

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