the YALE LOGOS

an undergraduate journal of Christian thought.

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Love is the Thing with Lightning
Personal & Longform The Yale Logos Personal & Longform The Yale Logos

Love is the Thing with Lightning

Sept 15, 2020 | Raquel Sequeira TD ‘21+.5

The world always darkens before a storm. Not just the sky, but the air itself, as if someone has flipped the switch for dusk too early. Every blade of grass seems to inhale with excitement and fear. For me, that excitement and fear is partially a memory: of a violent wind sweeping from the yellow sky into the New Haven streets as raindrops begin to fall on me and the boy beside me; of darting into the library just as a tree branch crashes behind us; of my heart racing like the wind and my mind crackling like the lightning and every word I say filling the air between us like a cloud ready to burst. 

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Veronica
Bible & Theology The Yale Logos Bible & Theology The Yale Logos

Veronica

Sept 15, 2020 | Jadan Anderson MC ‘22

It might seem a bit absurd, given the dire situation of the nation and the greater world, to put out a journal themed around something so seemingly privileged. It is easy to think that wonder, in the sense of standing in awe of the beautiful, good, and enrapturing, is only afforded to those carefree with youth or leisure. Most others count it a luxury. 

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Wonder Women
Arts & Culture The Yale Logos Arts & Culture The Yale Logos

Wonder Women

Sept 15, 2020 | By Sharmaine Koh SM ‘22

When D.C.’s Wonder Woman hit the box offices in 2017, it was met with remarkable enthusiasm.  “Groundbreaking,” “Revolutionary,” “absolutely empowering!”: the first superhero movie with a female lead and a female director in more than a decade, the film revitalized an entertainment industry that has never been known for recognising female achievement. 

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What We Talk About When We Talk About Miracles
The Yale Logos The Yale Logos

What We Talk About When We Talk About Miracles

Sept 15, 2020 | By Serena Puang DC ‘22+1

In 2019, members of Bethel Church implored the world to join them in asking God to raise two-year-old Olive Heiligenthal from the dead. For six days, people gathered to pray, worship, and declare resurrection power over Olive, but she never woke up. 

Incidents like these and more everyday occurrences such as seemingly unanswered prayers for loved ones make it hard to trust accounts of miracles or even hope that they will come. Sometimes the seemingly unanswered prayer is waved off by the supplicant’s lack of faith. Alternatively, it is seen as proof that no higher being is listening. 

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To Boldly Go…
Arts & Culture The Yale Logos Arts & Culture The Yale Logos

To Boldly Go…

Sept 15, 2020 | By Ben Colón-Emeric TD ‘22

If you wanted to build the perfect future, what would you do? When the world was brought to a screeching halt by COVID-19, there was talk of dramatic change, institutional upheaval. But how does dramatic change come about? How can we rethink the systems that shape our lives? Imagine for a moment that you have infinite resources and total control over public policy. No longer must you decide if you’re going to trust your mother to cut your hair: the decisions you make can shape anything from world governance, to education, to the direction of scientific research. What future do you choose to build, and how do you get there? I, like many people, would be heavily influenced by the genre that has focused on the future for the better part of one-and-a-half centuries: science fiction.

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A Rumination with Reepicheep:  The Wonder of Animals
Bible & Theology The Yale Logos Bible & Theology The Yale Logos

A Rumination with Reepicheep:  The Wonder of Animals

Sept 14, 2020 | By Bella Gamboa JE ‘22

The room in the aquarium is darkened, each tank illuminated from a hidden source. Against the artificial blue background, a thin, pale filament drifts into view and is soon followed by the billowing body of a jellyfish. Contracting slightly, filling again with water, slowly moving. Yet it lacks a brain or recognizable organs, as it fills the viewer with undeniable wonder! This creature, unconscious yet an animal still; elusive, with some species practically immortal; delicate but painful or even dangerous to the touch. 

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