the YALE LOGOS

an undergraduate journal of Christian thought.

search our writing:

How (Not) To Renew a City
New Creation, Arts & Culture The Yale Logos New Creation, Arts & Culture The Yale Logos

How (Not) To Renew a City

December 31, 2021 | by Amelia Dilworth BR’23

The Pruitt-Igoe housing projects sink into the ground one broken window at a time, sections of buildings falling in waves like rows of wounded soldiers faltering to their knees before collapsing in the rubble. Smoke rises from the ground, the same color as the crumbling gray walls. Apartments lay in the rubble ripped open like carcasses. Half-exploded buildings kneel in the remains of their brothers, awaiting destruction. 

This is St. Louis, Missouri. America is bombing its own city. 

Read More
Batter My Heart
Arts & Culture, New Creation The Yale Logos Arts & Culture, New Creation The Yale Logos

Batter My Heart

December 31, 2021 | Shi Wen Yeo MC ‘23

The famous English poet John Donne is said to have been so afraid of and obsessed about death that he, on multiple occasions, rehearsed his death by lying still in his hearse and having someone paint the dead likeness of him. Indeed, he was a poet of the English Renaissance, characterised by his polemic attitudes—in his youth, he wrote many famous erotic love poems yet moved to somber sermons in adulthood, and he even converted from the “salvation through works” Catholicism to “faith and works” Anglicanism to become an important preacher in the Church of England. Ostensibly, he was a troubled figure, full of personal vacillations and characterised by contradictions—not unlike many Christians today.

Read More
How Could Immortality Be Good?
Arts & Culture, New Creation The Yale Logos Arts & Culture, New Creation The Yale Logos

How Could Immortality Be Good?

December 31, 2021 | By Shayley Martin DC ‘22

In books and movies, immortality is generally a bad thing. We watch characters strive for it only to discover that life goes sour if prolonged. Even aside from practical issues like overpopulation and resource depletion, there’s a prevailing idea that human nature can’t stomach living forever. The end of a Netflix series called The Good Place captures this well: the occupants of paradise become so bored with the afterlife’s never-ending stream of pleasures that they rejoice when finally offered a chance to vanish from existence. The show concludes that fleetingness gives life its meaning.

Read More
Emotional Enlightenment
New Creation, Arts & Culture The Yale Logos New Creation, Arts & Culture The Yale Logos

Emotional Enlightenment

December 31, 2021 | By Hannah Turner, BK ‘23+1

​​The concepts Karl Marx did not grasp led to the downfall of communism, but may also lead to the magnification of our societal understanding. He believed that there must be an enlightenment of the proletariat for the realization of the bourgeoisie’s exploitation of them. A revolt would follow. Finally, once the proletariat is in control of the state, a communist society would be born. Everyone would live, “from each according to his ability, to each according to his need.”

Read More
What Christians Can Learn From (And Bring To) Mutual Aid
Arts & Culture The Yale Logos Arts & Culture The Yale Logos

What Christians Can Learn From (And Bring To) Mutual Aid

October 31, 2021 | By Shayley Martin DC ‘22

More and more nonprofits are questioning the charity model because it suggests a big power imbalance: wealthy donors versus poor recipients. Since charities rely on donors, they have to guard against valuing donors’ interests more highly than the needs of the people they want to help.

And they don’t always succeed.

Read More
The People Are A Temple
Arts & Culture The Yale Logos Arts & Culture The Yale Logos

The People Are A Temple

October 26, 2021 | By Jadan Anderson MC ‘22

And souls are candles, each lighting the other.

I read this short poem by Gennady Aygi, a Russian poet, in a class where I had hoped to build substantial relationships with my classmates as we discussed faith through the lens of poetry, and vice versa. Surprisingly, I’ve been building those relationships even more in my introductory Chinese class, in between our bad third tones and character-related short-term memory loss.

Read More

Upcoming Events:

  • Weekly Dinner Meetings

    TUESDAYS 5-7PM, BK North Court Seminar

    Discuss with us what it means to think Christianly and write for our publication.