Wednesday, May 16, 2012
MARS HILL AUDIO CD Bonus

In the past when the MARS HILL AUDIO Journal came on both cassette and CD, CD subscribers would receive an additional interview at the end of the second CD of each issue which simply could not fit on a cassette. So, we provided these "bonus tracks" in MP3 format to cassette subscribers and to anyone else who might wish to listen to them.

We no longer produce the Journal on cassette, and since CDs and MP3s can fully support the length of the Journal, "bonus tracks" are unnecessary. The Journal is simply longer now. But we wanted to keep old "bonus tracks" online for those who might be interested in them and for those who want a sense of what the Journal is.

If you would like to join the thousands who are listening to the high quality, intelligent conversations found on the MARS HILL AUDIO Journal, you can subscribe to our bi-monthly publication in MP3 ($30) or CD ($48) form here. If you still need more convincing, you can request a complimentary demonstration issue of the Journal on CD or download an MP3 version of our sample edition here. Happy listening!

  • Vol. 96 - Kiku Adatto, on how the image of a person’s face in a photograph has the capacity for intimate representation of inner personhood.
  • Vol. 95 - William T. Cavanaugh, on how theology and economics are necessarily intertwined.
  • Vol. 94 - Maggie Jackson, on the importance of attentiveness in sustaining personal and social order; and Jeremy Begbie, on how music is a way of engaging with the order in Creation.
  • Vol. 93 - James A. Herrick, on evolution as a religion.
  • Vol. 92 - Craig Holdrege, on the "conversational" quality of our engagement with Creation.
  • Vol. 91 - Patrick Deneen, on how Wendell Berry’s thought demonstrates his identity as a “Kentucky Aristotelian.”
  • Vol. 90 - Gregory Reynolds, on lessons about reading from the study of media ecology.
  • Vol. 89 - Jerome Wakefield, on Loss of Sadness.
  • Vol. 88 - Diana Pavlac Glyer, on Owen Barfield; and Michael J. Lewis, on the meaning of the body in Western Art.
  • Vol. 87 - John Witte, Jr., on models of Church and State.
  • Vol. 86 - Norman Klassen & Jens Zimmermann, on the Incarnation and humanism.
  • Vol. 85 - Matthew Dickerson, on the glory of trees and the shepherdhood of ents.
  • Vol. 84 - Harry R. Lewis, on how colleges and universities can help students grow into adulthood.
  • Vol. 83 - Dick Keyes, on how the Bible encourages us to be suspicious in certain settings.
  • Vol. 82 - James K. A. Smith, on the relationship between experience and belief, between ideas and cultural events.
  • Vol. 81 - Nigel Cameron, on the deficiencies of much current debate on technology and ethics.
  • Vol. 80 - Calvin Stapert, on the sense of resolution, completion, and the sense of the goodness of creation in Mozart's music.
  • Vol. 79 - Roger Lundin, on the necessity of humility in the writing of biographies
  • Vol. 78 - Thomas de Zengotita, on postmodern individualism and "reality" TV
  • Vol. 77 - Alan Jacobs, with more on The Narnian: The Life and Imagination of C.S. Lewis
  • Vol. 76 - D. H. Williams, on the excluding character of Christian conversion
  • Vol. 75 - Eugene Peterson, on Gerard Manley Hopkins, taking time to worship, and learning the fear-of-the-Lord.
  • Vol. 74 - Paul Walker, with more on Thomas Tallis
  • Vol. 73 - John W. O'Malley, more on Four Cultures of the West
  • Vol. 72 - Wilfred McClay, on the theme of place and communal obligation in Nathaniel Hawthorne’s writing
  • Vol. 71 - Roger Lundin, on Milosz on exile & modern boundlessness
  • Vol. 70 - C. Ben Mitchell, on why and how the Church should be more welcoming toward the elderly
  • Vol. 69 - Barrett Fisher, on the history of very serious thinking about what makes something funny
  • Vol. 68 - Murray Milner, Jr., on how the choices of parents create the institutional framework for the lives of adolescents
  • Vol. 67 - Terence Nichols on how and why religion has become so privatized in America
  • Vol. 66 - Leon Kass, on how new technologies have changed the assumptions many people have about their children
  • Vol. 65 - Julian Johnson on music and the expectations of immediate gratification
  • Vol. 64 - Hadley Arkes on how the defense in the courts of the "right to privacy" has transformed thinking about law and rights in American society
  • Vol. 63 - James A. Herrick on Mormonism, gnosticism, and the significance of Luke Skywalker
  • Vol. 62 - Lilian Calles Barger on the need for community at a scale that encourages unplanned face-to-face interaction
  • Vol. 61 - John H. Timmerman author of Jane Kenyon: A Life, talks about how the late poet lived and worked
  • Vol. 60 - Russell Hittinger on the reasoning behind the upholding of a right to physician-assisted suicide in Compassion in Dying v. Washington
  • Vol. 59 - Adrienne Chaplin on the place and responsibilities of Christian artists in their communities
  • Vol. 58 - Bradley J. Birzer on how Tolkien understood the idea of myth
  • Vol. 57 - Wilmer Mills reads two of his poems: "Diary of a Piano Tuner's Wife" and "The Tent Delivery Woman's Ride"
  • Vol. 56 - Peter Augustine Lawler on "Bobos" and the end of history
  • Vol. 55 - Mark Noll on how the size of the North American continent affected its religious developments
  • Vol. 54 - Mark Henrie on film director Whit Stillman's approach to comedy
  • Vol. 53 - Dana Gioia talks about the life and work of Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, and reads a poem inspired by the death of his wife, "The Cross of Snow"
  • Vol. 52 - Ralph McInerny on natural theology and his mystery novels
  • Vol. 51 - Nigel Cameron on the obstacles and opportunities facing Christians concerned about bioethics
  • Vol. 50 - Glenn C. Arbery on how great literary works sustain their meaning
  • Vol. 49 - Ralph C. Wood on how Tolkien viewed the use and meaning of human language
  • Vol. 48 - Zygmunt Bauman author of Liquid Modernity, on the effect of this new sensibility on business, politics, and personal life
  • Vol. 47 - John Durham Peters on how the 19th century rise of new communications technologies was related to various forms of spiritualism

Last updated: 11/03/2010