The current Friday Feature

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If you’re a member, you can select this (or any other) Friday Feature, and download it to our app for later listening. Here’s the listing of Features.


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  1. AUDITION some of the features on our Listen for free page (over 15 hours of listening).
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Literature in its fullness

Classics & “greatness of soul

A fully human farewell

Virgil & purposeful history


Meet one of our Partners

Under the guidance of Dr. Jason M. Baxter, the Center for Beauty and Culture at Benedictine College (Atchison, Kansas) promotes an integrated vision of beauty, studying beauty in all of its possible manifestations: in the visual arts, in music, poetry, the natural world, and within human the human soul. Each year the Center for Beauty and Culture offers a select number of “Angelico Fellowships” to incoming freshmen at Benedictine College. Named after the priest-painter, Blessed Fra Angelico, Angelico Fellows believe in the holiness of beauty and the beauty of holiness. 

The Center for Beauty and Culture has collaborated with Paul Kingsnorth, Jonathan Pageau, Sir James MacMillan, as well as with Glenn Arbery. Future collaborations will include D.C. Schindler.

On this page, you can browse a listing of lectures that the Center for Beauty and Culture has made available as Features for Mars Hill Audio members.

Click here to see news from all our Partners


A recent Bonus Feature

In this November 2025 lecture, Glenn Arbery draws on the work of Louise Cowan and several key phenomenologists to explore how lyric poetry works to reveal essential insights into human and transcendent experience. Using various poems as examples, Arbery traces lyric poetry’s ability to illuminate what Jacques Maritain refers to as the inner beings of things and of people. He wonders whether, in our increasingly technological age, this form of literature is precisely what we need to be awakened from dead language into a revelatory relation to the given world. Lyric unlocks the secrets that we need to recover.

If you’re not yet a member, you can get a free Visitor’s Pass and listen to hours of free audio. Details are here.


Our most recent Journal

Guests on Volume 167

  • NICHOLAS CARR, author of Superbloom: How Technologies of Connection Tear Us Apart, on how social media affects our brains and our relationships  
  • THOMAS WARD, author of After Stoicism: Last Words of the Last Roman Philosopher, on Boethius — the Christian — and Stoicism 
  • JOSEPH STUART, author of Christopher Dawson: A Cultural Mind in the Age of the Great War, on Dawson’s forgotten legacy 
  • STEVEN KNEPPER & ROBERT WYLLIE, authors of Byung-Chul Han: A Critical Introduction, on key themes in the contemporary philosopher’s work 
  • EPHRAIM RADNER, author of Mortal Goods: Reimagining Christian Political Duty, on the flawed modern narrative of ‘‘betterment” 
  • ANDREW WILLARD JONES, author of The Church Against the State: On Subsidiarity and Sovereignty, on reality, friendship, and analogical participation 

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