The current Friday Feature

read more

duration 31:22

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.


Latest wisdom from Sound Thinking


“I’m not a member yet. Convince me that it’s worth it.”

  1. AUDITION some of the features on our Listen for free page (over 15 hours of listening).
  2. READ our mission statement and some testimonials.
  3. BROWSE the various sections of our catalog to see how much you’re missing.
  4. SCROLL down on the Meet our Guests page to see if you recognize anyone.
  5. SIGN UP here.


The religion of modernity

Politics of virtue

An impoverished anthropology

The dictatorship of relativism


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 2015 lecture, David L. Schindler (1943–2022) explores the implications for a civilization that discards the reality that being is grounded in God. American culture is profoundly shaped, he says, by a logic that leads to the abstraction of creature from its Creator and therefore to the loss of its creaturely telos. Schindler argues that a shift from a symbolical to a non-symbolical understanding of being fundamentally changes the nature of human experience in the world. It also implies an “absent God,” a position that is not metaphysically neutral. The way that a culture “images” God thus has profound consequences, which Schindler explores at length.

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 168

  • BRIAN BROCK, author of Some New World: Myths of Supernatural Belief in a Secular Age, on science as a human endeavor  
  • FR. LUKE BELL, author of author of Truth in Person, on the relational nature of knowing truth 
  • PETER HARRISON, author of Some New World: Myths of Supernatural Belief in a Secular Age, on science as a human endeavor 
  • KATHERINE CALLOWAY, contributor to Art Seeking Understanding, on Francis Bacon, George Herbert, and poetic knowledge 
  • BRENT STRAWN, contributor to Art Seeking Understanding, on poetry as Divine discourse in the Old Testament 
  • PETROC WILLEY, author of Light from Alexandria: Recovering a Vision for Christian Paideia for Education & Formation, on spiritual formation in the early Alexandrine church 

Preview: