The formation of affections

The formation of affections

FROM VOL. 101
James K. A. Smith explains how education always involves the formation of affections and how the form of Christian education should imitate patterns of formation evident in historic Christian liturgy. (15 minutes)
Smith, James K. A.

Smith, James K. A.

FROM THE GUEST PAGE: James K. A. Smith is Professor of Philosophy at Calvin University, where he holds the Gary & Henrietta Byker Chair in Applied Reformed Theology and Worldview.
To renounce the world

To renounce the world

James K. A. Smith on baptism’s rebuke of disordered cultural life
Mars Hill Audio Journal, Volume 123

Mars Hill Audio Journal, Volume 123

FEATURED GUESTS: Nicholas M. Healy, Christian Smith, James K. A. Smith, Esther Lightcap Meek, Richard Viladesau, and Jeremy Begbie
Mars Hill Audio Journal, Volume 121

Mars Hill Audio Journal, Volume 121

FEATURED GUESTS: Daniel Gabelman, Curtis White, Michael Hanby, Alan Jacobs, James K. A. Smith, Bruce Herman, and Walter Hansen
Mars Hill Audio Journal, Volume 101

Mars Hill Audio Journal, Volume 101

FEATURED GUESTS: James Davison Hunter, Paul Spears, Steven Loomis, James K. A. Smith, Thomas Long, and William T. Cavanaugh
The Vocation of Knowledge: Higher Education and the Difference Christ Makes

The Vocation of Knowledge: Higher Education and the Difference Christ Makes

Mark Noll (The Future of Christian Learning), Norman Klassen & Jens Zimmermann, (The Passionate Intellect: Incarnational Humanism and the Future of University Education),and James K. A. Smith explore the nature of Christian education. (78 minutes)
Mars Hill Audio Journal, Volume 82

Mars Hill Audio Journal, Volume 82

FEATURED GUESTS: Stephen Gardner, Elisabeth Lasch-Quinn, Wilfred McClay, David Wells, James K. A. Smith, and Robert Littlejohn