Jacob Collier’s career became a celebration of unity and diversity without restrictions . . . This content is for Christ and Pop Culture members only. If you’d […]
Politics
Apostle and the Machinery of Religion: What Makes It Work?
I What makes religion work? This is a more complex question than it might first appear. A thoughtless answer is likely to give a knee-jerk […]
The Humane Vision of The Texas Chain Saw Massacre
I first saw Tobe Hooper’s The Texas Chain Saw Massacre under the best of possible circumstances. No more than sixteen years old, I was marooned […]
Explorations of Tribalism in Death Stranding, Sable, and Chants of Sennaar
These three unique takes on tribalism highlight the wide-ranging discourse that can be found in the modern gaming landscape . . . This content is for Christ […]
“All Things Change, Nothing Perishes”—The Body in Annihilation
Spoiler Alert: This article contains mild spoilers for the book and movie Annihilation. It’s been a long time since I’ve read a book in just […]
Coming Soon: A CAPC Exploration of Tribalism in Our Divisive Age
We’re heading into what certainly seems like the most fraught election in United States history—a sensation due in large part to the divisive and tribalistic […]
Living for Truth in the Age of AI
In 1999’s The Matrix, Morpheus (Laurence Fishburne) brings the newly freed Neo (Keanu Reeves) up to speed with a history lesson. At some point in […]
The Grace of Phantom Pain
I dread mornings. I wake to a world without my daughter in it. Jess died nine years ago. She was twenty-six. Many bereaved parents know […]
Midnight ’til One Belongs to the Dead: Hauntology in The Fog
Our actions reveal what our speech by itself cannot. The Fog is one of John Carpenter’s greatest accomplishments. Its story is elegant in its simplicity, […]
The Life Wildcat Saves May Be Your Own
“An outline would be helpful at this point,” an editor warns the young Flannery O’Connor (Maya Hawke) in Wildcat. And viewers might feel the same […]