the YALE LOGOS

an undergraduate journal of Christian thought.

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The Hardest Goodbye
Topical & Events The Yale Logos Topical & Events The Yale Logos

The Hardest Goodbye

May 27, 2022 | By Raquel Sequeira TD ’21.5

Over the past few years, I’ve been learning more about the traditional Church calendar. I learned from my audio devotional that today (Thursday, May 26, 2022) is the Feast of the Ascension: the day we celebrate Jesus’ return from life here on Earth to his Father in heaven. I’m not sure how we’re supposed to feel on Ascension Day, but I find that this remembrance is making me profoundly sad.

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For Whom the Bells Laugh
Lent 2022 The Yale Logos Lent 2022 The Yale Logos

For Whom the Bells Laugh

April 17, 2022 | by Aliénor Manteau H’23

Bells ring from Jerusalem’s church spires in the evenings. If you stand on tiptoe on the shower ledge of a hotel bathroom and look through the half-open skylight, or push open an unlocked door on the top floor of a restaurant and lean against an air vent on the roof, you can hear them ringing all over the city.

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Terror at the Cross, Transformed
Lent 2022 The Yale Logos Lent 2022 The Yale Logos

Terror at the Cross, Transformed

April 15, 2022 | By Jadan Anderson MC’22

On that Friday, we looked at Jesus on the cross and were appalled. From what did we avert our eyes?

With guilty relief and a strange sense of injustice, we try to grasp how in God’s just world this perfect Man would die our deaths. How could we look? How could we look away?

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What We Deserve
Lent 2022 The Yale Logos Lent 2022 The Yale Logos

What We Deserve

April 14, 2022 | By Katherine Matsukawa BK’23

“You did this to yourself.”

If you’ve ever been on the receiving end of this phrase, you likely know that this is the last thing anyone in a tough situation wants to hear.

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Peace Without Any Answers
Lent 2022, Personal & Longform The Yale Logos Lent 2022, Personal & Longform The Yale Logos

Peace Without Any Answers

April 13, 2022 | By Yoska Guta TD’25

Why do bad things happen to good people? Why does God allow evil? Where is God in the midst of suffering?

Growing up, my parents always taught me that it was okay, and even good, to ask questions about and of God. And although I wanted to believe them, I was convinced that if I questioned God’s character or His decisions, He would either meet me with wrath or be deeply disappointed. So, I made a subconscious decision to never question.

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