

Episode 819: Attuned to the World - Peter Leithart
8 snips Sep 10, 2025
Peter Leithart, President of Theopolis Institute and a thought leader in political theology, delivers an insightful lecture. He explores the tension between music and scripture in worship, revealing how liturgical music nurtures discipleship. Leithart discusses the philosophical implications of writing on memory and knowledge, contrasting it with the richness of oral traditions. He emphasizes the significance of scriptural records in the Bible and their essential role in Protestant worship, framing scripture as a vital guide for genuine faith.
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Bookishness Limits Liturgical Life
- Protestantism's bookishness can obstruct a full liturgical life by overemphasizing texts and analysis.
- Peter Leithart warns that being 'people of the book' risks neglecting embodied, communal worship.
Plato's Warning About Writing
- Leithart recounts Plato's Phaedrus myth where Thoth offers writing and King Thamos rejects it as causing forgetfulness.
- Plato argues writing gives the semblance of truth and weakens living memory and wisdom.
Writing Shifts Us Toward Left-Brain Bias
- Ian McGilchrist links alphabetic writing to left-brain dominance that fragments perception into parts and analysis.
- Leithart suggests this cultural shift fosters a rationalistic, closed, and atomizing mentality.