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The Full Table

Welcome to The Full Table

A Welcome to Our Readers

Welcome to The Full Table! As with any new endeavor, readers naturally have questions. We hope this inaugural post offers clarity 鈥 and an invitation.

鈥淭hat house was, as Bilbo had long ago reported, 鈥榓 perfect house, whether you like food or sleep, or storytelling or singing, or just sitting and thinking best, or a pleasant mixture of them all.鈥 Merely to be there was a cure for weariness, fear, and sadness.鈥
-The Fellowship of the Ring

Sylvan Heights Bird Park (Around Town)

Details about the Sylvan Heights Bird Park including ways that you can leverage the experience to engage in meaningful conversations with your child(ren) around the experience, helping to equip them with an enduring faith.

Green Hills County Park (Around Town)

Details about Green Hills County Park including ways that you can leverage the experience to engage in meaningful conversations with your child(ren) around the experience, helping to equip them with an enduring faith.

Around Town – Table of Contents

This post collects all of the Around Town posts on one page, helping you identify activities you can engage in around town (Raleigh) with your family. Furthermore, posts also seek to provide ways that you can leverage the experience to help point your child to Truth, Goodness, and Beauty, seeking to equip them with faith that endures.

Why another site? What makes this different?

As classical Christian educators, contributors to The Full Table regularly think deeply about meaningful questions and engage in rich conversations with colleagues. Out of these dialogues came the idea for a platform that could extend these conversations 鈥 and invite others to begin similar ones within their own communities.

This site seeks to be distinctive by:

  • Featuring articles written exclusively by educators devoted to shaping the next generation through the Christian faith and the classical tradition.
  • Exploring topics that inspire contemplation, from philosophical reflections, to lively debates, (wait until you see our Narnia series!) to practical applications of classical Christian education in daily life.
  • Maintaining a consistent voice of thoughtfulness while allowing each author鈥檚 personality to shine through.

 

Why The Full Table?

A variety of names were considered, as with any name it needs to convey the intent. When considering the aims of this site, we envisioned a table 鈥 overflowing not just with food but with companionship, conversation, and joy. This idea of a full table has long echoed throughout classical works:

  • The quintessential 鈥渇ull table鈥 scene in Leonardo da Vinci鈥檚 The Last Supper.
  • The jolly merriment that is found in The Happy Family by Jan Steen or the more raucous conversation of Supper at Emmaus by Caravaggio.
  • The Coffee Cantata by Bach portrays a livelier table scene than the depiction of a banquet in Alexander鈥檚 Feast by Handel.
  • The banquets throughout the work of Shakespeare, throughout the Fellowship of the Ring, and the fellowship throughout The Canterbury Tales.

What will we write about?

The Full Table will grow and adapt over time, but we begin with three main themes:

  • Classical Education
  • Enduring Faith
  • Great Works Reflections

Each submission will ultimately include various 鈥渢ags鈥 for themes throughout these main categories, mirroring the classical ideal that knowledge is best interwoven, not kept in silos. The goal with tags is to create some semblance of order amidst the spaghetti strands that connect various reflections.

 

What is the connection to 91制片厂?

This blog is representative of The Full Table of conversations, fellowship, and musings that happen daily amongst the community of staff at 91制片厂, but is not representative of the views or opinions of the Academy, the Directors, or any employees of the Academy (view full disclaimer here).

So, as the hobbits discovered at the Last Homely House east of the Sea, we hope your visits to The Full Table offer 鈥渁 cure for weariness, fear, and sadness鈥 and become a place of rest, reflection, and joy among friends. We are grateful you have joined us and hope you are a frequent guest at our table.

  • All
  • Classical Education
  • Developing Enduring Faith
  • Dinner Table Reflections
  • Great Works
  • Table of Contents (of Series)
  • The Full Table

Sylvan Heights Bird Park (Around Town)

Details about the Sylvan Heights Bird Park including ways that you can leverage the experience to engage in meaningful conversations with your child(ren) around the experience, helping to equip them with an enduring faith.

Green Hills County Park (Around Town)

Details about Green Hills County Park including ways that you can leverage the experience to engage in meaningful conversations with your child(ren) around the experience, helping to equip them with an enduring faith.

Around Town – Table of Contents

This post collects all of the Around Town posts on one page, helping you identify activities you can engage in around town (Raleigh) with your family. Furthermore, posts also seek to provide ways that you can leverage the experience to help point your child to Truth, Goodness, and Beauty, seeking to equip them with faith that endures.

Three Assumptions About Classical Christian Education

What assumptions does classical education make that causes it to be different? How does it answer core questions differently than today’s progressive education – questions such as “What is the purpose of education?” Or “What is man?”

Dinner Table Reflections – Table of Contents

This post collects all of the Dinner Table Reflections onto one page, allowing for easy access of Great Works of visual art, music, and literature along with potential prompts and conversations to inspire conversation around the dinner table.

The Planets

Prompts for dinner table reflections around the symphonic music The Planets by Holst! From Mars (the Bringer of War) to Jupiter (the Bringer of Jollity) there is sure to be something to entertain and inspire everyone in the family!

The Carnival of the Animals

The Carnival of the Animals is a playful musical suite by Camille Saint-Saens, comprised of 14-short movements totaling less than 25 minutes. Each movement sketches an animal or a scene found in a carnival, perfect for short listening sessions around the dinner table to spark family conversation!

Labors of the Months Paintings

Dinner table conversation starters around The Labors of the Months, a series of medieval images showing rural life across the year through 12 different scenes. While there are a variety of sets of different images, they typically included similar actions across the 12 scenes such as images of harvesting, plowing, and feasting.

Developing Enduring Faith (Why K-12 Matters)

The story of students from engaged Christian homes going off to college and abandoning their faith is told so often that it has become accepted as fact. However, when you look more closely at the circumstances, a different pattern emerges…this post explores how K-12 education can be impactful.

Developing Enduring Faith (Introduction)

As parents, how do I help not only equip my child(ren) with faith, but with faith that will endure? This mini-series will explore various research on this very topic!

Fate and the Futility of Doubt

Is Fate escapable? Can prophecy be reversed? The Ancient Greeks commonly wrestled with these questions. Sophocles鈥 tragedy Oedipus Rex tells of the prophecy that Oedipus would kill his father and marry his mother…

The Full Table is provided as a gathering place for conversation and ideas and is not a repository of 91制片厂 policies, stances, or opinions. All articles/posts are the opinions solely of the author and do not reflect any official endorsement of these views by the Academy, its directors, or employees. Publication does not imply any sort of approval beyond the recognition of the Academy that conversation around ideas is a worthwhile endeavor, even when there is not unanimity around the ideas. All articles/posts should be read as personal views of the author and not as representations of official positions, teachings, or policies of the Academy.