
The Resources section of the website is for our students and others who may be interested. While the rest of the website helps explain what Cambridge is about, this section of the site is to aid you in your general reading, viewing and listening. It’s an opportunity for you to keep in touch with the world we populate and the community in which you live. It’s for cultural enrichment and information. And if you’re doing research and/or writing a paper, we are hoping you will find resources here that are helpful.
We would first point you to the Cambridge Book Store. At the bookstore you will find all the books for your Cambridge classes and many more. These books are purchased through Amazon at standard Amazon prices, and even though you don’t pay extra, Cambridge does receive a very small commission on these purchases. Purchasing books through the Cambridge Book Store helps support the study center at no cost to you. At some point the book store will be adding films and music to our collection of recommended items.
Other sections for your perusal are the Audio Journal which makes available relevant mp3s for streaming or download, the Articles page which offers relevant articles, an extensive collection of quotes on the Quotes page, the Lists page recommending helpful reading, viewing an listening options, and the Links page that offers a useful collection of links to outside websites we have found helpful.
You should know that we don’t necessarily agree with everything you will find here. When exploring these resources, you should use the same discernment you exercise at the library or bookstore. We trust you will benefit from exploring the Resources section. It is for you and your family.
Because we are commanded by God to form and reform culture, Christians have to be actively engaged with culture: studying it, discerning positive and negative aspects, and working to redeem it. We are to be in the world but not of it, working to restrain evil and advance redemptive potentials. We are called to be salt in the world, working to enrich culture and preserve life-affirming aspects. We are also called to be a light to show the way for cultural development, uncovering and disentangling forces for good and evil, and redirecting unhealthy or destructive patterns toward principles in line with loving god and serving our neighbor. And the culture we are called to form and reform, to move toward redemption, includes even popular culture. ~ William Romanowski