A Noble Imagination: Sir Walter Scott’s Waverley Novels

By |2025-03-15T10:45:31-05:00December 3rd, 2013|Categories: Books|Tags: |

If you would wish for your children to garner a love and fascination for the good things of God’s Creation, if you would have them embrace adventure, cherish what is noble, honor the poor, and attain to a sincere civility and gentleness, let them read from the works of Sir Walter Scott. Born in 1771 in [...]

Tyranny in American Political Discourse

By |2017-10-11T23:23:05-05:00December 1st, 2013|Categories: Alexis de Tocqueville, Politics, Revolution, Tyranny|Tags: |

The word “tyranny” has a long history in American political discourse. Since at least the American Revolution, Americans have used the word to describe political actions they find distasteful. But what is tyranny? Some have defined tyranny to be identical with monarchy; others identify it with any form of government which is not democratic, or [...]

The Mysteries of Atheism

By |2013-11-30T19:52:11-06:00November 30th, 2013|Categories: Atheism, Joseph Pearce, Religion|

“I have left behind illusion,” I said to myself. “Henceforth I live in a world of three dimensions – with the aid of my five senses.” I have since learned that there is no such world; but then, as the car turned out of sight of the house, I thought it took no finding, but [...]

The Heart of Wisdom

By |2021-04-09T15:50:06-05:00November 30th, 2013|Categories: Books, Communio, Featured, Stratford Caldecott, Wisdom|

There is a book that caught my attention and may well hold it to the end of my life. Written by an English hermit—Priest-Monk Silouan, a convert to Orthodoxy now living in a retreat on the Shropshire hills—Wisdom Songs is a collection of “Centuries”, chapters of a hundred meditations each, on a series of spiritual [...]

Ten Ways to Shop Like a Conscientious Conservative

By |2016-07-26T15:41:51-05:00November 29th, 2013|Categories: Conservatism|Tags: |

Yesterday we were thankful for the harvest, now we reward our year’s successes. I know how so many of you ladies get all warm and fuzzy inside, putting on your Christmassy sweaters, listening to Christmas music while driving to the mall with your sisters and besties to see it all decked out in decorations and [...]

Tocqueville on the Individualist Roots of Progressivism

By |2019-04-11T10:35:41-05:00November 29th, 2013|Categories: Alexis de Tocqueville, Conservatism, Progressivism|Tags: , |

A friend once described conservatives as people who agreed about one important thing–that at some point in the past, something went terribly wrong. After that, conservatives splinter into untold numbers of camps, since they disagree ferociously about the date of the catastrophe. Most conservatives today agree that America has taken a terrible turn–that something went [...]

Kitsch or Kitchen Sink? Illustrating Conservatism With Andrew Wyeth & Thomas Kinkade

By |2019-08-08T14:09:40-05:00November 29th, 2013|Categories: Art, Christianity, Conservatism, Dwight Longenecker|

In 2012 Thomas Kinkade, “America’s Painter of Light” died in his sleep at his home in California. He was fifty-four. Three years earlier another American realist painter–Andrew Wyeth–died in his sleep in his Pennsylvania home. He was ninety-one. Both men worked hard and established popular reputations for their realistic renditions of American landscapes and homespun [...]

The Invention of Thanksgiving

By |2025-11-23T16:01:32-06:00November 27th, 2013|Categories: Bradley J. Birzer, History, Thanksgiving|

I must admit, I always have mixed feelings about celebrating Thanksgiving. It’s not that I don’t love giving thanks—in fact, I really do love it. And, I especially love how we Americans do it. If I had my way, we’d have cranberry relish, sweet potatoes, pumpkin pie, and turkey five times to six times to [...]

The 60th Anniversary of The Conservative Mind- What it Means to be Conservative

By |2014-01-21T11:25:21-06:00November 26th, 2013|Categories: Russell Kirk, The Conservative Mind|Tags: |

The sixty-year anniversary of The Conservative Mind is an opportunity to reflect on Russell Kirk’s achievement in shaping perceptions of conservatism. The book places conservatism in the larger tradition of Western civilization. It also connects it to particular thinkers who embodied the canons of conservatism Kirk describes in the first chapter. The canons intend to [...]

The Cult of Niceness

By |2019-08-15T12:50:34-05:00November 25th, 2013|Categories: Bruce Frohnen, Compassion, Education|Tags: |

More than twenty-five years ago, in The Closing of the American Mind, Allan Bloom pointed out that college students in the United States had become very “nice.” Students in general did not want to offend anyone and there was a constant concern to protect one another’s feelings. Bloom meant this as a half-hearted, even backhanded [...]

Subsidiarity and the Power of Local Government

By |2013-11-28T08:22:36-06:00November 24th, 2013|Categories: Government, Politics|Tags: |

The Competitive Governance Institute presents a video on the concept of subsidiarity. Subsidiarity describes the principle of making decisions and taking action at the lowest, smallest possible level of authority. It is the conservative principle that gives power back to local institutions and de-emphasizes the brute force of the national government. We’re now at a [...]

Honoring Thy Mother(s) and Father(s): Man of Steel

By |2015-01-07T13:38:52-06:00November 23rd, 2013|Categories: Bradley J. Birzer, Christianity, Fiction, Film|

In one of the best comic book stories of the last several generations, Frank Miller’s The Dark Knight Returns (1986), Batman confronts Superman. Years into a dystopian future in which the United States has become more or less imperialist, fundamentalist, and oppressive, the rather conservative and patriotic Superman has rather unthinkingly joined forces with America [...]

50th Anniversary: Remembering Lewis and Huxley

By |2016-02-12T15:51:42-06:00November 22nd, 2013|Categories: Aldous Huxley, C.S. Lewis, Christianity|Tags: |

For the last week our televisions and newspapers have been taken up with commemorations of the 50th anniversary of the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. As I write this, we are just an hour away from bells tolling across the land. It is right that we pause and remember the event that changed so [...]

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