About C. R. Wiley

C. R. Wiley is a Presbyterian pastor living in the Pacific Northwest. He is the author of In the House of Tom Bombadil, Man of the House: A Handbook for Building a Shelter That Will Last in a World That is Falling Apart, and The Purloined Boy. He has written for various publications, including Touchstone Magazine, Modern Reformation, Sacred Architecture, National Review Online, and First Things. He’s also been a college professor, a commercial real estate investor, and a home improvement contractor.

“Shop Class as Soulcraft”: Let Us Recognize the Yeoman Aristocracy

By |2025-06-09T21:55:35-05:00June 9th, 2025|Categories: Audio/Video, Books, C. R. Wiley, Culture, Labor/Work, Timeless Essays|

In “Shop Class as Soulcraft,” Matthew B. Crawford tells a story of diminishment, outlining how we went from a nation of independent tradesmen, farmers, and shop keepers to cubicle dwellers. I am not a fan of Ask This Old House, the spin-off of the PBS home improvement program, This Old House. Formerly the companion series to [...]

Gifts for Men Who Work With Their Hands… and Heads

By |2020-12-20T20:23:43-06:00December 5th, 2018|Categories: Books, Christmas, Gifts for Imaginative Conservatives|

Imaginative conservatives love words, but we’re not an effete bunch, no sir. We know that the pen is mightier than the sword—but we respect swords, too. I suspect that our ancestors were better prepared for Christmas than we tend to be. Unless you’re the sort of person who breathlessly anticipates the holy day, like we [...]

Christmas Shopping for the Man Who Works with His Hands & Head

By |2016-12-14T11:50:36-06:00December 14th, 2016|Categories: Books, Christmas, Gifts for Imaginative Conservatives, Senior Contributors|

I'm not much of a long-range planner when it comes to the giving of gifts at Christmas time, I'm a last minute giver. But at least I try to be a thoughtful one. My recommendations in past years have followed a theme. The same is true this year. This time around my list reflects my [...]

What “Inside Out” Managed to Leave Out

By |2016-09-15T12:32:32-05:00September 15th, 2016|Categories: Film, Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Modernity, Philosophy|

Pixar certainly has a winning formula. The movie studio seems to have found that little spot behind the collective ear that we like to have scratched. Its first 2015 release, Inside Out, follows the same inimitable story-telling recipe it served up to great applause with films such as Up, WALL-E, and Ratatouille. Pixar films are captivating—artfully done—without losing [...]

Christmas Gifts that Conserve from Old New England

By |2016-02-12T15:28:04-06:00December 23rd, 2014|Categories: Anthony Esolen, C. R. Wiley, Christianity, Christmas, Gifts for Imaginative Conservatives|Tags: |

On election night, when the returns come in, folks around the country generally look upon the results from New England with a mixture of horror and puzzlement. Even though I have lived in New England most of my life I admit to looking at them in the same way. My feelings have something to do [...]

How the West Really Lost God: A New Theory of Secularization

By |2020-12-10T05:41:08-06:00April 6th, 2014|Categories: Books, C. R. Wiley, Religion, Western Civilization|Tags: |

In a world with central heating and agribusiness, the natural family is the last direct connection most people have to a natural order. With its demise, traditional religion loses an important justification for its sacrifices. How the West Really Lost God by Mary Eberstadt (268 pages, Templeton Press, 2013) We can hope that Western civilization [...]

Jack, the Giant, and the Indigestible Bean: A Fable

By |2014-03-03T17:40:34-06:00March 4th, 2014|Categories: C. R. Wiley, Fiction, Young Man's Guide to Building a House|

The Introduction to, The Young Man’s Guide to Building a House There were giants in the land in those days, but fewer people than there used to be. Now the giants were the typical sort—lumbering and hungry. But the people were very odd, most anyway. It wasn’t uncommon for a giant to reach right into [...]

One Flesh and Other Household Mysteries

By |2014-01-24T20:24:58-06:00January 3rd, 2014|Categories: C. R. Wiley, Christianity, Culture, Marriage, Morality, Young Man's Guide to Building a House|

Chapter 4 in The Young Man’s Guide to Building a House “And the two shall become one flesh.” You don’t hear that much anymore, and when you do it is written off as poetry. With the low regard for poetry these days that pretty much relegates it to something fit for a greeting card. When I [...]

Christmas Gifts That are True, Good, and Truly Beautiful

By |2014-12-10T11:42:44-06:00December 19th, 2013|Categories: C. R. Wiley, Gifts for Imaginative Conservatives|

Imaginative conservatives flee from the mass mind, so you should expect their Christmas gifts to come from parts unknown. They haven’t run just to be different—heaven forbid. Being obsessed with being unprecedented is itself a symptom of the mass mind. Instead imaginative conservatives are always on the lookout for things that are true, good, and [...]

The Economics of Love: The Real Economy

By |2016-01-16T12:45:39-06:00October 2nd, 2013|Categories: C. R. Wiley, Christianity, Economics, Featured, Young Man's Guide to Building a House|

Chapter Three in The Young Man’s Guide to Building a House The words love and economy rarely find their ways into the same sentence. Economics has been called the dismal science but people write songs about love. You don’t write songs about economics unless you’re writing a parody. When most people hear the word economy they think about money. That is dismal. [...]

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