When Mother Teresa Came to Washington

By |2026-03-19T14:56:23-05:00March 19th, 2026|Categories: Barbara J. Elliott, Catholicism, Featured, Mother Teresa, Politics, Ronald Reagan, Sainthood, Timeless Essays, Virtue|

As I looked around that room in Washington, filled with so many powerful people, I realized that one day in Mother Teresa’s life brought more good to the face of the earth than all our efforts combined for a lifetime. It was utterly ludicrous, stepping out of a chauffeured White House limousine to go hear [...]

A Loving Yes

By |2026-03-18T20:06:18-05:00March 18th, 2026|Categories: Audio/Video, Catholicism, Christianity, Gospel Reflection|

Our prayers, works, sufferings and joys are not independent sacrifices looking for their own justification before the throne of God. What brings them to life is the sacrifice of Jesus, His eternal yes. Mark 12: 28b-34 sees another of those dialogues between Jesus and a private individual – in this case, one of the scribes. Which is the [...]

Barbara J. Elliott in Memoriam

By |2026-03-26T22:25:52-05:00March 17th, 2026|Categories: Barbara J. Elliott, Catholicism, Death, Love, Senior Contributors|

Barbara J. Elliott Wife, mother, author, professor, social entrepreneur, Catholic evangelist, and faithful follower of Jesus Christ, Barbara J. Elliott illuminated the lives of thousands of people across the country and around the world. The author of five books and scores of articles, Barbara was an international television correspondent for PBS during the [...]

Christ the Statesman

By |2026-03-17T22:23:26-05:00March 17th, 2026|Categories: Catholicism, Christendom, Government|

The king’s task is to weave the two kinds together, bringing out the good qualities in their opposite temperaments, so that virtues of both courage and moderation may be found together in each individual soul and in the city. Interrogated by the governor for political treason, the lowly Nazarene simply responds, “My kingship is not [...]

The Common Good versus the Machine

By |2026-03-13T18:54:23-05:00March 13th, 2026|Categories: Books, Catholicism, Cluny, Common Good, Freedom, Government|

A political system, however efficient, cannot be good if it clashes with ethics. We have to work for the restoration of local autonomy. There are things in which centralized control is necessary and beneficent; but there is a vast multitude of things in which it is unnecessary, and derogatory to human freedom and responsibility. Man [...]

Living an Integrated Life

By |2026-03-11T20:49:35-05:00March 11th, 2026|Categories: Catholic Culture Series, Catholicism, Christianity, Civil Society, Culture, Government|

None of us wants a theocracy, nor do we wish to have a totally secularized order. But both secular and sacred are to be joined in some way, the only question being how and to what extent. Have we still got a Christian consensus around which Americans of every possible persuasion can rally round? A public [...]

The Christian Humanists Challenge the Machine

By |2026-03-11T20:03:46-05:00March 11th, 2026|Categories: Bradley J. Birzer, Catholicism, Christendom, Christian Humanism, Christianity, Culture, Grace, Modernity, Senior Contributors, Timeless Essays|

Only a people who accepts a moral foundation of its culture, a protection of its property, the decentralization of power, and a “national humility” will in the long run survive. Once a people forgets its purpose, it will fall into decadence. The nineteenth century witnessed the flourishing of progressivist thought: in social relations, political relations, [...]

A Friend Remembered

By |2026-03-17T14:53:07-05:00March 10th, 2026|Categories: Barbara J. Elliott, Books, Catholicism, Death, Love, Senior Contributors, The Imaginative Conservative, W. Winston Elliott III|

John Rocha with Winston & Barbara Elliott On Saturday evening, I went to sleep reflecting on a text I had received from Winston Elliott about the film The Emperor’s Club. On Sunday morning, as I awoke—still a little groggy from Daylight Saving Time—I saw another text from him saying that his beloved bride, [...]

God Is a Great Gift-Giver

By |2026-03-09T20:32:51-05:00March 9th, 2026|Categories: Catholicism, Gospel Reflection, Lent|

Lent is a great time to take stock of all the good things that God has given us and to realize our utter dependence on God, while also realizing he is with us every step of the way. In my time in ministry, first as a diocesan seminarian and now as a Dominican student brother, [...]

Mimetic Desire and the Seven Deadly Sins

By |2026-03-05T21:16:08-06:00March 5th, 2026|Categories: Catholicism, Dwight Longenecker, Lent, Rene Girard, Senior Contributors|

During this season of Lent it is helpful to reflect on how mimetic desire—defined as “imitation envy"—connects with and influences the classic seven deadly sins. The French thinker Rene Girard had a seminal insight which has shed light on just about every aspect of human endeavor from theology and anthropology to economics, politics, psychology, and [...]

Combatting the “Naked Public Square”

By |2026-03-04T14:36:59-06:00March 4th, 2026|Categories: American Republic, Catholic Culture Series, Catholicism, Christendom, Civil Society, Government|

What is it that finally holds a society together? What enables it to cohere? Nothing less, St. John Henry Newman reminds us, “than a common reverence for a certain sacred possession.” Does anyone know what the central myth of America might be? I mean, isn’t there a story out there we tell ourselves about our origins? Our [...]

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