James Joyce, John Senior, & the Illumination of the Modern World

By |2023-11-18T08:06:23-06:00November 17th, 2023|Categories: Books, Christianity, Culture, John Senior, Modernity|

Reading James Joyce and John Senior together will illuminate the modern world and point toward a path of how to thrive within it. Both represent a quest for the real: one through the symbolic mediation of literature and the other through its poetic embodiment in our daily lives. John Senior is known as a cultural [...]

A World in Need of Re-Enchantment: A New Leader at Wyoming Catholic College

By |2023-11-11T08:26:35-06:00November 10th, 2023|Categories: Catholicism, Education, Liberal Arts, Liberal Learning, Wyoming Catholic College|

We live in a world in need of re-enchantment; but re-enchanting love is rekindled in the hearts of people one at a time. To reclaim that sense of loving delight in God and the world, we need to give our students a break from the busyness and distraction that surrounds daily life, let them digitally [...]

John Senior and the Restoration of Realism

By |2023-11-11T08:34:52-06:00November 9th, 2023|Categories: Books, Christianity, Dwight Longenecker, Featured, John Senior|

John Senior’s great contribution was to forge a middle way between indoctrination and the chaos of complete relativism. Instead of indoctrinating students, the classical knowledge of a Christian culture provided the tools and the framework for true education. John Senior and the Restoration of Realism by Francis Bethel It was one of those serendipitous meetings that [...]

Poetry & Politics?

By |2023-10-25T05:58:29-05:00October 24th, 2023|Categories: Dante, Featured, Glenn Arbery, Humanities, Liberal Arts, Poetry, Timeless Essays, William Shakespeare, Wyoming Catholic College|

Great poetry can come from deep engagement with the problems of politics, but it is especially moving to see how exile—often the consequence of that engagement—subtly becomes the symbol of the condition of fallen man. Students at Wyoming Catholic College memorize many poems in the four years of the humanities curriculum, but few of the [...]

Do Great Books Make Us Better?

By |2023-09-20T18:02:08-05:00September 20th, 2023|Categories: Glenn Arbery, Great Books, Senior Contributors, Timeless Essays, Wyoming Catholic College|

If books could make us better on their own, then we could read our way to perfect virtue. Do Great Books make us better? This question goes to the heart of what we do at Wyoming Catholic College. In an essay for The New Yorker early in December, the professor and writer Louis Menand reviews [...]

Intending the Unintended

By |2023-09-13T19:06:58-05:00September 13th, 2023|Categories: Catholicism, Glenn Arbery, Humanities, Liberal Arts, Liberal Learning, Senior Contributors, Timeless Essays, Wyoming Catholic College|

What is the intention of a Great Books education? Does it need to make the student feel at every moment as though there were a palpable design upon him? I ask because making things “intentional” seems to have become something of a buzzword, even in spiritual matters. Guided tours can be a wonderful thing. I [...]

Silence: Seeing & Hearing God’s World

By |2023-08-22T19:06:30-05:00August 22nd, 2023|Categories: Catholicism, Glenn Arbery, Poetry, Senior Contributors, Timeless Essays, Wyoming Catholic College|

Real silence (always recommended by the saints) allows us to escape our own conceptual frames and be open to the world as it is in God's first book. The world repeats itself, as it has done and will do, a little differently each time, each time worth seeing and hearing differently. Several years ago, in [...]

The Grace of Simple Praise

By |2023-07-28T12:39:49-05:00July 28th, 2023|Categories: Catholicism, Glenn Arbery, Liberal Learning, Senior Contributors, Wyoming Catholic College|

Learning the language of Christian culture begins with God-given reality, which explains our emphasis on the outdoors and on horsemanship; it explains our technology policy, which helps students avoid an algorithmically manipulative virtual reality; and it explains our four years of classes centered on the Great Books, an encounter with the greatest thought of the [...]

Andrew Senior on John Senior, Proponent of Beauty & Tradition

By |2023-07-14T11:07:34-05:00July 13th, 2023|Categories: Beauty, Catholicism, Christianity, John Senior, Liberal Learning, Tradition|

My father was first and foremost a true philosopher, a lover of wisdom, a student, a seeker of truth, and in addition to this and as a necessary result, he became a great teacher, and more than that, a converter. Everyone who ever met him, even briefly, was affected by his intense love of truth, [...]

Unfinished Reading

By |2023-07-07T15:35:21-05:00July 7th, 2023|Categories: Books, Catholicism, Glenn Arbery, Senior Contributors, Wyoming Catholic College|

Every summer, I look forward to reading new books in the months between classes, but this year I'm determined to finish the ones I've started. The word "graduation" in most people's minds means something like "the end of an education," even though the word "commencement" (used for this ceremony at least since 1387, according to the Oxford [...]

True Fourth

By |2023-07-03T16:17:35-05:00July 3rd, 2023|Categories: American Founding, Freedom, Glenn Arbery, Independence Day, Liberty, Patriotism, Timeless Essays, Wyoming Catholic College|

Why is the true Fourth such a powerful image of liberty? Because the things that most deepen us and rouse us are dangerous. An appetite for the real good means being willing to face danger, and the whole point of the liberty we celebrate is that we learn to handle danger, to face it responsibly, [...]

Great Books and Horses

By |2023-06-23T19:34:35-05:00June 23rd, 2023|Categories: Featured, Glenn Arbery, Great Books, Liberal Learning, Timeless Essays, Wyoming Catholic College|

The greatest books of the Western world have relied upon the knowledge of horses whose natures have so influenced and symbolized our own. When my wife Virginia and I first came to Wyoming Catholic College in 2013, we had only notions about horses. Each of us had been astride some poor rope-led nag or other [...]

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