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 [...]

Already-but-not-yet

By |2026-03-02T14:55:34-06:00March 2nd, 2026|Categories: Catholicism, Grace|

Christ has called us each in a particular way to labor in his vineyard here and now and witness to the truth of the gospel in our daily lives. To live that call—that vocation—our hearts must be open to the grace that Christ is offering to us in the circumstances of his providence. In two days, my [...]

Crises of Faith

By |2026-03-01T17:56:25-06:00March 1st, 2026|Categories: Books, Catholicism, Cluny, Faith|

The essence of the attitude of the believer lies in the obduracy with which he approaches the real, and in the firmness of his determination to keep up the struggle. If faith is still developing, there comes a time when the believer considers his faith as the most securely anchored reality of all, sure to [...]

J.R.R. Tolkien’s Vision of Just War

By |2026-03-03T14:49:41-06:00February 28th, 2026|Categories: Books, Christendom, Christianity, Featured, J.R.R. Tolkien, Just War, Timeless Essays, War, World War I|

Might certainly does not make right, but it does not make wrong either. There are times to reject the allure of power, especially when it involves dominating others, and there are times when the right course is to take up arms and fight unreservedly against the forces of darkness. Indeed, Tolkien suggests, there are times [...]

Religion and Politics in Public Life

By |2026-02-25T12:04:56-06:00February 25th, 2026|Categories: American Republic, Catholic Culture Series, Catholicism, Politics, Religion|

Ours is the first nation under God which makes no real provision for God in its public life, owing to a great and sundering wall of separation between Church and State, religion and politics, faith and life. We live in a country whose citizenry have been, almost from the beginning of the Republic, carefully coached to [...]

A Worthy, Doomed Metaphysical Poet

By |2026-02-24T15:07:31-06:00February 24th, 2026|Categories: American South, Books, Catholicism, Poetry, St. Thomas Aquinas|

James Matthew Wilson judges American poet John Martin Finlay “practically the only contemporary writer to practice a genuinely metaphysical poetics.” A sinner and a man of imperfect ear, trite phrasing, and occasionally wayward philosophical judgment, Finlay was nevertheless a man whose pursuit of God who is Truth and Love demands our admiration. The Wayward Thomist: [...]

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