The Songs of America’s Wars

By |2025-03-02T13:47:11-06:00March 2nd, 2025|Categories: Audio/Video, John Willson, Music, Timeless Essays, War|

American wars produce songs of hope, encouragement, nostalgia, longing, sadness, and humor. Only one war produced a stirring song of triumphalist heresy. The war that made us independent gave us “Yankee Doodle,” a frivolous tune that threw back in the face of the Brits a term they had used to belittle us. The most popular [...]

Historicism or a Theology of History?

By |2025-02-26T20:08:12-06:00February 26th, 2025|Categories: Books, Catholicism, Christianity, Faith, Hans Urs von Balthasar, History, Theology|

Any attempt to interpret history as a whole, if it is not to succumb to gnostic myth, must posit some subject which works in and reveals itself in the whole of history and which is at the same time [the belief in] a being capable of providing general norms. —Fr. Hans Urs von Balthasar, A [...]

The Skaldic Bard

By |2025-02-21T10:07:57-06:00February 21st, 2025|Categories: Catholicism, Christianity, Joseph Pearce, Music, Orthodoxy, Poetry, Senior Contributors|

A primary aim of my work is to counter the widespread misconception that Christianity somehow “weakened” or “polluted” the cultures of Europe. It is often claimed by Neo-Pagans that the faith was simply a foreign imposition forced upon an unwilling population. However, a closer examination of contemporary sources reveals a far more nuanced reality. Joseph [...]

Towards a Middle Earth Metaphysical

By |2025-02-20T14:17:37-06:00February 20th, 2025|Categories: C.S. Lewis, Dwight Longenecker, Nature, Philosophy, Science, Senior Contributors, Theology|

Whether they be fairies, gnomes, cryptids, aliens, or elves, what are these creatures about which man has written for centuries? C.S. Lewis explained that the medieval mind understood them to be inhabitants of a kind of middle realm between the physical and the spiritual regions. But is this "Middle Earth" real? No matter our chosen [...]

“Napoleon”: The Rediscovery of a Cinematic Masterpiece

By |2025-02-20T16:46:21-06:00February 20th, 2025|Categories: Audio/Video, Culture, Film, History, Timeless Essays|

There remain few attempts in the world of cinema so daring as French director Abel Gance’s magnificent silent film “Napoleon.” Nearly a century after its stillbirth on the screens of the late 1920s, it appears to have at last found its audience on the wide-screens of another millennium. It was, and it remains, a unique experience [...]

Richard Weaver’s Conservatism of Affirmation & Hope

By |2025-02-18T09:03:38-06:00February 17th, 2025|Categories: Conservatism, Featured, Ludwig van Beethoven, Plato, Relativism, Richard Weaver, South, Timeless Essays, Western Civilization|

Against a modern age that denied notions of meaning, purpose, and truth, Richard Weaver articulated a conservatism of hope and affirmation based on the Platonic-Christian heritage and its manifestation in the Amer­ican South. Richard Weaver reasoned it was the emergence of nominalism, the departure from Plato­nism and Christianity, which produced the intellectual heresies leading to [...]

Catholic Imagination and Contemporary Culture

By |2025-02-15T11:57:21-06:00February 14th, 2025|Categories: Audio/Video, Barbara J. Elliott, Catholicism, Culture, Moral Imagination, Timeless Essays|

Please enjoy Barbara Elliott's presentation on "Catholic Imagination and Contemporary Culture," delivered at the Dominican School of Philosophy and Theology. DSPT Fellow - Barbara Elliott's Presentation on Catholic Imagination and Contemporary Culture from DSPT on Vimeo. This lecture was first published here in March 2012. Dr. Barbara Elliott's presentation at the Third Annual Convocation of [...]

Classical Music Pairings for a Romantic Valentine’s Day Dinner

By |2025-02-15T08:16:09-06:00February 13th, 2025|Categories: Audio/Video, Love, Music, Timeless Essays|

Some years ago, my wife and I decided to forego the over-crowded restaurants and parking lots on Valentine’s Day, light a few candles of our own, and enjoy a romantic dinner at home. With this year’s health concerns and, in some cases, more limited restaurant seating to compete for, it may be just the year [...]

Sounding Faith: Conversations With a Baroque Composer

By |2025-02-10T11:07:18-06:00February 9th, 2025|Categories: Audio/Video, Books, Catholicism, Michael De Sapio, Music, Senior Contributors|

The music of little-known Baroque composer Francesco Antonio Bonporti embodies a kind of Arcadian serenity and joy, like the music of Mozart. Art conceived along those lines is closely tied to the refinement of the spirit, in which the senses do not go their own brutish way but are reconciled with the mind by means [...]

Renewing America’s Soul: Faith and Civil Society

By |2025-02-11T17:11:57-06:00February 7th, 2025|Categories: American Founding, American Republic, Barbara J. Elliott, Christianity, Civil Society, Compassion, Faith, Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Religion, Timeless Essays, Virtue|Tags: |

American culture has an opportunity now for renewal through its people of faith. We are being called to care for one another with love. We are being called to live out our virtue in service. The American soul has withered, and awaits an infusion of the lifeblood of love. Whether or not we respond may [...]

How Gregorian Chant Benefits the Body and Soul

By |2025-02-05T17:30:04-06:00February 5th, 2025|Categories: Catholicism, Faith, Heaven, John Horvat, Music|

One longstanding Church practice oriented to the worship of God has been the chanting of psalms and hymns. From the earliest times, monks engaged in liturgical chanting that complemented their often grueling lives. These monks managed to accommodate hours spent in choir while providing for their material needs. In his French-language book, Pourquoi Mozart, author [...]

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