How We Split the World Apart: The Separation of Faith & Philosophy

By |2023-05-21T11:28:46-05:00November 29th, 2022|Categories: E.B., Eva Brann, Faith, Philosophy, Religion, Senior Contributors, St. John's College, Theology, Timeless Essays|

This is an edited version of a conversation between Eva Brann, the longest-serving tutor at St. John’s College, and Hamza Yusuf, President of Zaytuna College, recorded in March 2019. You can listen to the full podcast here. Hamza Yusuf: We’re really fortunate today to have with us, I think, one of the treasures of our [...]

Beauty: A Necessity, Not a Luxury

By |2023-08-04T09:27:45-05:00November 27th, 2022|Categories: Architecture, Art, Beauty, Books, Catholicism, Christianity, Communio, Essential, Featured, Hans Urs von Balthasar, Language, Pope Benedict XVI, St. John Paul II, Timeless Essays|

“Beauty will save the world.” That remains to be seen. But beauty has saved me, and continues to do so. My experience is that I need saving; it is not a luxury. Just when I am about to succumb to the sadness and living death of nihilism, some piercing ray of beauty breaks open my [...]

The Revealed & the Hidden: Reconceiving Western Civilization

By |2022-11-27T17:05:17-06:00November 27th, 2022|Categories: Culture, Timeless Essays, Western Civilization, Western Tradition|

What is most needed at this hour is a retrieval of the sources which shaped the Western imagination. Returning to our Christian, Greek, and Roman roots, and examining the texts and ideas which provided the foundation for the remarkable civilisation that spread across the European continent could bear real fruit in strengthening our ailing cultures. [...]

“Vital Tension” as the Creative Spiritual Energy of History

By |2023-08-30T18:35:33-05:00November 20th, 2022|Categories: Catholicism, Christendom, Christian Humanism, Christianity, Christopher Dawson, Culture, Featured, Timeless Essays|

In spite of modern man’s spiritual failure, historian Christopher Dawson believed it possible to return to that vitality which for many centuries built Western culture: Christianity. Jesus Christ came to reveal to men that they have no enemies but themselves. –Pascal It is this vital tension between two worlds and two planes of reality which [...]

“Antigone” and the Necessity of Political Prudence

By |2022-11-06T15:36:43-06:00November 6th, 2022|Categories: Antigone, Government, Great Books, Politics, Religion, Sophocles, Timeless Essays|

A key lesson of Sophocles’ “Antigone” is that fanaticism results when public actors fail to practice the one virtue capable of moderating the excesses of human nature: political prudence. In an insightful essay (“Idolatry in Lockdown,” Law and Liberty, January 28, 2021), Spencer Klavan reflects on the contemporary significance of the conflict at the heart [...]

Books That Make Us Human

By |2022-10-26T16:57:11-05:00October 26th, 2022|Categories: Books, Books that Make Us Human, Conservatism, Film, Literature, Stephen Masty, Timeless Essays, Western Civilization|

I take the blame for this idiosyncratic list. Since my betters have identified so many stellar choices, I propose the somewhat obscure: books (presented in no order) that may lead an already-humane human in the direction of the holy as unexpected and inspirational, maybe mischievous and mirthful. Great? Maybe not, but possible nectar for an [...]

An Undeserved Nobel Prize in Literature

By |2022-10-24T18:05:19-05:00October 24th, 2022|Categories: Beauty, John Horvat, Literature, Truth|

The world needs works of literature with a moral message that will inspire readers to virtue and bring people closer to God. But today's literature reflects only a debased wasteland. Let there be no Noble Prize for literature until writers can present a moral order that will return to the long-forgotten quest for the good, [...]

Physics, Beauty, & the Divine Mind

By |2022-10-16T14:49:46-05:00October 16th, 2022|Categories: Beauty, Culture, Featured, George Stanciu, Religion, Science, St. John's College, Timeless Essays|

Last week, my wife, a painter-friend of ours, who wishes to be anonymous, and I did the Friday night walk down Canyon Road, the site of numerous galleries in Santa Fe, New Mexico, a small town that is the third-largest art market in the United States. Halfway down Canyon Road, we stopped in at a [...]

The Quest for the Best: Is it in the Eye of the Beholder?

By |2022-10-14T12:46:03-05:00October 14th, 2022|Categories: Beauty, Joseph Pearce, Senior Contributors|

The more that we learn the language that beauty speaks, which is ultimately the language of the Logos, the more will our subjective preferences converge into the objective presence of goodness, truth and beauty Himself. The claim that beauty is in the eye of the beholder is an expression of philosophical relativism. It confuses and [...]

Columbus the Exemplar

By |2023-10-08T16:03:52-05:00October 9th, 2022|Categories: Christendom, Culture, History, Leadership, RAK, Russell Kirk, Timeless Essays|

Christopher Columbus offers us the example of those virtues that the old Romans called fortitude and constancy; and the example of those virtues that the early Christians called faith and hope. Half a millennium ago, a Genoese navigator with three caravels and Spanish crews groped his way among the islands of the Caribbean. Thus commenced [...]

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