Not Everything, Not Yet

By |2025-11-13T22:07:40-06:00November 13th, 2025|Categories: Bible, Catholicism, Theology|

God did not provide us with something to offer, but someone. In Christ, our offering becomes pleasing. In Christ, the act of perfect worship is accomplished. When it comes to the worship of God, we quickly realize how little we are and how little our offering is in comparison to God’s greatness and majesty. In his [...]

Horror and the Sacred

By |2025-11-06T14:06:25-06:00November 6th, 2025|Categories: Bruce Frohnen, Christianity, Culture, Film, Timeless Essays|

The horror genre is not about gore. Rather, it is about the human soul: its capacity for depraved conduct, but also its capacity to recognize the natural order of our existence and to work to re-establish that order at great sacrifice and in the face of evils born of hubris, self-divinization, and even tragic error. [...]

Georg Philipp Telemann: Good Taste in Music

By |2025-11-03T19:40:43-06:00November 3rd, 2025|Categories: Audio/Video, Michael De Sapio, Music, Senior Contributors|

Longer-lived than most composers, Georg Philipp Telemann was still creating and experimenting in his 80s, ready to welcome the new Classical era represented by Haydn and Mozart. In some ways Telemann was the key composer of the high Baroque era, one who amalgamated all the styles of the day in a style that reflected geniality, [...]

Purgatory, Beauty, & Suffering: A Scriptural Defense

By |2025-11-03T08:59:12-06:00November 1st, 2025|Categories: Beauty, Bible, Bradley J. Birzer, Catholicism, Heaven, Hell, Purgatory, Senior Contributors, Suffering|

Grace alone determines whether we go to Heaven or Hell. But our good works determine whether we go through purgation or not, en route to Heaven. November 2 is the feast of All Souls. The point of the day is to remember those who have gone before us—but not necessarily the saints (those in Heaven). [...]

And the Nobel Prize in Literature Goes to… an Absurdist

By |2025-10-31T12:19:29-05:00October 31st, 2025|Categories: Beauty, Goodness, John Horvat, Literature, Senior Contributors, Truth|

It makes no sense to reward someone who frustrates the purposes of literature with a major prize. Imagine literary works with plots in dystopian settings where the characters act within an unraveling social order. Apocalyptic events abound inside absurd situations. This is the literature of Laszlo Krasznakorkai. There is more. Imagine an unreadable and drawn-out [...]

Ten Scary Classical Music Pieces for Halloween

By |2025-10-29T14:11:41-05:00October 29th, 2025|Categories: Antonin Dvorak, Audio/Video, Franz Schubert, Halloween, Hector Berlioz, J.S. Bach, Jean Sibelius, Music, Sergei Rachmaninoff, Stephen M. Klugewicz, Timeless Essays|

Great music pierces the soul… and can sometimes terrify it. Over the centuries, composers, like nearly all artists of every variety, have been fascinated by the subject of death and by the supernatural—the world of witches, goblins, ghosts, and demons. Composers have given us Dances of the Dead, frightful tone poems and songs, scary opera [...]

From Whitefield to Kirk: Revivals That Saved Nations

By |2025-10-13T11:29:36-05:00October 13th, 2025|Categories: Christianity, Conservatism, Culture, Education, History, Liberalism, Politics, Wokeism|

Charlie Kirk believed that America’s myths were both truths and facts worth cherishing. The story of America, he insisted, was not original sin without redemption, but sin and redemption together—the kind of story that could inspire loyalty, sacrifice, and renewal. Eventually, he would sacrifice himself for it. England could have been thrown into the cauldron [...]

The Life and Legacy of John Henry Newman

By |2025-10-08T18:23:26-05:00October 8th, 2025|Categories: Catholicism, Christianity, Joseph Pearce, Senior Contributors, Theology, Timeless Essays|

John Henry Newman was born in 1801, at the beginning of a century that would see the rise of skepticism in matters of religion. Yet, simultaneously, it was a century which would see a real revival of religious orthodoxy. With respect to the latter, Newman himself might be seen as the most important and influential [...]

Hawthorne’s Darkening American Vision: “The Blithedale Romance”

By |2025-10-07T20:12:24-05:00October 7th, 2025|Categories: American Republic, History, Literature, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Religion|

"The Blithedale Romance" conveys Nathaniel Hawthorne’s disillusionment with Brook Farm, Transcendentalism, reform movements, and the quest for individual and social perfection. I. Published in 1852, The Blithedale Romance offers Nathaniel Hawthorne’s most trenchant criticism of America.[i] Unlike his more optimistic contemporaries who imagined the advance toward individual and social perfection in the United States, Hawthorne [...]

Empires of the Mind: The Work of Culture

By |2025-10-06T18:00:07-05:00October 6th, 2025|Categories: Culture, Evil, Goodness, History, Imagination, Michael De Sapio, Senior Contributors|

What is it that makes life worth living when the temporal aspects of life are taken care of? That is the realm of culture and the spirit. It has to do with the development of our minds, our moral growth, and our sense of belonging to a community. “The empires of the future are the [...]

Autumnal Coolness: Gentle Whispers of Saint Francis

By |2025-10-03T14:00:24-05:00October 3rd, 2025|Categories: Bradley J. Birzer, Catholicism, Christianity, Religion, St. Francis, Timeless Essays|

Understood properly, October purges us of our follies and reminds us that death hovers just in front of us. It reminds us that we always stand in time, but at the very edge of eternity. The autumnal coolness—just on the edge of the dying summer—is in the air, and it feels good. Very cool, very [...]

The First Screen Apocalypse

By |2025-10-02T20:16:07-05:00October 2nd, 2025|Categories: C.S. Lewis, Christopher Dawson, Community, Culture, Film, Technology, Tradition|

To the 21st-century reader, the suggestion that cinema is a destructive and corrosive force will likely appear absurd. To attentive cultural critics of the early 20th century, however, it was all but self-evident. You’ve heard it before, certainly: The screens are killing us. They play to our basest passions and appetites, rendering us passive, and [...]

Tobacco and the Soul

By |2025-10-02T20:33:38-05:00October 2nd, 2025|Categories: Christianity, Culture, Timeless Essays|

The current brouhaha over smoking has made everyone painfully aware of tobacco’s effects on the body, but it has also obscured a more profound reason for smoking’s popularity: its relation to the soul. As the heyday of smoking passes into the ashheap of history, it is meet that we reflect on this connection. The soul, [...]

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