Booker T. Washington and His Virtues

By |2025-08-20T20:45:05-05:00August 20th, 2025|Categories: Christianity, Equality, History, Labor/Work, Religion|

Booker T. Washington did not call for a revolution. Instead, he called for the simplest of building blocks in American society: helping your neighbor. I reread an undergraduate paper comparing the educational methods of Booker T. Washington and W.E.B. Du Bois and realized the comparison was horribly incomplete. I cited only Of the Training of Black [...]

Great Unsung Composers of Christendom

By |2025-09-15T05:58:51-05:00August 18th, 2025|Categories: Antonin Dvorak, Joseph Pearce, Music, Senior Contributors, Unsung Heroes of Christendom|

There is little doubt that Dvořák’s "New World Symphony" will be performed across the United States as part of next year’s celebrations to commemorate the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence. Perhaps we might hope and pray that the "Te Deum" that he composed to commemorate the 400th anniversary of the discovery of the [...]

True North: Cultural Renewal in Canada

By |2025-08-15T21:24:51-05:00August 15th, 2025|Categories: Catholicism, Culture, Education, Joseph Pearce, Senior Contributors|

In the long term, the hope is for the Gregory the Great Institute to become a major contributor to the “great conversation,” bringing the wisdom of Christendom to Canada’s beleaguered and floundering culture. We live in exciting times. As a native-born Englishman, I rejoice at the news that St. John Henry Newman is soon to [...]

“Hymn for the Dormition of the Mother of God”

By |2025-08-14T20:00:09-05:00August 14th, 2025|Categories: Audio/Video, Christianity, Mother of God, Music, Timeless Essays|

Scored for a cappella choir, John Tavener's "Hymn for the Dormition of the Mother of God" was composed in 1985 as the second part of a pair of Marian devotions. Its  text is taken from the Feast of the Dormition (or slumber) of the Mother of God, celebrated in the Eastern Orthodox Church on August [...]

Are We Entering an Age of Imagination?

By |2025-08-11T14:59:46-05:00August 11th, 2025|Categories: Christianity, Culture, Faith, Imagination, Information Age, Michael De Sapio, Religion, Senior Contributors, Technology, Theology|

Jesus did not preach an escape from earth to an immaterial Heaven. Rather, he preached the coming of God’s kingdom “on earth as it is in heaven,” a redemption of God’s good creation. We hope in the completion of God’s grand rescue project, which is taking shape as we speak and which will reach fulfillment [...]

Why Is “Christian” Music So Awful?

By |2025-08-10T12:19:12-05:00August 10th, 2025|Categories: Audio/Video, Christianity, Music|

Most “Christian” music is taken from the secular world. People might have nice feelings about Jesus by listening to it, but the secular music was designed to produce certain types of feelings, and why should those warm sentimental feelings or hard emotional feelings be linked with worship? A friend of mine used to quip, “When [...]

Sounding a Discordant Note

By |2025-08-07T22:35:42-05:00August 7th, 2025|Categories: Beauty, Culture, Joseph Pearce, Modernity, Music, Richard Wagner, Senior Contributors|

I would say that taking idioms or gaining inspiration from past works does not constitute a continuum, i.e. tradition, if the intention is to put their integrity (their beauty) at the service of disintegration (ugliness). A correct term for such taking from the tradition would be vandalism. “Charles,” said Cordelia, “Modern Art is all bosh, [...]

The War the West Forgot

By |2025-08-28T20:23:03-05:00August 6th, 2025|Categories: Books, Catholicism, Christianity, Film, History, Literature, Protestant Reformation, War, Western Civilization|

Better than any historian, storyteller Gertrud von le Fort brings her unique genius for laying bare the human heart in making sense of and finding redemption amid the horror of human suffering. Is there a Catholic home in America that does not display an Infant of Prague watching over the family from the top of [...]

Distant Light: The Music of Peteris Vasks

By |2025-08-04T11:24:23-05:00August 4th, 2025|Categories: Audio/Video, Michael De Sapio, Music, Senior Contributors|

In a normal world, Peteris Vasks would be the most famous composer alive. He writes music for an apocalyptic age, in which culture is coming full circle, providing exactly what the world needs: spirituality, depth, presence, beauty. “I want to nourish the soul, that is what I preach in my works.” —Pēteris Vasks Pēteris [...]

Roman Death Masks and the Role of Memory

By |2025-07-31T15:01:45-05:00July 31st, 2025|Categories: Art, Culture, Death, History, Patriotism, Rome, Timeless Essays|

Roman death masks—called “imagines”—were actually wax models impressed directly on the face during life, and they bore a remarkable likeness to the person. Displayed during the funerals of the elite, they served as a link between the present and the past and were meant to inspire attendees to patriotic virtue. The recent defacement of statues [...]

“Judith Triumphant”

By |2025-07-26T11:44:32-05:00July 26th, 2025|Categories: Antonio Vivaldi, Audio/Video, Christianity, Music, Timeless Essays|

Based on the Biblical tale of the young Israelite woman who cuts off the head of the barbarian invader Holofernes, Antonio Vivaldi’s sole surviving oratorio, "Juditha Triumphans," was written to celebrate the 1716  victory of the Republic of Venice over the Turks. "Juditha triumphans devicta Holofernis barbarie" (Judith triumphant over the barbarians of Holofernes), RV 644, is an oratorio by Antonio Vivaldi, the only [...]

Enemies of the Permanent Things

By |2025-07-24T18:25:21-05:00July 24th, 2025|Categories: Benjamin Lockerd, Books, Civil Society, Cluny, Conservatism, Culture, History, Literature, Permanent Things, Russell Kirk, T.S. Eliot, Timeless Essays, Tradition|

The necessity of personal morality in a thriving community is denied by the enemies of the permanent things, who do not believe that there are permanent standards of behavior or indeed an unchanging human nature, and who seek to create political systems that will make everyone happy without much effort. Enemies of the Permanent Things: [...]

Go to Top