Why Government Cannot Educate

By |2025-07-18T19:05:07-05:00July 13th, 2025|Categories: Aristotle, Bureaucracy, Christianity, Education, Enlightenment, Family, Government, Liberal Learning, Love, Plato, Progressivism|

Saying that government cannot educate is not a partisan political position, but a simple statement of fact: government cannot educate, because government cannot love. Even more bluntly, government should not even try to run institutions of love, because, slowly but surely, its administrators inevitably pervert them in their desire for security or lust for power. [...]

Heroes of the Vendée

By |2025-03-18T14:06:53-05:00February 23rd, 2025|Categories: Catholicism, Enlightenment, History, Joseph Pearce, Senior Contributors, Unsung Heroes of Christendom|

The Catholic people of the Vendée, aware of the horrors being unleashed by the stormtroopers of the French Revolution, responded courageously to the threat to their Faith and their way of life. Many people will have heard of the French Resistance, the name given to the various underground organizations that fought against the Nazis during [...]

Revolution and Papacy

By |2024-11-02T21:07:45-05:00November 2nd, 2024|Categories: Books, Catholicism, Cluny, Enlightenment, History|

Pope Gregory XVI believed that, even if it were true that immediate spiritual advantages might be gained by revolt, or by the introduction of liberal measures, the shock to the monarchical system involved by such changes would be disastrous to the Church and Society. Revolution and Papacy: 1769–1846, by E. E. Y. Hales (Cluny Media, [...]

Anti-Catholic Revolution and Catholic Revival

By |2024-07-28T13:39:33-05:00July 28th, 2024|Categories: Catholicism, Enlightenment, History, Joseph Pearce, Senior Contributors, Unsung Heroes of Christendom|

The 18th century was a low point for the Church, particularly in France. But François-René de Chateaubriand would sow the seeds of the Catholic revival in France. It is hard to say which have been the lowest points in the history of the Church. The fourteenth century was pretty wretched. The papacy, exiled from Rome to [...]

“Age of Revolutions”: An Exercise in Reading History Backward

By |2024-05-29T16:53:58-05:00May 29th, 2024|Categories: Books, Enlightenment, History, John Horvat, Progressivism, Revolution|

Fareed Zakaria’s book is a defense of liberalism in the European sense of a regime of limited government, free markets, rule of law, moral indifference, maximized freedom, and unending progress. He turns all those who support the conservative cause into resentful, racist individuals left behind by progress. Age of Revolutions: Progress and Backlash From 1600 [...]

Puppy Dogs & Women Priests: Sentimentalism & Romanticism

By |2023-06-23T22:02:01-05:00June 23rd, 2023|Categories: Christianity, Dwight Longenecker, Enlightenment, Senior Contributors|

Sentimentalism—the rule of individualistic emotion—ends by destroying not only the good and beautiful emotions of the individual, but also the individual himself and the society in which he lives. In the late 1980s I was a minister in the Church of England, when the entire denomination was embroiled in a debate about women’s ordination. Much [...]

Leapfrogging the Enlightenment

By |2022-08-04T18:36:42-05:00August 4th, 2022|Categories: Architecture, Art, Culture, Enlightenment, History, Joseph Pearce, Literature, Senior Contributors|

There are some valuable lessons to be learned from the Romantic reaction against the Enlightenment and the various neo-medievalist movements which were its fruits. The most important is that society is not progressing inexorably in one “progressive” rationalist direction. The eighteenth century was a time of religious skepticism which seemed to foreshadow the eclipse of [...]

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