Seek His Face Evermore: St. Augustine & the Quest for God

By |2025-04-02T19:26:20-05:00April 2nd, 2025|Categories: Christianity, St. Augustine, The Witness of St. Augustine|

Who among us is erudite enough to set about measuring the immensity of the achievement wrought by Augustine, whose depths clearly defy one’s best efforts to plumb? It was during the pontificate of Paul VI, who has since been raised to the altar, that a gathering of scholars arrived in Rome for a conference on [...]

Mystical Premonitions

By |2025-10-20T17:39:51-05:00March 22nd, 2025|Categories: Catholicism, Christianity, Love, Mysticism, Prayer, St. Augustine|

Begin your meditation by primarily using the Gospels to centre your whole attention on the person of Jesus so that knowledge can gradually turn to love. Affective Prayer begins when the sparks of love that are generated there begin to lead upwards and into the Risen Christ. After the Protestant Reformation, a new terminology began [...]

Richard Weaver: The Conservatism of Piety

By |2025-02-09T15:34:00-06:00February 9th, 2025|Categories: Conservatism, Faith, Featured, Plato, Richard Weaver, St. Augustine, Timeless Essays, Western Tradition|

Confronted with choices between evil and good, man frequently chooses evil with its accompanying anguish. Would not wisdom and prudence dictate that man ought to be modest, restrained, and humble—in a word, pious? Born in Weaverville, North Carolina in 1910, Richard Malcolm Weaver was raised in Lexington, Kentucky. Elected to Phi Beta Kappa, Weaver graduated [...]

Do Not Receive the Grace of God in Vain

By |2025-02-08T14:40:31-06:00February 8th, 2025|Categories: Catholicism, Grace, Sainthood, St. Augustine|

Jesus Christ teaches that we totally rely on his grace to possess friendship with him, to resist temptation, and to perform good works. Our Lord taught this to his Apostles the evening before he courageously suffered his Passion and purchased that grace for us: As the branch cannot bear fruit by itself, unless it abides [...]

Augustine’s “Confessions” Unpacked

By |2024-11-15T17:15:27-06:00November 12th, 2024|Categories: Books, Christianity, Faith, Great Books, Louis Markos, Religion, St. Augustine, Theology, Timeless Essays|

Augustine’s “Confessions” is first and foremost a prayer to God. Indeed, unless we read it as a prayer, we will not understand it; we will only study it. I Burned for Your Peace: Augustine’s Confessions Unpacked, by Peter Kreeft (240 pages, Ignatius Press, 2016) Back in 1990, I had the rare privilege of teaching in [...]

T.S. Eliot: Hope Beyond the Waste Land

By |2024-10-16T13:31:13-05:00October 16th, 2024|Categories: Literature, Poetry, St. Augustine, T.S. Eliot|

In The Waste Land, T.S. Eliot displays the dark and depraved qualities of humanity. These qualities are especially prevalent in “The Fire Sermon,” where society has fallen victim to sexual immorality and corruption. Due to this subject matter, scholars conclude that Eliot is pessimistic about the future of Western Civilization, but this point of view [...]

Not Facts First, Truth First

By |2024-10-07T18:32:08-05:00October 7th, 2024|Categories: Christianity, Joseph Pearce, Literature, Senior Contributors, St. Augustine, St. Thomas Aquinas|

Literature is important because it takes us beyond the facts to the truth. It shows us who we are as human beings and as human persons. We could go even further by insisting that literature is not merely important but necessary. Without literature or, more specifically, without the ability to see literarily, we will be [...]

Jonathan Edwards: Founding Father of American Political Thought

By |2024-10-04T19:23:58-05:00October 4th, 2024|Categories: American Founding, Freedom, History, Leadership, Philosophy, Plato, Politics, St. Augustine, Timeless Essays|

Jonathan Edwards helped to invent a new America, committed to a national covenant and an unprecedented spiritual egalitarianism. In 1930, the historian Henry Bamford Parkes critically assessed the legacy of America’s most famous Puritan intellectual, Jonathan Edwards. According to Parkes, “it is hardly a hyperbole to say that, if Edwards had never lived, there would [...]

Eternity in Time: Augustine, Russell Kirk, & Christopher Dawson

By |2024-08-29T13:13:36-05:00August 29th, 2024|Categories: Catholicism, Christian Humanism, Christopher Dawson, Culture, Russell Kirk, St. Augustine, Timeless Essays|

For Dawson and Kirk, St. Augustine served as both the lodestar in confronting the evils of the world and as a means by which the modern traditionalist should navigate in turbulent ideological waters. One would be hard pressed to find a greater influence on two of the finest Catholic Humanists of the twentieth century, Christopher [...]

Saint Augustine on Figurative Language in Scripture

By |2024-08-27T19:05:04-05:00August 27th, 2024|Categories: Bible, Christianity, Christine Norvell, Culture, Education, Religion, Senior Contributors, St. Augustine, Theology, Timeless Essays|

When trying to understand Scripture, we need to establish an analysis of concrete terms. But if we aren’t careful, we just might explain away the beauty of descriptive language in the Bible. Saint Augustine of Hippo encountered the same issue, and not just among his youngest students. In humanities coursework, we often train students to [...]

An Invitation to Augustine’s “City of God”

By |2024-08-27T16:28:57-05:00August 27th, 2024|Categories: Books, Christendom, Civilization, Education, Great Books, Paul Krause, Senior Contributors, St. Augustine, Timeless Essays|

No work of Christian theology has left such an impact on the world and biblical interpretation and understanding as St. Augustine’s “City of God.” We who read the Bible do so, often unknowingly, through the eyes of the bishop of Hippo. In 410 A.D., the city of Rome was sacked by the Visigoths. Rome was [...]

Euclid’s Geometry Seen Through the Glasses of Saint Augustine

By |2024-08-02T08:18:11-05:00August 1st, 2024|Categories: Christianity, Mathematics, St. Augustine|

Moderns often believe they are great discoverers and inventors, yet they remain ignorant of the meaning and significance of the ancient intellectual monuments of Antiquity and the Middle Ages. This is a lesson upon which we can never meditate enough and a good argument in favor of seriously undertaking classical studies and ancient history. We [...]

Saint Augustine’s “Confessions”: An Introduction

By |2024-05-21T14:12:16-05:00May 21st, 2024|Categories: Books, Great Books, Joseph Pearce, Senior Contributors, St. Augustine, Timeless Essays|

Augustine is accessible and applicable because he is one of us. He suffers from the same temptations and succumbs to those temptations. He falls and does not always get up again, preferring to wallow in the gutter with his lusts and his illicit appetites. And yet, like us, he is restless until he rests in [...]

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