Mimetic Desire and the Seven Deadly Sins

By |2026-03-05T21:16:08-06:00March 5th, 2026|Categories: Catholicism, Dwight Longenecker, Lent, Rene Girard, Senior Contributors|

During this season of Lent it is helpful to reflect on how mimetic desire—defined as “imitation envy"—connects with and influences the classic seven deadly sins. The French thinker Rene Girard had a seminal insight which has shed light on just about every aspect of human endeavor from theology and anthropology to economics, politics, psychology, and [...]

Our Need for the Madonna in Reforming Our Culture

By |2026-01-22T20:34:29-06:00January 22nd, 2026|Categories: Catholicism, Christendom, Christianity, Community, Culture, Hans Urs von Balthasar, Mother of God, Rene Girard|

Today Christians of all stripes are responding in defense of the embattled family, but our eventual success will be enabled by the image of the Madonna, the Mother of God, especially as the "Stabat Mater," the Mother standing beneath the cross of her bruised and broken Son, suffering more than any other human creature has [...]

Hans Urs von Balthasar & the Dramatic Project of Theology

By |2024-07-12T11:49:11-05:00July 12th, 2024|Categories: Christopher Morrissey, Hans Urs von Balthasar, Rene Girard, Timeless Essays, Tragedy|

Hans Urs von Balthasar believed that tragedies that feature the death of the hero—the sacrificial crisis of the innocent victim—reflect the fullest dramatic meaning of the Passion of Christ: In these stories, good violence is needed in order to make the bad violence go away. Hans Urs von Balthasar, in Volume IV (The Action) of [...]

The Apocalypse of the Sovereign Self

By |2023-11-25T12:28:01-06:00September 14th, 2023|Categories: Books, Catholicism, Dwight Longenecker, Philosophy, Rene Girard, Senior Contributors, Theology|

The prevalent tendency in our society to overestimate individual freedom is wreaking havoc on personal happiness and threatening to bring down Western culture. This culture is built on a Judeo-Christian foundation and it will not survive the dismantling of that foundation. Fr. Longenecker concludes his interview with author and friend of René Girard with a [...]

Theologian Gil Bailie’s Reflections on René Girard

By |2023-11-25T12:06:53-06:00August 29th, 2023|Categories: Books, Catholicism, Christianity, Dwight Longenecker, Philosophy, Rene Girard, Senior Contributors, Theology|

We are in a civilizational crisis, one that is the outworking of anthropological mistakes that have long festered. Increasingly in the history of Western culture we have forgotten or ignored or misconstrued, not only mimesis, but what is perhaps the most essential fact of human existence, namely, religious longing. Theologian Gil Bailie was a personal [...]

Picking a Bone With René Girard

By |2023-11-25T12:06:56-06:00June 5th, 2021|Categories: Catholicism, Christianity, Civilization, Culture, Rene Girard, Theology|

René Girard was a polymath—not only writing on literature, but bringing his theory to bear on anthropology, philosophy, sociology, psychology, and theology. While I greatly admire his work, I would presume to pick a bone with his thought on sacrificial systems in religion. René Girard I was first introduced to the French thinker [...]

God’s Gamble: Gethsemane, Free Will, & the Fate of Man

By |2023-11-25T12:38:08-06:00November 24th, 2018|Categories: Books, Christianity, Dwight Longenecker, Heaven, Rene Girard, Senior Contributors, Theology|

Did God gamble everything in the Garden of Gethsemane, the second Adam facing a real, existential, and eternal choice of going through with the Father’s will or backing away from it? God’s Gamble: The Gravitational Power of  Crucified Love, by Gil Bailie (384 pages, Angelico Press, 2016) Few thinkers have stormed the post modern world [...]

Death to the Death Penalty? René Girard’s Challenge to Thomas Aquinas

By |2023-11-25T12:06:58-06:00November 19th, 2018|Categories: Catholicism, Christianity, Death, Justice, Rene Girard, St. Thomas Aquinas|

Is acceptance of the death penalty contrary to the modern understanding of the dignity of the human person? The anthropology of René Girard allows for a rereading of Thomas Aquinas’ defense of capital punishment. The Catholic Church’s recent definitive revocation of the death penalty[1] suggests that something in the zeitgeist demands a rethinking of one [...]

Evolution of Desire: A Life of René Girard

By |2023-11-25T12:42:47-06:00July 14th, 2018|Categories: Books, Christianity, Dwight Longenecker, Philosophy, Rene Girard, Theology|

René Girard gave the intellectual universe a way of seeing old truths in a new way and new truths through an old lens. As a result, his work has already been hugely influential in a range of disciplines, both academic and cultural… Evolution of Desire: A Life of René Girard by Cynthia L. Haven (346 [...]

René Girard’s Challenge to Fusionism

By |2023-11-25T12:46:50-06:00May 23rd, 2018|Categories: Civilization, Conservatism, Culture, Eric Voegelin, Politics, Rene Girard, Western Civilization|

At a minimum, a restoration of conservative thought requires paying attention to primitive history and to what it might tell us about the things that fusionism has long assumed are most important about tradition—as well as what this new knowledge reveals about the viability of freedom…   Modern American conservatism rose in the 1950s under [...]

René Girard and the Common Good

By |2023-11-25T12:07:02-06:00August 25th, 2017|Categories: Books, Character, Christianity, Ethics, Featured, Rene Girard, St. Thomas Aquinas|

The core of René Girard's thought seems to center around the fundamental conviction that mimetic desire is the desire for God. In a recent essay in this journal, Dr. Thaddeus Kozinski makes the bold claim that “the work of René Girard would not seem all that relevant to Thomists.... However, in my estimation, Girard’s thought [...]

René Girard and Secular Modernity

By |2023-11-25T12:50:07-06:00September 2nd, 2016|Categories: Books, Christianity, Modernity, Rene Girard, Secularism, Wyoming Catholic College|

René Girard and Secular Modernity: Christ, Culture, and Crisis, by Scott Cowdell (Notre Dame, IN: Notre Dame University Press, 2013) The work of René Girard would not seem all that relevant to Thomists. A French literary critic turned anthropologist and amateur scripture exegete, one who identifies ritual murder as the basis of all religion, culture, myth, [...]

Go to Top