The Bard of Greenville

By |2025-03-08T17:39:21-06:00March 7th, 2025|Categories: Art, Beauty, Catholicism, Christianity, Culture, Dwight Longenecker, Joseph Pearce, Literature, Senior Contributors, Wokeism|

Dwight Longenecker Father Dwight Longenecker will be no stranger to readers of The Imaginative Conservative. Apart from the numerous essays that he has written for this illustrious journal for more years than I care or dare to remember, he has written many excellent books. As with the essays, so with the books. They [...]

Two Big, Indispensable Catholic Books

By |2025-02-27T19:28:31-06:00February 27th, 2025|Categories: Books, Catholicism, Christianity, Dwight Longenecker, Senior Contributors|

If Scott Hahn’s "Catholic Study Bible" is a monument to the contribution that converts from Protestantism have made, Daniel Gonzalez’ "Mass Explained" is a monument to the solid, reliable, and deep faith of lifelong Catholics. Both books are magnificent accomplishments. A few years after I was received into the Catholic Church, my older brother and [...]

Towards a Middle Earth Metaphysical

By |2025-02-20T14:17:37-06:00February 20th, 2025|Categories: C.S. Lewis, Dwight Longenecker, Nature, Philosophy, Science, Senior Contributors, Theology|

Whether they be fairies, gnomes, cryptids, aliens, or elves, what are these creatures about which man has written for centuries? C.S. Lewis explained that the medieval mind understood them to be inhabitants of a kind of middle realm between the physical and the spiritual regions. But is this "Middle Earth" real? No matter our chosen [...]

Be Still and Read

By |2025-01-27T12:32:38-06:00January 27th, 2025|Categories: Catholicism, Classical Education, Dwight Longenecker, Great Books, Literature, Senior Contributors|

The future will belong to the literate, not the un-literate, and the decline of reading will invariably be corrected by those at the forefront of the educational revolution sweeping America—and that is the rise of classical education. Some years ago I was discussing with a Benedictine abbot the trends he was experiencing among postulants and [...]

Jimmy Carter & John Lennon’s Leftist Anthem

By |2025-01-12T12:01:44-06:00January 12th, 2025|Categories: Christianity, Communism, Dwight Longenecker, Music, Presidency, Religion, Senior Contributors|

Jimmy Carter was a nice, good man who epitomized American Christianity’s reduction to Moralistic, Therapeutic Deism. As such, the singing of John Lennon's atheistic "Imagine"—Carter's favorite song—at the former president's funeral was entirely appropriate. Last week at former president Jimmy Carter’s funeral, country singers Garth Brooks and Trisha Yearwood sang ex-Beatle John Lennon’s song Imagine, [...]

Reassessing Benjamin Franklin’s Life & Legacy

By |2025-01-07T12:39:58-06:00January 7th, 2025|Categories: American Founding, American Republic, Benjamin Franklin, Books, Bradley J. Birzer, Christianity, Dwight Longenecker, Reason, Senior Contributors|

D.G. Hart perceptively notes that Benjamin Franklin was not a Deist, as popular memory claims, but rather a "cultural Protestant." As such, he "applied much of what Protestants taught about work and study in the secular world without accepting all that the churches taught about the world to come." Benjamin Franklin: Cultural Protestant (270 pages, [...]

Tolkien’s Faith

By |2025-01-02T17:18:33-06:00January 2nd, 2025|Categories: Books, Dwight Longenecker, J.R.R. Tolkien, Senior Contributors, Timeless Essays|

What will delight lovers of J.R.R. Tolkien most is the portrait of the man that is drawn in the pages of Holly Ordway's biography. In the final chapters, she summarizes his life as the extraordinary fleshed out in ordinary. While Tolkien is completing his magnum opus, he is also maintaining the daily routine of husband, [...]

Step Aside, Columbus: The Irish Got There First

By |2024-12-25T21:14:53-06:00December 25th, 2024|Categories: Dwight Longenecker, History, Ireland, Senior Contributors|

Could the Duhare of North America have been the descendants of Irish explorers who ventured across the Atlantic long before the Nina, the Pinta, and the Santa Maria set sail? Maybe it's the Amish in me, but there’s an ornery streak that delights in eccentric theories, provoking the establishment, undermining the accepted narrative, pondering alternative [...]

Punk Rock and Those Notre Dame Vestments

By |2024-12-16T21:27:13-06:00December 15th, 2024|Categories: Catholicism, Dwight Longenecker, Senior Contributors|

While one might respect the French traditions of haute couture and the artistic avant garde, who thought it was a good idea to mar the otherwise grand reopening of the historic Christian monument of Notre Dame by dressing the clergy in costumes so garishly outlandish? Once when I was living in England, I stood in [...]

Whatever Happened to Saint Nicholas?

By |2024-12-05T17:38:39-06:00December 5th, 2024|Categories: Advent, Christianity, Christmas, Dwight Longenecker, Timeless Essays|Tags: |

Let us remember this day in Advent as a reminder of the true spirit of Saint Nicholas—a valiant defender of the faith, a tender-hearted lover of the poor and a kindly, generous soul, who saw that the true message of Christ’s nativity was that unless you become like a little child, you cannot enter the [...]

Why Is that Big Bird Called a Turkey?

By |2024-11-27T11:36:57-06:00November 27th, 2024|Categories: Dwight Longenecker, Senior Contributors, Thanksgiving|

When your bird reaches the table this Thursday, you can ask your table mates if they know why the bird is called a turkey, and then—if you have read this essay—impress them with your encyclopedic knowledge. You remember the Dad joke at this time of year: “We’re having an international Thanksgiving. Mom’s serving Turkey on [...]

Women’s Ordination & the Distortion of Humanity

By |2024-10-20T18:12:59-05:00October 20th, 2024|Categories: Christianity, Dwight Longenecker, Nature of Man, Senior Contributors, Wokeism|

The issue of women’s ordination is one comparatively minor aspect of the much larger issue of our times: the destruction and distortion of human sexuality and ultimately the destruction and distortion of the human race itself. The ordination of women in the Church of England was the catalyst for my conversion to the Catholic Church [...]

Darkness Visible: Exorcism Films & the Iconography of Evil

By |2024-10-15T19:18:45-05:00October 15th, 2024|Categories: Dwight Longenecker, Film, Timeless Essays|Tags: |

Popular culture is awash with the horror genre. Television shows, video games, movies and literature on the occult gush forth seeming to make the ironic point that the more our society becomes scientifically secular the more appetite there is for the supernatural. It seems impossible to avoid the tsunami of paranormal investigators, zombies, vampires and [...]

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