Dr. Glenn C. Arbery is President of Wyoming Catholic College. He is the author of Why Literature Matters (2001) and the editor of two volumes, The Tragic Abyss (2004) and, most recently, The Southern Critics: An Anthology (2010).

Out of the Metaverse

By |2022-02-04T19:19:08-06:00February 5th, 2022|Categories: Glenn Arbery, Senior Contributors, Technology, Transhumanism, Wyoming Catholic College|

Isn’t this the next thing we really want—young people with vision and confidence, willing to stand up and speak the truth? The metaverse is pure sophistry, the flattery of an audience it literally encompasses. Our students speak on behalf of God and the best of our inheritance. Where are the billions being invested on their [...]

Lost in Translation?

By |2022-01-28T21:05:58-06:00January 29th, 2022|Categories: Catholicism, Christianity, Glenn Arbery, Great Books, Literature, Wyoming Catholic College|

Good translations are crucial since they make accessible what would otherwise require years of study. The problem, of course, lies in what is lost in the process turning one language into another. One of the funniest scenes in Shakespeare’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream comes in the woods outside Athens when Bottom the Weaver first begins [...]

Ordinary Time (with Bulldogs)

By |2022-01-20T20:28:08-06:00January 14th, 2022|Categories: Catholicism, Christianity, Glenn Arbery, Senior Contributors, Wyoming Catholic College|

On Monday, almost without warning, the Christian world fell from the Christmas season into that plain-sounding condition called "Ordinary Time." Technically, this designation simply means the days and weeks of the liturgical year that do not fall in Advent, Christmas, Lent, or Easter. Most of us struggle, suddenly finding ourselves in this kind of time, [...]

Why We Pray

By |2021-12-28T16:58:39-06:00December 28th, 2021|Categories: Catholicism, Christianity, Christmas, Glenn Arbery, Senior Contributors, Wyoming Catholic College|

As we celebrate Christmas, the most familiar of stories, we should be aware that its very familiarity can numb us to its importance: the center of all prayer, the mystery of the Incarnation, when God submitted himself to the human form in the radical dependency of a newborn’s pure petition. Last week, the Catholic News [...]

Finals and New Beginnings

By |2021-12-20T15:05:32-06:00December 20th, 2021|Categories: Christianity, Education, Glenn Arbery, Liberal Learning, Wyoming Catholic College|

What are our students going to be bringing into their first contact with this world? Primarily sanity. Grounded in the real virtues, cardinal and theological, they understand themselves and others as loved by God, given life by His will, sustained by His purposes. It’s Finals week at Wyoming Catholic College. Since Monday, students have been [...]

The Piety of Thought

By |2021-11-12T12:01:14-06:00November 12th, 2021|Categories: Christianity, Education, Glenn Arbery, Liberal Learning, Wyoming Catholic College|

The teaching of modern universities is that we inhabit a godless, indifferent, pointless material universe where consciousness itself is an accident. A prevailing nihilism settles out from this failure of questioning. If we reopen the essential questions, we can have faith that the truth will sustain us and reward us for our love of it. [...]

On Being Known

By |2021-10-18T08:46:12-05:00October 19th, 2021|Categories: Glenn Arbery, Senior Contributors, Wyoming Catholic College|

Isn’t part of the problem in the culture at large a lack of the personal correction and encouragement that accompany truly being known to those around us? Don Rags sessions have an immediate effect on the behavior of students, as professors often notice, but they mean more than that. This kind of recognition helps personal [...]

The Night of Faith

By |2021-09-19T14:32:18-05:00September 19th, 2021|Categories: Christianity, Glenn Arbery, Literature, Senior Contributors, Wyoming Catholic College|

Anyone who questions the usefulness of literature might want to reflect how often every day we try to fit people’s actions into a cogent narrative. What happened exactly? we ask. What choice was made, and who made it? What were the consequences? Given these consequences, what conclusions about the character of the person who made the [...]

Summer Reading

By |2021-08-27T12:33:41-05:00August 15th, 2021|Categories: Glenn Arbery, Literature, Wyoming Catholic College|

If this had been a normal year, I might have written a column on summer reading in mid-June, say, with a couple of relatively uneventful months stretching ahead. I might have anticipated which books I wanted to read about the cultural situation we face and the place of strong, traditional, liberal arts education in addressing [...]

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