G.K. Chesterton’s “Orthodoxy” and Conservatism

By |2025-06-13T10:15:57-05:00June 13th, 2025|Categories: Books, Christianity, G.K. Chesterton, Michael De Sapio, Orthodoxy, Senior Contributors, Timeless Essays|

Turning the popular negative connotation of “orthodoxy” on its head, G.K. Chesterton argues that orthodoxy is anything but dull and musty, but on the contrary exciting and adventuresome. In 1952, C.S. Lewis did a great service to the world in producing Mere Christianity, his account of the fundamentals of Christian belief for a popular audience. It [...]

Seeing the Origins of the Church in a Mosaic

By |2025-06-06T12:26:50-05:00June 6th, 2025|Categories: Beauty, Catholicism, Film, Michael De Sapio, Senior Contributors|

The Mosaic Church (2025) is an engaging new documentary film about an extraordinary archeological discovery of recent times. In 2004, excavators renovating a prison near the ancient city of Megiddo in northern Israel came across a mosaic floor that, as soon became apparent, originally covered the floor of a Christian worship hall in Roman times. [...]

St. Philip Neri, the Oratorio, & Christian Culture

By |2025-05-25T15:53:46-05:00May 25th, 2025|Categories: Catholicism, Culture, Michael De Sapio, Music, Sainthood, Senior Contributors|

The history of the oratorio proper begins in St. Philip Neri’s oratory chapel, where the story of salvation was brought to life with the best of human art, causing audiences fall in love with their faith through the power of beauty. When I was in the eighth grade and the time came to choose my [...]

The Catholic Worldview & the World to Come

By |2025-05-14T06:04:17-05:00May 13th, 2025|Categories: Beauty, Books, Catholicism, Culture, Imagination, Michael De Sapio, Senior Contributors|

The idea that eternity will be a culture and a civilization, not a disembodied never-never land, is perhaps the most powerful takeaway from Fr. William J. Slattery's "Enchanted by Eternity," and I assume it will be news to many people. It opens up a vast field of wonder and possibility. Enchanted by Eternity: Recapturing the [...]

Palestrina: Commemorating a Musical Giant

By |2025-04-06T16:20:32-05:00April 6th, 2025|Categories: Audio/Video, Catholicism, Michael De Sapio, Music, Senior Contributors|

Later generations of Catholic Church leaders continually held up Palestrina’s music as the model for what sacred music should be. Whenever church music seemed in a rickety state—as in the semi-operatic effusions of the Victorian era, or the folky derivatives of the late 20th century—Palestrina was always there as a lighthouse to guide us back [...]

Why Is Beethoven So Popular?

By |2025-04-03T09:50:41-05:00April 1st, 2025|Categories: Beethoven 250, Ludwig van Beethoven, Michael De Sapio, Music, Timeless Essays|

It is Beethoven—not Bach or Mozart—who is the most universally popular composer in the classical canon. Why is this? Some authors have posited his democratic social beliefs or his personal story of victory over deafness. These are all certainly factors, but I prefer to look first at the aesthetic qualities of the music itself. Johann [...]

The Mighty Nine: Reflections on Beethoven’s Symphonies

By |2025-12-17T11:56:11-06:00March 25th, 2025|Categories: Andrew Balio, Beethoven 250, Joseph Pearce, Ludwig van Beethoven, Mark Malvasi, Michael De Sapio, Music, Stephen M. Klugewicz, Timeless Essays|Tags: , , , |

Please enjoy this symposium on the nine symphonies of Ludwig van Beethoven, with contributions from our distinguished panel, including composer Michael Kurek and Principal Trumpet of the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra, Andrew Balio. Clicking on the CD cover art next to each symphony will guide you to a listening recommendation on Spotify; at the bottom of [...]

J.S. Bach and the Musical Mind

By |2025-03-20T18:33:37-05:00March 20th, 2025|Categories: J.S. Bach, Michael De Sapio, Music, Senior Contributors, Timeless Essays|

Johann Sebastian Bach shows how mind and soul, spirit and body connect. In its complex richness and wholeness his music suggests the unity of faith and reason, science, and imagination. Full of relationships that stimulate the ear and the mind, it expresses the multifold splendor of creation itself. “To strip human nature until its divine [...]

Sounding Faith: Conversations With a Baroque Composer

By |2025-02-10T11:07:18-06:00February 9th, 2025|Categories: Audio/Video, Books, Catholicism, Michael De Sapio, Music, Senior Contributors|

The music of little-known Baroque composer Francesco Antonio Bonporti embodies a kind of Arcadian serenity and joy, like the music of Mozart. Art conceived along those lines is closely tied to the refinement of the spirit, in which the senses do not go their own brutish way but are reconciled with the mind by means [...]

Josef Pieper and the End Times

By |2025-02-02T19:31:08-06:00February 2nd, 2025|Categories: Christendom, Christianity, Josef Pieper, Michael De Sapio, Philosophy, Senior Contributors|

Josef Pieper stresses that the “end of times” religiously understood is not an annihilation. God does not revoke his creation. Rather, the “catastrophe” of the end times is to be understood as a final apotheosis of evil, leading to the end of time and earthly existence and opening out into redemption and new creation. “It [...]

The Sabbath and Striving for the Good Life

By |2025-01-17T09:11:36-06:00January 16th, 2025|Categories: Books, Catholicism, Michael De Sapio, Senior Contributors|

Daniel Fitzpatrick's book "Restoring the Lord’s Day" is, in essence, a diagnosis of the ills of modernity viewed from the aspect of the Sabbath. Lost today are the grandeur and the normative and unitive force of the Sabbath, the center of the life of the individual, the family, and the community. Restoring the Lord’s Day: [...]

Launching the New Year in Hope and Faith

By |2025-01-04T12:11:46-06:00January 4th, 2025|Categories: Catholicism, Christianity, Faith, Hope, Michael De Sapio, New Year's Day, Senior Contributors|

To anyone who feels beaten down by the bleakness of the world around us, my advice is this: seek to rise above the soundbites and thought-clichés of journalism, politics, and academia. Instead, inquire about the truth from the great tradition. Keep the sabbath, cultivate the soul and the mind, study nature. Maintain that flame of [...]

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