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 [...]

The Essential Paul Elmer More

By |2024-08-23T18:00:56-05:00August 23rd, 2024|Categories: Books, Catholicism, Christian Humanism, Christianity, Paul Elmer More, Religion, Theology|

There are few twentieth-century intellectual figures to whom one might apply the adjective “essential.” One of the earliest is Paul Elmer More, perhaps the last century’s greatest Christian apologist. The final appeal of the humanist is not to any historical convention but to intuition. —Irving Babbitt, “Humanism: An Essay at Definition” in Norman Forester, Humanism [...]

Gather Round the Hearth to Enjoy Things

By |2024-08-22T21:54:34-05:00August 22nd, 2024|Categories: Glenn Davis, Old Republic, Richard Weaver, Russell Kirk, Timeless Essays|Tags: |

How do we redeem the time? We start by "brightening the corner where we are," by improving ourselves, by helping our neighbors, by loving our families, by setting high standards for our students, and by exercising the inherited liberty bequeathed to us from the founders, responsibly, yet joyfully. With the Louisiana Purchase, the original republican [...]

The Power of Beauty

By |2024-08-20T19:47:02-05:00August 20th, 2024|Categories: Art, Barbara J. Elliott, Beauty, Culture, Permanent Things, T.S. Eliot, Timeless Essays|

Art has the twin functions of reflecting a culture and shaping it. The problem that contemporary artists face is a difficult one: how to express meaning to a world that has become culturally over-stimulated by the spectacular, the hyper-sexualized, and the dumbed-down by inanity, and which has increasingly become antagonistic to manifestations of Christianity. “We [...]

Irving Babbitt: Moral Imagination & Progressive Education

By |2024-08-01T15:38:46-05:00August 1st, 2024|Categories: Education, Featured, Glenn Davis, Imagination, Irving Babbitt, Liberal Learning, Timeless Essays|Tags: |

Throughout his works, Irving Babbitt addressed the continuing decline of the humanistic imagination, humanism constituting a tradition that had produced a leadership class of ladies and gentlemen. His educational theory was aimed at producing an elite, humanistic aristocracy that would lead responsibly and ethically. When Literature and the American College, Irving Babbitt’s critique of the [...]

The Truth of Beauty: Educating the Moral Imagination

By |2024-07-19T21:33:44-05:00July 19th, 2024|Categories: Beauty, Benjamin Lockerd, C.S. Lewis, Russell Kirk, Senior Contributors, T.S. Eliot, Timeless Essays, Truth|

The answers to the errors of modern times need to be given in philosophy and theology, but it is essential that we also experience the truth imaginatively. Beauty is truth, truth beauty,—that is all Ye know on earth, and all ye need to know. —Keats, “Ode on a Grecian Urn” These famous lines of Keats [...]

The Imaginative Conservative: 14 Years of Preserving & Advancing

By |2024-07-11T10:08:05-05:00July 9th, 2024|Categories: Aristotle, Bradley J. Birzer, Cicero, Reason, Russell Kirk, Senior Contributors, The Imaginative Conservative, Timeless Essays|

May we always defend like Socrates and Cicero and Thomas More. May we always preserve like the monks of Lindesfarne. May we always see the world through the eyes of Russell Kirk, Christopher Dawson, and T.S. Eliot. May we always cherish the humanity and the divinity of the Second Person of the Most Blessed Trinity. [...]

The Voice of This Calling: The Enduring Legacy of T.S. Eliot

By |2024-07-11T10:18:12-05:00July 8th, 2024|Categories: Essential, Russell Kirk, T.S. Eliot, The Conservative Mind, Timeless Essays, Tradition|

T. S. Eliot offers neither a program for success nor a recipe of happiness, no remedy, nostrum or elixir, but simply the counsel of hope, the example of his prudence, play, and compassion, all as part of the imperative of the unremitting spiritual discipline of tradition. In 1953, the first edition of The Conservative Mind [...]

How to Read the Declaration of Independence

By |2024-07-07T16:00:22-05:00July 7th, 2024|Categories: American Founding, American Republic, Constitution, Declaration of Independence, Featured, M. E. Bradford, Timeless Essays, Willmoore Kendall|Tags: |

Our collective confusion about the American experience begins at the beginning. Most Americans who think about such questions imagine that they understand the Declaration of Independence, though many of them may be puzzled that it did not (and does not) produce the results one might expect from the commitments which they believe it makes. After [...]

An Empire Like No Other

By |2024-07-01T19:11:06-05:00July 1st, 2024|Categories: Christendom, Christianity, Christopher Dawson, Christopher Morrissey, Cluny, Featured, Rome, Theology, Timeless Essays|

The Roman Empire was unique because it espoused the principle of moderation in politics. This is what permitted the unique dynamism of a uniquely changing but uniquely enduring political form: from city, to empire, to nation. And that dynamism may still propel us today as a principle of rebirth, if only we recapture its essence. [...]

Eric Voegelin, Leo Strauss, & American Conservatism

By |2024-06-26T19:34:16-05:00June 26th, 2024|Categories: Conservatism, Eric Voegelin, Featured, Leo Strauss, Timeless Essays|

Conservatives are people who defend certain traditional goods, because they know they’re worth defending. Political philosophy, by contrast, is animated by concerns quite different from political battles or external goods. It’s fundamentally a quest for insight, not influence. Eric Voegelin and Leo Strauss were essentially philosophers, not conservatives. For more than fifty years, American conservatives [...]

The English Way

By |2024-06-21T15:23:03-05:00June 21st, 2024|Categories: Books, Bradley J. Birzer, Catholicism, Christianity, Christopher Dawson, Cluny, G.K. Chesterton, Hilaire Belloc, Sainthood, Senior Contributors, St. John Fisher, St. Thomas More, Timeless Essays|

The Catholic Church canonized Saints Thomas More and John Fisher in 1935, only two years after the appearance of "The English Way," a work edited by one of the most important Christian humanists and publishers of the twentieth century, Maisie Ward, and which looks at the lives, ideas, and deaths of the great Roman Catholic [...]

Irrational Forces: Christopher Dawson on the Modern Age

By |2024-05-24T20:56:54-05:00May 24th, 2024|Categories: Bradley J. Birzer, Christian Humanism, Christianity, Christopher Dawson, History, Senior Contributors, Timeless Essays|

Evil, according to Christopher Dawson, is a progressive force, and it has grown mightily over the centuries since the Reformation first tore apart the West. The Reformation led to secularization, and secularization led to the creation of a machine-like society, dehumanizing all citizens of the world. The modern world is the world of the anti-Christ, [...]

Christopher Dawson’s “Beyond Politics”

By |2024-03-10T18:20:24-05:00March 9th, 2024|Categories: Books, Christianity, Christopher Dawson, History|

“Old books” speak to the times, often in more profound ways than “new books.” Christopher Dawson's "Beyond Politics" is just such a book. It diagnosed in 1939 the cultural situation in which the book appeared, and its diagnosis is apropos to the cultural situation today. Here’s the front story followed by the more important back [...]

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