Revisiting Robert Nisbet’s Conservative Classic

By |2024-09-30T14:34:50-05:00September 29th, 2024|Categories: Community, Conservatism, Freedom, Modernity, Robert Nisbet, Timeless Essays|

In his analysis of alienation in the modern world, Robert Nisbet recognized an important truth about the human person, which makes “The Quest for Community” timely even today: The individual cannot be understood except in relationship to other individuals in time and space. The abstract, autonomous individual does not exist nor can he ever exist. [...]

Harry Jaffa and the Demise of the Old Republic

By |2024-09-26T14:29:39-05:00September 26th, 2024|Categories: American Republic, Conservatism, Constitution, Declaration of Independence, Edmund Burke, Featured, Foreign Affairs, History, Political Philosophy, Politics, Timeless Essays, Tradition|

Harry Jaffa’s constitutional history of America’s late-eighteenth-century is not credible nor, in keeping with many of his own pronouncements, is it conservative. The writing of history, as we have learned from authors as diverse as Thucydides, Voltaire, Nietzsche, Butterfield, Collingwood, and Oakeshott can and has been done in strikingly different ways while serving radically different [...]

Fate and Will in Tolkien’s “Beowulf”

By |2024-09-24T14:27:44-05:00September 24th, 2024|Categories: Beowulf, Beowulf Series, Bradley J. Birzer, Christianity, Imagination, J.R.R. Tolkien, Literature, Myth, Senior Contributors, Timeless Essays|

Arguably one of the finest stories in the Western Tradition, “Beowulf” concerns the advent of a hero and his timely end. Throughout, questions of fate, free will, good, and evil predominate. Most prominent, though, are the theological questions of will and grace, one pagan and the other Christian. In 1926, when merely a thirty-four year [...]

Let Our Kids Play Dangerously!

By |2024-09-24T08:33:58-05:00September 23rd, 2024|Categories: Community, Culture, Family, Timeless Essays|

We have handicapped children by letting our concern for their safety overrule the enormous benefits that come with the way they naturally play. Last semester, some of our faculty recently participated in on-site CPR training on a Saturday morning. And again, this semester, on a Friday evening. Aside from the comfort you should derive knowing [...]

Finnish Perfection: The Sibelius Violin Concerto

By |2024-09-19T14:04:58-05:00September 19th, 2024|Categories: Books, Jean Sibelius, Music, Timeless Essays|

There is something immoderate about Sibelius’ Violin Concerto—something vulnerable and unspeakably beautiful, right there along something dark and brooding. The piece illustrates that not only do darkness and beauty coexist, they enhance each other. It’s complex, gripping, devilishly complicated, and sounds like no other concerto in the violin repertoire. Listening to Finnish composer Jean Sibelius’ violin concerto, [...]

A Warm Friend of Toleration: Charles Carroll and Religious Freedom

By |2024-09-18T16:33:02-05:00September 18th, 2024|Categories: American Founding, American Republic, Catholicism, Charles Carroll, Christendom, Stephen M. Klugewicz, Timeless Essays|

By enshrining the principle of religious freedom in Maryland’s constitution, Charles Carroll hoped to better the prospects of Catholics like himself. Indeed, he saw toleration as the only logical policy for governments to adopt. Designing and selfish men invented religious tests to exclude from posts of profit and trust their weaker or more conscientious fellow [...]

Marxism: A Primer

By |2024-09-17T16:33:42-05:00September 17th, 2024|Categories: Bradley J. Birzer, Civilization, Communism, Ideology, Karl Marx, Timeless Essays|

Unlike reality—which is infinitely and ultimately unknowable—Marxism as ideology pretends to understand the world, but, in reality, it offers only the merest shadow of true complexities. Though responsible—directly and indirectly—for the murder of nearly 150 million innocent children, women, and men in the previous century, Marxism is making a comeback in Western civilization. Not only [...]

A Popular Defense of Our Undemocratic Constitution

By |2024-09-16T15:56:06-05:00September 16th, 2024|Categories: American Republic, Constitution, Democracy, Electoral College, Federalism, Federalist Papers, Timeless Essays, Wyoming Catholic College|

If we consider the Founders’ arguments for the Constitution, we find not only that they intended it to be undemocratic, but that they would defend even its most undemocratic elements on “popular” grounds. What might appear to the partisans of democracy today as outdated roadblocks to efficient government are for the Founders politically salutary forms [...]

The Spirit of American Constitutionalism

By |2024-09-16T15:27:37-05:00September 16th, 2024|Categories: American Founding, American Republic, Constitution, Edmund Burke, Featured, Federalist Papers, John Dickinson, Timeless Essays|

The Constitution described by John Dickinson in his “Letters of Fabius” is a model of prudence and moderation, based not primarily on theoretical arguments, but on experience and an extensive knowledge of history. Though virtually ignored by scholars in recent decades, John Dickinson was one of the most influential of the American Founders. When he [...]

The Canon of the Bible: Who Decided What Made It In?

By |2024-09-15T16:21:57-05:00September 15th, 2024|Categories: Bible, Catholicism, Christianity, History, Timeless Essays|

Despite the multitude of Christian denominations that have sprung up over the last 500 years, there seem to have been few, if any, important divisions among Christians about the authenticity of the canon of the New Testament since the Catholic Church promulgated it at the Council of Rome more than 1,600 years ago. I. The [...]

Islam and Western Civilization

By |2024-09-10T17:12:49-05:00September 10th, 2024|Categories: Christianity, Islam, Joseph Pearce, Senior Contributors, Timeless Essays|

The seven pillars of Western Civilization are the edifying edifices which tower over the landscape of the centuries as a fortress of faith and a beacon of reason. Islam has served throughout the centuries as an outside force which has repeatedly laid siege to the fortress, seeking its overthrow. Several weeks ago I wrote an [...]

The Humility of Mary

By |2024-09-07T22:00:38-05:00September 7th, 2024|Categories: Catholicism, Christianity, Gospel Reflection, Mother of God, Timeless Essays, Virtue|

From the Annunciation to the Presentation, from the Wedding at Cana to the upper room in Acts 1 and 2, the Mother of God’s life is undergirded and infused with humility. About a year before being received into the Catholic Church in 2004, the biggest obstacle to conversion for me, a Protestant, who had moved in [...]

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