Making America Great Again: Orestes Brownson on National Greatness

By |2024-07-16T20:06:32-05:00July 16th, 2024|Categories: American Republic, Catholicism, Government, Natural Law, Politics, Religion, Timeless Essays|

It’s time for Orestes Brownson to re-enter our contemporary political discourse, and on the campaign trail to remind us, first, that all just authority is from God, who instituted natural law, and also, that moral authority is not relative. I. The Brownson Revival In 1993 Peter J. Stanlis revisited Orestes Brownson’s political thought by reviewing [...]

Merrie England: Hilaire Belloc in the South Country

By |2024-07-15T19:05:57-05:00July 15th, 2024|Categories: Books, Featured, Hilaire Belloc, Joseph Pearce, Timeless Essays|

Little has changed in the years since Hilaire Belloc departed bodily from King’s Land. The ghost of his powerful absence still dwells in his stead, and the mill that he restored stands tall and erect, and in full working order. The great hills of the South Country They stand along the sea; And it’s there [...]

Hell Is Getting What You Want

By |2024-07-13T12:41:15-05:00July 13th, 2024|Categories: Freedom, Timeless Essays, Tyranny|

Just as all men recognize tyranny as the most oppressive regime, we should recognize a tyrannical soul as the most onerous. The tyrannical soul gets exactly what it wants, but this is a curse, not a blessing. Freedom from all constraint is actually the worst form of slavery. “A dream is a wish your heart [...]

Hans Urs von Balthasar & the Dramatic Project of Theology

By |2024-07-12T11:49:11-05:00July 12th, 2024|Categories: Christopher Morrissey, Hans Urs von Balthasar, Rene Girard, Timeless Essays, Tragedy|

Hans Urs von Balthasar believed that tragedies that feature the death of the hero—the sacrificial crisis of the innocent victim—reflect the fullest dramatic meaning of the Passion of Christ: In these stories, good violence is needed in order to make the bad violence go away. Hans Urs von Balthasar, in Volume IV (The Action) of [...]

What Exactly Is Conservatism?

By |2024-07-11T21:13:47-05:00July 11th, 2024|Categories: Bradley J. Birzer, Conservatism, Senior Contributors, Timeless Essays|

If conservatism is true, it is true for all times, all places, and all persons. It might take on a Christian character here, or a Jewish character there, or a Stoic character way over there, but it remains universally tied to certain humane principles, whatever its local manifestations. It is imagination, perhaps our highest faculty [...]

Benedict the Balanced

By |2024-07-11T10:13:50-05:00July 10th, 2024|Categories: Christianity, Dwight Longenecker, Family, St. Benedict, Timeless Essays|

St. Benedict’s civilized communities remind us that personal virtue is vital for a civilisation of decency, order, and peaceful prosperity. A Christian needs to listen to God, listen to the Scriptures, listen to the Church and listen to the Holy Spirit within us. Then comes action. In the summer of 1987 I had three months [...]

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 [...]

Heaven’s Delights: Gustav Mahler’s Fourth Symphony

By |2024-07-06T18:13:23-05:00July 6th, 2024|Categories: Audio/Video, Gustav Mahler, Michael De Sapio, Music, Senior Contributors, Timeless Essays|

Gustav Mahler's Fourth Symphony is his most sheerly delightful and accessible creation. It is written on a human scale and brings us on a clear and cogent musical and emotional journey. What’s more, this relatively traditional work still shows many of the ways in which Mahler was one of the most original and inventive composers [...]

The Challenge of Secularization

By |2024-07-05T14:11:24-05:00July 5th, 2024|Categories: Christendom, Christianity, Communio, England, Islam, Morality, Secularism, Timeless Essays|

What the faith of the Catholic Church can offer is a framework—intellectual, imaginative, and moral—for the pursuit of all the good that pertains to human destiny, and its effective bestowal in the grace of conversion. The Church civilizes while she evangelizes. But she evangelizes first. Secularisation is far more of a challenge to Christianity in [...]

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