The Importance of Marcus Tullius Cicero

By |2026-02-10T15:55:01-06:00February 10th, 2026|Categories: Bradley J. Birzer, Cicero, Classical Education, Classical Learning, Classics, Featured, Liberal Learning, Natural Law, Timeless Essays|

It can be said of Cicero and his role within the West that, in hindsight, he becomes a figure much larger than he himself actually was; he is a touchstone, a fountainhead, a rock upon which we can place our fondest and dearest dreams. How do I define the Natural Law? Taking my cue from [...]

Choose Wisely

By |2026-02-09T14:35:15-06:00February 9th, 2026|Categories: Catholicism, Gospel Reflection|

Having made known God’s will, Christ neither demands servile submission from us nor desires groveling self-abasement. He asks of us something far greater and costlier: “Will you follow me?” To riff on Tertullian – what has obedience to do with love? How does obedience to God show love for him? To our modern sensibilities, the two seem like [...]

Contemplating Our Civilization at The Bible Museum

By |2026-02-08T17:50:23-06:00February 8th, 2026|Categories: Bible, Christianity, Michael De Sapio, Senior Contributors, Western Civilization|

There is truly no place quite like the Bible Museum because, in it, our faith is made manifest with concrete clarity. It is a place of ongoing learning and discovery that presages that eternity in which we will continuously unravel the mysteries of God’s truth. Whenever I need a respite from the hermetic life of [...]

Edmund Burke, Thomas Paine, & the Birth of Right and Left

By |2026-02-08T17:26:22-06:00February 8th, 2026|Categories: Books, Bruce Frohnen, Edmund Burke, Featured, Timeless Essays|

Do you wish to understand the birth of right and left? Examine the debate between Edmund Burke and Thomas Paine occasioned by the French Revolution. The Great Debate: Edmund Burke, Thomas Paine, and the Birth of Right and Left by Yuval Levin, (304 pages, Basic Books, 2014) Those seeking a deeper understanding of the roots of contemporary [...]

Beyond the Times

By |2026-02-07T12:25:43-06:00February 7th, 2026|Categories: Books, Catholicism, Christendom, Cluny, History|

The Church is like an old schoolmaster, the schoolmaster of the centuries, and as such it has seen so many students pass before it, cultivate the same poses and fall into the same errors, that it merely smiles at those who believe that they have discovered a new truth. One of the catchwords which keeps [...]

Gods and Demons

By |2026-02-08T17:18:14-06:00February 6th, 2026|Categories: Christianity, Evil, Fiction, Goodness, Joseph Pearce, Literature, Senior Contributors|

In reflecting the strangeness of reality and the diabolical darkness of evil, Tim Powers’ "The Mills of the Gods" takes its place alongside other cautionary tales of fictional supernatural realism that prefigure and reflect reality. They show real-life figures in the light of the truth that exposes and vanquishes the diabolical darkness. Not facts first; [...]

Desperately Needing Thomas More

By |2026-02-06T18:41:11-06:00February 6th, 2026|Categories: Books, Bradley J. Birzer, Christianity, Senior Contributors, St. Thomas More, Timeless Essays|

We live in a world that desperately needs Thomas More’s wisdom. We need his understanding of God, his understanding of virtue, and his understanding of the complexities of the human person. The Essential Works of Thomas More, edited by Gerard B. Wegemer and Stephen W. Smith (1520 pages, Yale University Press, 2020) Though he’s only [...]

Ronald Reagan & the Return of Blue-Collar Conservatism

By |2026-02-05T16:08:01-06:00February 5th, 2026|Categories: Books, Conservatism, Donald Trump, Economics, Featured, Politics, Ronald Reagan, Timeless Essays|

Ronald Reagan’s version of conservatism was far more pro-government than was Barry Goldwater’s. Compassion, not liberty, was Reagan’s guide. This raises the question: To what extent is the success of modern political conservatism dependent upon the conservation of liberal, even progressive, reforms? The Working Class Republican: Ronald Reagan and the Return of Blue Collar Conservatism [...]

Cultivating the Soil

By |2026-02-04T13:38:53-06:00February 4th, 2026|Categories: Catholic Culture Series, Catholicism, Culture|

We can only bloom where we are planted. So, our job as finite beings—rooted in the soil of this world while yet being summoned to an infinite and eternal destiny—is to provide the best possible soil: culture. How to account for the Good News of Jesus Christ? The short answer is the Holy Ghost, who, in [...]

The Deavel’s Dictionary

By |2026-02-04T13:37:51-06:00February 4th, 2026|Categories: David Deavel, Language, Modernity, Politics, Senior Contributors, Timeless Essays, Truth|

For all those out there wondering, including my first-grade art teacher who never learned how to pronounce it, my surname is actually pronounced with a long rather than short “e.” It’s “DEE-vuhl” and not “Devil.” But the moniker of a demon has been applied to me so often that I have decided to make demon-ade. [...]

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