Magnanimity: The Balm for Our Brutalized Public Discourse

By |2026-02-03T16:19:22-06:00February 3rd, 2026|Categories: Civil Society, Love, Stephen M. Klugewicz, Timeless Essays|

Every man is his own pope and philosopher-king on the Internet, where our semi-formed and semi-informed opinions are cast as absolutes. Convinced of our perfect knowledge and infallible righteousness, we denounce and demean in harsh, uncharitable terms the arguments of others, and even their very persons. “Minds are conquered not by arms, but by love [...]

The Glory of Chamber Music

By |2026-02-02T14:53:47-06:00February 2nd, 2026|Categories: Antonin Dvorak, Audio/Video, Felix Mendelssohn, Ludwig van Beethoven, Music, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart|

Chamber music is sometimes the best work of the best composers, and for that there is no acceptable substitute. When I first heard chamber music, it seemed an acquired taste, and subsequently a taste I acquired. So I will recite some personal history without any illusion that it matters because it was my experience. On [...]

The 1928 Book of Common Prayer: An Appreciation

By |2026-02-01T14:01:16-06:00February 1st, 2026|Categories: Anglicanism, Bible, Books, Christian Living, Christianity, Prayer, Religion, Timeless Essays|

The 1928 Book of Common Prayer is an important cultural artifact, whose influence on English language and literature rivals that of the Authorized Version of the Bible and the works of William Shakespeare. You will recall Parson Thwackum in Henry Fielding’s classic novel History of Tom Jones, a Foundling (1749). Mr. (never, in proper ecclesiastical usage, Reverend) Thwackum [...]

How Did I Get Here?

By |2026-02-06T20:32:34-06:00February 1st, 2026|Categories: Catholicism, Prayer, St. Dominic|

A classic technique in sitcoms and movies is for the story to open at a climactic or bizarre moment, and then to rewind and use first-person narration to explain how the protagonist ended up there. The giveaway is usually a line like: “Yep, that’s me. You’re probably wondering how I got here.” Since I entered the [...]

The Inviolability of Private Property

By |2026-02-01T10:25:15-06:00January 31st, 2026|Categories: Books, Catholicism, Cluny, Papacy, Social Institutions|

The first and most fundamental principle, if one would undertake to alleviate the condition of the masses, must be the inviolability of private property. The main tenet of socialism, community of goods, must be utterly rejected. The fact that God has given the earth for the use and enjoyment of the whole human race can [...]

The Dark Night of the Soul

By |2026-02-07T20:41:58-06:00January 31st, 2026|Categories: Books, Catholicism, Christianity, David Torkington, Love, Mysticism, Prayer, Sainthood, St. John of the Cross, The Primacy of Loving|

All must go through purification to attain union with God. In this life it is called the Dark Night of the Soul; in the next life, it is called Purgatory. No one can avoid it. Mystical theology teaches how this purification is brought about in this life. When studying Philosophy, I had a brief flirtation [...]

Is the World a Stage?

By |2026-01-31T08:34:47-06:00January 30th, 2026|Categories: Christianity, Joseph Pearce, Senior Contributors, William Shakespeare|

All the world's a stage, And all the men and women merely players; They have their exits and their entrances, And one man in his time plays many parts, His acts being seven ages.                                     As You Like It, Act II, Scene VII Is the world a stage? And are all of us merely players [...]

America’s Fin de Siècle: End of a Civilization?

By |2026-01-30T13:28:42-06:00January 30th, 2026|Categories: Books, Classics, Culture, Economics, Education, Gleaves Whitney, Political Economy, Virgil|Tags: , |

American culture is surely decadent. Its decay is palpable to any sensitive observer who reads the feuilleton section of the local newspaper or attends a university. But is our decadence terminal? Is our civilization on a collision course with extinction? The Culture We Deserve by Jacques Barzun (200 pages, Wesleyan University Press, 1989) Politically America [...]

Nick Carraway & Charles Ryder: Observers of Delusion & Decadence

By |2026-02-01T10:33:33-06:00January 29th, 2026|Categories: Dwight Longenecker, Faith, Literature, Nature of Man, Senior Contributors|

One comes away from both F. Scott Fitzgerald’s "The Great Gatsby" and Evelyn Waugh’s "Brideshead Revisited" with an acute sense of the emptiness of the jazz age and the despair at the heart of all our delusions and decadence. One also can’t help but compare the lives of the authors themselves. On re-reading The Great Gatsby (thanks [...]

Newman & Dawson Against Liberalism

By |2026-01-31T16:36:05-06:00January 29th, 2026|Categories: Bradley J. Birzer, Christianity, Christopher Dawson, Edmund Burke, Liberalism, St. John Henry Newman, Timeless Essays|

Christopher Dawson greatly admired John Henry Newman, for he understood more clearly than any of his contemporaries the coming war of the Church against the ideologues bred by the French Revolution, utilitarianism, and secularization. As Christopher Dawson attempted to discover the sources of the ideological disruptions of the twentieth-century as well as solutions to the [...]

The Spirit of Philadelphia

By |2026-01-28T20:13:16-06:00January 28th, 2026|Categories: American Founding, American Republic, Books, Christianity, Common Good, Constitution, Nature of Man|

Chris Gibson's "The Spirit of Philadelphia" helps us to rethink the role of Common Sense Realism as a unifying principle of American life. But that idea rests on a greater idea. The spirit of Philadelphia has no sustaining power to preserve order in soul or republic unless wedded to the genius of Christianity. The Spirit [...]

Where We Find the Lord

By |2026-01-31T12:42:57-06:00January 27th, 2026|Categories: Audio/Video, Catholicism, Christianity, Gospel Reflection|

Mark 1:29-39 shows us the organic rhythms that underpinned the life of Jesus and those that should underpin our own lives also. Jesus begins by visiting His friends, but His sociability very quickly turns into ministry, as He heals first Peter’s mother-in-law, then the sick from around the neighbourhood, and also delivers those possessed by [...]

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