The Inklings: Remembering and Preserving

By |2022-02-14T08:22:30-06:00February 14th, 2022|Categories: Bradley J. Birzer, C.S. Lewis, J.R.R. Tolkien, Senior Contributors|

In a Platonic sense, the Inklings might very well have brought about an "anamnesis," a remembering of what had been lost, but they might also very well have been simply preservers of timeless wisdom for many ages to come, so far into the future that they seem unimaginable. A number of things can be stated [...]

A Sonnet for Saint Valentine

By |2025-02-13T23:06:27-06:00February 14th, 2022|Categories: Christianity, Love, Malcolm Guite, Poetry|

Here is a sonnet I composed in honour of the original St. Valentine. I notice some Facebook posts implying that as an early Christian martyr he has nothing to do with Romantic Love and should be dissociated from it. I believe that on the contrary there is every reason why he should be the patron [...]

The Rise of Common-Good Conservatism

By |2022-02-15T00:21:59-06:00February 13th, 2022|Categories: Conservatism|

The concerns of common-good conservatives about the harms caused by globalism and corporate wokeness are real. And to the extent that their calls for reform in the conservative outlook reflect those real concerns, then such calls are to be taken seriously. A spirited debate is occurring within American conservatism. The debate generally involves traditional conservatives [...]

Truthfulness Is Not Optional

By |2022-02-12T14:07:18-06:00February 12th, 2022|Categories: Glenn Arbery, Wyoming Catholic College|

In a time when crime and inflation are rising together, when independent nations are threatened by massive powers eager to consume them, and when dispassionate public discourse seems impossible, it's bracing to remember the fairness and generosity that make justice and good judgment possible. In the last few months, two friends have highly recommended a [...]

Looking Beyond the Bloody Chaos of History

By |2022-02-18T10:13:41-06:00February 12th, 2022|Categories: Christendom, Christianity, Christopher Dawson, Quotation, St. Augustine|

It was in this age of ruin and distress that St. Augustine lived and worked. To the materialist, nothing could be more futile than the spectacle of Augustine busying himself with the reunion of the African Church and the refutation of the Pelagians, while civilisation was falling to pieces about his ears. It would seem [...]

Theater for the Ages: “Moonshine Abbey”

By |2022-02-10T22:30:15-06:00February 10th, 2022|Categories: David Deavel, Senior Contributors, Theater|

Missed the Boat’s production of “Moonshine Abbey” was a delight because of the slapstick humor and mixture of realistic and insane dialogue in which its priestly writer specializes. It was powerful because it tapped into the hopes and fears of young Catholics who want to believe in the certainty of God but are hampered by [...]

The Mantle of Eumaios

By |2022-02-08T09:44:00-06:00February 8th, 2022|Categories: Glenn Arbery, Great Books, Homer, Odyssey, Senior Contributors|

Why is it, we might ask, that the "Odyssey" ultimately feels so consonant with the Old Testament in its depiction of the punishments of sensuality and perfidy, and so profoundly pre-Christian in its elevation of simple, hidden people into rewards they could never have expected? At the risk of undercutting my ethos, I want to [...]

Andrew Lytle & the Politics of Agrarianism

By |2022-02-07T16:01:13-06:00February 7th, 2022|Categories: Agrarianism, Andrew Lytle, History, Literature, Mark Malvasi, Senior Contributors, South, Southern Agrarians|

Automated and impersonal, American society, Andrew Lytle feared, was coming to be peopled by the rootless masses ensnared in dreary, routine, unimaginative, and irrelevant occupations—a society of interchangeable parts and interchangeable men. This condition was the very antithesis of the Christian economy. I. By the 1930s, Andrew Lytle thought the signs of impending disaster everywhere [...]

Out of the Metaverse

By |2022-02-04T19:19:08-06:00February 5th, 2022|Categories: Glenn Arbery, Senior Contributors, Technology, Transhumanism, Wyoming Catholic College|

Isn’t this the next thing we really want—young people with vision and confidence, willing to stand up and speak the truth? The metaverse is pure sophistry, the flattery of an audience it literally encompasses. Our students speak on behalf of God and the best of our inheritance. Where are the billions being invested on their [...]

Literature Goes to the Movies

By |2022-02-04T16:07:16-06:00February 4th, 2022|Categories: Film, Joseph Pearce, Literature, Senior Contributors|

When works of literature go to the movies, it’s usually an unpleasant sight. There are noble exceptions, however, which are worthy of praise. The film adaptions of two literary classics come to mind. First is the 1995 BBC adaptation of Pride and Prejudice, starring Colin Firth as Mr. Darcy and Jennifer Ehle as Elizabeth Bennet. [...]

Who Were the Inklings?

By |2022-02-09T16:01:38-06:00February 3rd, 2022|Categories: Bradley J. Birzer, C.S. Lewis, J.R.R. Tolkien, Senior Contributors|

Would it be possible, J.R.R. Tolkien and C.S. Lewis wondered in the 1930s, to write fiction that might combine: a love of history; a desire to debate the defenders of the modern world and point out the many foibles of modern living; and a way to promote one’s philosophical and religious beliefs without being overly [...]

Unity in Beauty

By |2022-02-04T09:55:05-06:00February 2nd, 2022|Categories: Catholicism, Christianity, Dwight Longenecker, Senior Contributors|

After all the talk about the Crisis in Christianity is over, this is the root of the crisis: that the worship of the Almighty—the one who is the source of Beauty, Truth and Goodness—has been reduced to banality, subjective opinions, and a compromised morality. In a recent essay here, I remarked on Eastern Orthodox theologian [...]

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