Against the Grain

By |2025-10-10T19:16:01-05:00October 10th, 2025|Categories: Catholicism, Christianity|

You never find the prophet exalted in his own times. If you do speak what is true and do what is right in your life, in your family, in your neighborhood, in your office, you will suffer. Carving wood is difficult. Let’s say you are carving a sign, carving some letters into a piece of wood. [...]

Thomas Honegger on Tolkien

By |2025-10-12T11:13:23-05:00October 9th, 2025|Categories: J.R.R. Tolkien, Literature|

Thomas Honegger Born in Zürich (Switzerland) in 1965, Dr. Thomas Honegger is a specialist in Medieval Germanic languages and a noted Tolkien scholar. After completing all levels of academic training at the University of Zürich, where in 1996 he earned his doctorate with a thesis entitled Animals in Medieval English Literature, he worked [...]

Main Street of Days Gone By

By |2025-10-09T19:27:35-05:00October 9th, 2025|Categories: Community, History|

The sun rose steadily over main street in the mornings. The air was cool and light. The sky was clear. City workers watered the flowers on the lampposts. An older man sat on a bench and read the newspaper, and a young mother rocked her baby gently. A father held his little girl’s hand, and [...]

Socrates, Cicero, & the Meaning of Citizenship

By |2025-10-08T20:27:20-05:00October 8th, 2025|Categories: Bradley J. Birzer, Citizenship, Conservatism, Edmund Burke, Liberal Arts, Senior Contributors, Socrates, St. Paul|

We modern defenders of the liberal arts have to choose between Socrates’ vision and Cicero’s vision: Are we citizens of a particular soil and a particular place, or are we connected—across time and space—to all good men and God? A few weeks ago, I had the grand privilege of attending a Liberty Fund conference on [...]

The Life and Legacy of John Henry Newman

By |2025-10-08T18:23:26-05:00October 8th, 2025|Categories: Catholicism, Christianity, Joseph Pearce, Senior Contributors, Theology, Timeless Essays|

John Henry Newman was born in 1801, at the beginning of a century that would see the rise of skepticism in matters of religion. Yet, simultaneously, it was a century which would see a real revival of religious orthodoxy. With respect to the latter, Newman himself might be seen as the most important and influential [...]

Hawthorne’s Darkening American Vision: “The Blithedale Romance”

By |2025-10-07T20:12:24-05:00October 7th, 2025|Categories: American Republic, History, Literature, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Religion|

"The Blithedale Romance" conveys Nathaniel Hawthorne’s disillusionment with Brook Farm, Transcendentalism, reform movements, and the quest for individual and social perfection. I. Published in 1852, The Blithedale Romance offers Nathaniel Hawthorne’s most trenchant criticism of America.[i] Unlike his more optimistic contemporaries who imagined the advance toward individual and social perfection in the United States, Hawthorne [...]

Be True to Yourself?

By |2025-10-07T20:11:32-05:00October 7th, 2025|Categories: Catholicism, Nature of Man, Philosophy|

Should we be true to ourselves—or is this a meaningless cliche? In the great Hamlet, Polonius advises his son: “This above all—to thine own self be true” (I, 3). Oftentimes this kind of talk is used to justify the subjective view of reality that we truth-lovers oppose: “If I should just be me, then you have no business telling [...]

Empires of the Mind: The Work of Culture

By |2025-10-06T18:00:07-05:00October 6th, 2025|Categories: Culture, Evil, Goodness, History, Imagination, Michael De Sapio, Senior Contributors|

What is it that makes life worth living when the temporal aspects of life are taken care of? That is the realm of culture and the spirit. It has to do with the development of our minds, our moral growth, and our sense of belonging to a community. “The empires of the future are the [...]

“Lepanto”

By |2025-10-06T18:22:19-05:00October 6th, 2025|Categories: G.K. Chesterton, Poetry, Timeless Essays|

White founts falling in the courts of the sun, And the Soldan of Byzantium is smiling as they run; There is laughter like the fountains in that face of all men feared, It stirs the forest darkness, the darkness of his beard, It curls the blood-red crescent, the crescent of his lips, For the inmost [...]

Something New Came: Allen Mendenhall’s Hilarious & Ominous First Novel

By |2025-10-05T19:30:52-05:00October 5th, 2025|Categories: American South, Books, David Deavel, Literature, Senior Contributors|

In a very short novel, Allen Mendenhall manages to combine a great deal of philosophical and quasi-theological reflection, Twain-like adolescent comedy, and Faulkner-like familial dysfunction, adding to the Southern literary tradition’s collection of tales filled with absurdity, hilarity, shattering revelation, and haunting desire, all mixed to disturb and delight. A Glooming Peace This Morning by [...]

Balthasar and the Machine

By |2025-10-05T19:33:15-05:00October 5th, 2025|Categories: Artificial Intelligence, Catholicism, Hans Urs von Balthasar, Nature of Man, New Polity, Technology|

The Vatican has issued an official document on AI. The Church is willing, in the face of an aggressively rising transhumanistic tide, to state the obvious: machines do not—and cannot—do what humans do or be who humans are. There are many—myself included—who are tempted to give a knee-jerk reaction, one that goes something like this: [...]

A Call to Eternity

By |2025-10-05T09:30:57-05:00October 4th, 2025|Categories: Audio/Video, Catholicism, Faith, Monasticism, Sainthood, St. Benedict|

For centuries, Benedictines have safeguarded the soul of civilization. Now, the monks of Our Lady of Clear Creek Abbey are stewarding this ancient and vital tradition for our age—right here in America. We must hold each other in prayer. This is the work of the universal Church. Even as Benedictines lift up the world in [...]

One of These (Beatitudes) Is Not Like the Others!

By |2025-10-04T12:02:35-05:00October 4th, 2025|Categories: Catholicism, Gospel Reflection, Heaven|

To be poor in spirit is to acknowledge our creatureliness and our radical dependency on God, who loves us and wants our happiness. The Beatitudes all have a similar structure—but upon close review one of them is quite different! Most Beatitudes promise a future blessing to reward a present suffering, except for the first Beatitude in both Matthew’s (Matt 5:3-12) and [...]

Autumnal Coolness: Gentle Whispers of Saint Francis

By |2025-10-03T14:00:24-05:00October 3rd, 2025|Categories: Bradley J. Birzer, Catholicism, Christianity, Religion, St. Francis, Timeless Essays|

Understood properly, October purges us of our follies and reminds us that death hovers just in front of us. It reminds us that we always stand in time, but at the very edge of eternity. The autumnal coolness—just on the edge of the dying summer—is in the air, and it feels good. Very cool, very [...]

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