English History Revisited

By |2025-10-03T13:41:20-05:00October 3rd, 2025|Categories: Books, Catholicism, England, Hilaire Belloc, History, Joseph Pearce, Literature, Sainthood, Senior Contributors|

Seeing the works of the early decades of the twentieth century by Robert Hugh Benson and Hilaire Belloc as part of a living tradition of historical scholarship, we might hope that the revival of interest in their historical perspectives might prove inspirational to new generations of pioneering cultural figures in the twenty-first century. The reception [...]

The First Screen Apocalypse

By |2025-10-02T20:16:07-05:00October 2nd, 2025|Categories: C.S. Lewis, Christopher Dawson, Community, Culture, Film, Technology, Tradition|

To the 21st-century reader, the suggestion that cinema is a destructive and corrosive force will likely appear absurd. To attentive cultural critics of the early 20th century, however, it was all but self-evident. You’ve heard it before, certainly: The screens are killing us. They play to our basest passions and appetites, rendering us passive, and [...]

Tobacco and the Soul

By |2025-10-02T20:33:38-05:00October 2nd, 2025|Categories: Christianity, Culture, Timeless Essays|

The current brouhaha over smoking has made everyone painfully aware of tobacco’s effects on the body, but it has also obscured a more profound reason for smoking’s popularity: its relation to the soul. As the heyday of smoking passes into the ashheap of history, it is meet that we reflect on this connection. The soul, [...]

The Chronicle of an Ecclesiastical Dude Ranch

By |2025-10-01T19:37:40-05:00October 1st, 2025|Categories: Catholicism, Dwight Longenecker, England, History, Senior Contributors|

A Victorian cleric named Joseph Leycester Lyne dreamed of establishing an Anglican monastery at Llanthony, Wales. Lyne took the name of Father Ignatius and has gone down in history as one of the most eccentric and and energetic of all Anglo-Catholic pretenders. Ignatius of Llanthony During the first years of my quarter of [...]

Afraid to Change

By |2025-10-01T19:42:49-05:00October 1st, 2025|Categories: Catholicism, Love, Nature of God, Peace|

God’s perfect love casts out all fear when we hand ourselves over to him in hope. Why tremble? Why hesitate? When all that can be desired is offered by the one who is powerful to accomplish far more than all we ask or imagine. Change is scary. Between the unknowns we can foresee and those [...]

An Unhailed Holy Queen

By |2025-10-01T05:50:33-05:00September 30th, 2025|Categories: Catholicism, England, History, Joseph Pearce, Senior Contributors, Unsung Heroes of Christendom|

What do we know of Catherine of Aragon, the first to suffer the pains of the so-called Reformation? All Catholics know the Salve Regina, the “Hail, Holy Queen,” the Marian antiphon sung in praise of the Blessed Virgin Mary, the Queen of Heaven, who is without doubt and without question the most sung of all the [...]

St. Thérèse of Lisieux: Two Very Different Biographies

By |2025-09-30T19:32:08-05:00September 30th, 2025|Categories: Books, Catholicism, Christianity, Timeless Essays|

Biographies by Fr. Bernard Bro and and Kathryn Harrison give us two vivid depictions of St. Thérèse. Yet, attitudinally speaking, their accounts of this Christ-imitating, self-immolating woman of Lisieux have little in common. Thérèse of Lisieux made the first record of her life, and that record, written in obedience to her Carmelite superior, is the [...]

How Our Lady Gave Us Back the Color Blue

By |2025-09-29T20:07:38-05:00September 29th, 2025|Categories: Catholicism, Christianity, John Horvat, Mother of God, Senior Contributors|

Medieval man gave blue to Our Lady as her color. She rescued it from its barbarian captivity and elevated it for all the world to see. Devotion to her gave rise to a rich civilization full of the vitality and color the ancient pagans lacked. Most people imagine that antiquity was much like our own [...]

The Case for Tragedy

By |2025-09-29T14:05:34-05:00September 29th, 2025|Categories: Glenn Arbery, Greek Epic Poetry, Homer, Iliad, Literature, Senior Contributors|

What is the good of seeing a terrible state of soul displayed onstage, disclosed in all its humiliation and rage? After my first morning of classes at Wyoming Catholic College on August 27, I returned to the office to find the news of the shootings at Annunciation Catholic School in Minneapolis all over the internet. [...]

Rendering to God

By |2025-09-28T14:57:22-05:00September 28th, 2025|Categories: Catholicism, Christendom, Government, New Polity, Politics, St. Thomas Aquinas|

We cannot give our souls, or the souls of our neighbors, to the pagan Caesar. But the modern Christian can obey a tyrant, insofar as he is just. In fact, this is difference that Christianity brings to politics. Every particular decree of our leaders can be judged as either usurping God’s authority or rightfully, humbly [...]

Michaelmas: A Sonnet for St. Michael the Archangel

By |2025-09-28T15:03:27-05:00September 28th, 2025|Categories: Audio/Video, Christianity, Malcolm Guite, Timeless Essays|

The end of September brings us to the feast of St. Michael and All Angels which is known as Michaelmas in England, and this first autumn term in many schools and universities is still called the Michaelmas term. The Archangel Michael is traditionally thought of as the Captain of the Heavenly Host, and, following an image from [...]

Spiritual Weightlifting

By |2025-09-27T20:05:06-05:00September 27th, 2025|Categories: Books, David Torkington, Love, Prayer, The Primacy of Loving|

What happens to the muscles of our bodies can happen to the muscles of our hearts too. This can happen with ever greater intensity when spiritual weightlifting is practised in prayer, in the mystic way. The difference between conversion and repentance is so important that it needs further explanation. I hope to do this by [...]

Merciful Penance

By |2025-09-27T19:14:15-05:00September 27th, 2025|Categories: Catholicism, Mercy|

Just as a physical remedy is a real gift to one who has brought some infirmity upon himself, so too is penance a mercy to the one who has sinned. “Linus, Cletus, Clement, Sixtus, Cornelius, Cyprian…” We hear the names of these early Christian martyrs every time that Eucharistic Prayer I is used at Mass, [...]

Wonder & Wickedness: The Anatomy of Good & Evil

By |2025-09-26T13:38:11-05:00September 26th, 2025|Categories: Ethics, Evil, Faith, Friedrich Nietzsche, Goodness, J.R.R. Tolkien, Joseph Pearce, Senior Contributors, Timeless Essays, Virtue|

The way of humility leads, via the rolling road of wonder, to the heaven-haven of the reward. The way of pride leads, via the thorny path of prejudice, to a hell of one’s own devising. “For I am Saruman the Wise, Saruman Ring-maker, Saruman of Many Colours!” In Tolkien’s magnum opus, The Lord of the [...]

Go to Top