The Baleful Comet of Boston: Samuel Adams & the Puritan Republic

By |2025-09-26T13:46:05-05:00September 26th, 2025|Categories: American Founding, American Republic, American Revolution, M. E. Bradford, Samuel Adams, Timeless Essays|Tags: |

Samuel Adams believed that men are ruled more by fear or other emotions than by reason. And Sam Adams knew how to generate anger and fear. Thus he kept up the flow of propaganda that followed from the town's versions of what had happened in the Boston Massacre. Samuel Adams (September 27, 1722-October 2, 1803), [...]

The Man Who Invented Conservatism?

By |2025-09-26T08:31:55-05:00September 25th, 2025|Categories: Books, Chuck Chalberg, Conservatism, Politics, Senior Contributors|

Clearly, Frank Meyer was a major player in the modern conservative movement in its early days. But the heart of Daniel J. Flynn's new book doesn’t really explain just how it was that its subject somehow “invented” conservatism. The Man Who Invented Conservatism: The Unlikely Life of Frank S. Meyer, by Daniel J. Flynn. (562 [...]

Managing Our Mammon

By |2025-09-25T18:57:46-05:00September 25th, 2025|Categories: Catholicism|

God is the goal of our lives, so our service is directed to him. Mammon, on the other hand, is just a tool to be used for this journey. Two years ago, the passing of Queen Elizabeth evinced reverent sadness, even in a country as allergic to monarchy as America. Despite our national history, Disney [...]

Rediscovering Friendship & Happiness

By |2025-09-24T15:03:26-05:00September 24th, 2025|Categories: Friendship, Happiness, Literature, Virtue, Wokeism|

The ultimate purpose of virtue is to make us capable of friendship, of sacrificing our own good for the good of another, thus nurturing that mutual happiness and trust with another self. We know good families, totally devoted to their children, who’ve been blind-sided by woke “identity politics,” confusing and hijacking their kids. In three [...]

Understanding William Faulkner

By |2025-09-24T15:06:12-05:00September 24th, 2025|Categories: Books, Cleanth Brooks, Imagination, John Crowe Ransom, Literature, South, Timeless Essays|

In the forties and fifties, Cleanth Brooks devoted himself to interpreting and popularizing the work of one of America’s greatest but most difficult novelists, his fellow Southerner William Faulkner. When I think of the state of literary criticism in the academy today, I think of a New Yorker cartoon someone has put up in the [...]

Saint Thomas Aquinas’ Resignation

By |2025-09-23T21:04:19-05:00September 23rd, 2025|Categories: Catholicism, Grace, Joy, Love, Sainthood, St. Thomas Aquinas|

Today, threatened by the new barbarism and the new paganism, we would be wise to postpone speculative reasoning and look to Thomas Aquinas for his example of true reverence before the Holy Eucharist, concentration and recollection in prayer, perfect obedience, love of poverty, and passion for sacred music. The Story A few months before his [...]

Our Lady of Walsingham: The Queen of England

By |2025-11-28T19:03:42-06:00September 23rd, 2025|Categories: Catholicism, Christianity, England, Joseph Pearce, Mother of God, Our Lady of Walsingham, Sainthood, Senior Contributors, Timeless Essays|

The reason for Walsingham’s importance is its association with the Marian apparitions to a pious English noblewoman in 1061. By the middle of the fourteenth century, people considered England to be “Our Lady’s dowry” and that she was, in some special sense, the protectress of the English people. Few people in today’s godless England have [...]

Newman, the North Star for the Renewal of Education

By |2025-09-22T19:31:53-05:00September 22nd, 2025|Categories: Catholicism, Christendom, Christianity, Sainthood, St. John Henry Newman|

For many of us, Saint John Henry Newman, his teachings, and his example constitute our North Star. For many years he has been our doctor. And now he becomes the doctor of us all. Introduction: Newman as Our North Star On July 31, Pope Leo XIV announced that Cardinal Newman would formally be declared a [...]

Can Raymond Chandler & John Steinbeck Help Us Now?

By |2025-09-23T20:13:13-05:00September 22nd, 2025|Categories: Literature, Politics, Television, Truth|

Both Chandler and Steinbeck, in radically different idioms and voices, express a redemptive optimism. They believe in truth, and they are infused with an intuition of an untarnished human goodness that the shabbiness of the world cannot extinguish. The 1930s were a period of intellectual and cultural ferment that have much to tell us about [...]

Why We Can’t Have Sanctuary

By |2025-09-28T14:34:21-05:00September 21st, 2025|Categories: Authority, Catholicism, Mercy, New Polity, Politics, Rule of Law, Sainthood, St. Augustine|

Throughout the Middle Ages, to cherish and respect sanctuary was seen as the sign of a pious and powerful ruler. This was not some arbitrary custom, but an extension of the love and logic of the family into the world at large. Now if sanctuary seems unreasonable to moderns, it cannot be because we think [...]

When Colleges Lost Their Faith and Purpose

By |2025-09-21T16:47:22-05:00September 21st, 2025|Categories: Christianity, Education, Liberalism, Tradition, Wokeism|

What happened? How did institutions of higher education founded with such clear-eyed Christian missions, centered on moral and academic flourishing, go so far astray?  There was once a time when religiously affiliated liberal-arts institutions were just that: havens of the time-honored liberal-arts tradition that sought to shape both students’ minds and hearts in accordance with [...]

Symbols of Disruption: The Demonic in an Age of Uncertainty

By |2025-09-20T19:41:16-05:00September 20th, 2025|Categories: Catholicism, Christianity, Civil Society, Culture, Evil, Politics|

While Satan and his legions are known for their subtlety, of late it would seem they have become rather bold. From the Minneapolis shooter drawing a picture of himself staring into a mirror with his reflection not human but a beast with horns, to the recently resigned senior physician at the Centers for Disease Control proudly displaying photos of himself on [...]

The Idea of the University & the Future of Civilization

By |2025-09-19T17:01:59-05:00September 19th, 2025|Categories: Civilization, Classical Education, Classical Learning, Classics, Joseph Pearce, Liberal Learning, Senior Contributors, Uncategorized, Western Civilization|

The disastrous and destructive consequences of reductionist and relativistic education can be seen in multifarious ways, all of which are made manifest in the decay and decomposition of the modern West. We are no longer able to think outside of narcissistic or ideological boxes; we are no longer able to love self-sacrificially. The following is [...]

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