Liberty and Liberal Education

By |2025-08-08T20:12:41-05:00August 8th, 2025|Categories: American Republic, Civil Society, Classical Education, Education, Great Books, Liberal Arts, Liberal Learning, Timeless Essays, Western Tradition, Wyoming Catholic College|

Free citizens are necessarily invited to follow the Delphic injunction, “know thyself,” that is addressed to all mankind; and their success or failure in responding to this invitation is crucial for the preservation or loss of their liberty. Liberal education is the distinctive educational tradition of the West; so, too, is liberty our distinctive political [...]

Sounding a Discordant Note

By |2025-08-07T22:35:42-05:00August 7th, 2025|Categories: Beauty, Culture, Joseph Pearce, Modernity, Music, Richard Wagner, Senior Contributors|

I would say that taking idioms or gaining inspiration from past works does not constitute a continuum, i.e. tradition, if the intention is to put their integrity (their beauty) at the service of disintegration (ugliness). A correct term for such taking from the tradition would be vandalism. “Charles,” said Cordelia, “Modern Art is all bosh, [...]

Eloquence and Truth

By |2025-08-07T21:38:48-05:00August 7th, 2025|Categories: Catholicism, Christianity, Sainthood, St. Ambrose, St. Augustine, The Witness of St. Augustine|

In hearing St. Ambrose, St. Augustine began to distinguish between mere eloquence and the real truth. The Manichees had always been eager to enlist a bright young fellow like Augustine to help spread the word. And for a period of nine years, first in Carthage, then later in Rome, he remained one of their star [...]

Seeking Christendom: Christian Humanism in the 20th Century

By |2025-08-06T16:42:14-05:00August 6th, 2025|Categories: Bradley J. Birzer, C.S. Lewis, Christendom, Christian Humanism, Christopher Dawson, Russell Kirk, Senior Contributors, Western Civilization|

We need to return to first principles and to the most important questions one could ever ask: What is man? What is God? And, what is man’s relationship to God and to one another? The Christian Humanist does not pretend to know the answer to each of these questions, but he knows the questions must [...]

The War the West Forgot

By |2025-08-28T20:23:03-05:00August 6th, 2025|Categories: Books, Catholicism, Christianity, Film, History, Literature, Protestant Reformation, War, Western Civilization|

Better than any historian, storyteller Gertrud von le Fort brings her unique genius for laying bare the human heart in making sense of and finding redemption amid the horror of human suffering. Is there a Catholic home in America that does not display an Infant of Prague watching over the family from the top of [...]

“Transfiguration”

By |2025-08-06T07:43:23-05:00August 6th, 2025|Categories: Christianity, Malcolm Guite, Poetry, Timeless Essays|

Continuing my series of sonnets ‘Sounding the Seasons’ of the Church’s year, here is a sonnet for the feast of the Transfiguration when we remember how the disciples, even before they went to Jerusalem to face his trials with him, had a glimpse of Christ in his true glory. The Transfiguration is usually celebrated on [...]

The Bomb at 80

By |2025-08-05T18:07:49-05:00August 5th, 2025|Categories: Mark Malvasi, Senior Contributors, War, World War II|

The debate over whether the United States ought to have used the bomb against Japan is complicated and vexing. Did the United States have to drop atomic bombs on Japan to win the war? Should the United States have done so, even if military necessity dictated? I. The Pacific War German surrender on May 8, [...]

Whatever Happened to Manhood?

By |2025-08-05T18:27:46-05:00August 5th, 2025|Categories: Books, Christianity, Faith, Family, Featured, Louis Markos, Modernity, Timeless Essays|

Wayne Braudrick spares no punches in calling men to live up to a biblical ideal: one which expects them to be focused servant leaders who are true to their word, who fight for the right, who commit themselves to life-long learning, and who form strong, lasting friendships. Whatever Happened to Manhood? A Return to Biblical [...]

Less Than Nothing: The World Without Mystery

By |2025-08-05T11:39:01-05:00August 4th, 2025|Categories: Christianity, Friedrich Nietzsche, Modernity, Mystery, Timeless Essays, Truth, Western Civilization|

Only by recognizing the divine mystery that predicates existence in the world can one reclaim his individuality. Only then will he be capable of searching for meaning generated outside the human intellect. Humans can never be gods, but they need God to live meaningful lives. Most students I teach believe that reality is subjective and [...]

Distant Light: The Music of Peteris Vasks

By |2025-08-04T11:24:23-05:00August 4th, 2025|Categories: Audio/Video, Michael De Sapio, Music, Senior Contributors|

In a normal world, Peteris Vasks would be the most famous composer alive. He writes music for an apocalyptic age, in which culture is coming full circle, providing exactly what the world needs: spirituality, depth, presence, beauty. “I want to nourish the soul, that is what I preach in my works.” —Pēteris Vasks Pēteris [...]

Sidney Hook on Academic Freedom & Academic Anarchy

By |2025-08-03T21:37:11-05:00August 3rd, 2025|Categories: Classics, Education, Free Speech, Freedom, Liberal Arts, Liberal Learning|

Sidney Hook believed the university to be a community of scholars bound together by the ties of civility and intellectual respect, pursuing the truths, the goods, and the beauties—multiple visions which inspire the life of the mind. Those who accept this conception, he believed, must dedicate themselves to help those misguided students and their allies [...]

Heroes From an Unsung Country

By |2025-08-03T15:30:03-05:00August 3rd, 2025|Categories: Catholicism, Joseph Pearce, Senior Contributors, Unsung Heroes of Christendom|

Uruguay’s secular culture shuns Catholicism, yet heroes like Saint Anna Maria Rubatto and convert Alberto Methol Ferré defy the “libertine atheist” tide. A survey of the presence of the Catholic Church in South America will invariably focus on the largest nations, Brazil and Argentina, with reference also to countries such as Peru, Chile, Colombia, Bolivia, and [...]

The Primacy of Love in Catholic Reform

By |2025-08-02T18:27:39-05:00August 2nd, 2025|Categories: Christianity, David Torkington, Love, Prayer, The Primacy of Loving|

The reforms sweeping through the Church across Europe in the century leading up to the Reformation should put to bed the later Protestant assertion that Catholic spirituality was in a state of “terminal decline” prior to Martin Luther hammering his 95 articles to the door of the church in Wurttemberg in 1517. If you visit [...]

Let Them Be Born in Wonder

By |2025-08-02T18:32:13-05:00August 2nd, 2025|Categories: Christian Humanism, Christianity, John Senior, Liberal Learning, Timeless Essays, Wyoming Catholic College|

We are made for the stars but rooted in the soil. We are made to seek spiritual realities, but we must use this world, this visible creation, to do so. How the brief life of a storied liberal arts program changed lives the world over. In 1967, at the age of forty-four, John Senior transferred [...]

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