Making and Revealing

By |2019-10-10T11:51:43-05:00July 28th, 2017|Categories: Catholicism, Christianity, Flannery O'Connor, Glenn Arbery, Hope, Literature, Plato, Poetry, Senior Contributors, Sophocles, Wyoming Catholic College|

Making art is a mode of revealing the world in new ways… For the past two weeks, I’ve been writing about the opportunity to make a new Catholic culture, not from scratch and not from attempts to appropriate whatever happens to be popular at the moment, but from the immense resources available in the tradition [...]

Minding Malvolio: Shakespeare’s “Twelfth Night”

By |2024-01-05T18:48:29-06:00July 28th, 2017|Categories: Catholicism, Christianity, Community, Dwight Longenecker, Epiphany, Theater, William Shakespeare|

The ancient Catholic world was rich, colorful, and full of ritual and rumbustiousness. It was the culture of the rough and tumble, blood and glory, lusting and loving, fasting and feasting of the lives of the English people. I was introduced to Shakespeare’s Twelfth Night when I was a college freshman. Having learned to act [...]

What Is Unique About St. John’s College?

By |2019-06-10T15:45:29-05:00July 27th, 2017|Categories: Christopher B. Nelson, Classical Education, Great Books, Liberal Learning, Senior Contributors, St. John's College|

Join The Imaginative Conservative's Winston Elliott as he talks with Christopher Nelson, president of St. John's College, about his service at St John’s, and about the unique kind of liberal arts education offered there. President Nelson discusses the mission of St. John's College, the role of the Great Books in their classes, and explains the [...]

What If? The Moral Imagination of Disney’s “Beauty and the Beast”

By |2017-08-31T12:02:36-05:00July 27th, 2017|Categories: Bradley J. Birzer, Charity, Christianity, Conservatism, Edmund Burke, Film, Moral Imagination, Senior Contributors|

The story of Beauty and the Beast is the oldest story in the Christian world. It’s the story about love, sacrifice, and redemption… Several nights ago, I reluctantly watched Disney’s 2017 live version of Beauty and the Beast. I must admit three things before I get into the heart of this essay. First, I’ve never [...]

Henry James and American Painting

By |2023-07-16T00:56:39-05:00July 25th, 2017|Categories: Art, Literature|

Understanding Henry James’ relationship to painting may very well unlock one of the keys to understanding the notoriously concealed prose style of the greatest of all English-language prose artists. There is no single way to read a writer as complex as Henry James. His novels are renowned as much for their psychological openness as for [...]

Can Only a God Save Us Now?

By |2017-07-24T16:46:33-05:00July 24th, 2017|Categories: Christianity, Culture, Culture War, Democracy, Modernity, Morality, Politics, Socialism, Tyranny, Western Civilization|

Western civilization has been gutted from within. At the core of this moral bankruptcy is a watered-down Christianity that lacks the conviction to defend itself… Today mankind enjoys unprecedented technology, but lacks the wisdom to regard technology as a tool in the service of life, and not an end in itself. The difference between the [...]

Trudeau’s Cognitive Dissonance: Euthanasia and the Holocaust

By |2017-07-25T00:11:28-05:00July 24th, 2017|Categories: Compassion, Culture, Death, Ethics, Politics|

The soft totalitarian roots of Prime Minister Trudeau’s Liberal government are becoming increasingly transparent through its dismissing of the central truth that builds up society: the life of every person must be safeguarded and protected… Terezín. Auschwitz-Birkenau. Majdanek. Treblinka. These places of suffering, even their very names, signify what Eva Hoffman calls the “abrupt but [...]

Getting the Middle Ages Right: The Plight of the English Worker

By |2022-03-31T18:05:47-05:00July 23rd, 2017|Categories: Books, Christendom, Economics, England, Featured, History, Labor/Work|

There were pre-modern times when workers enjoyed broad prosperity and rights, thanks largely to the Church, which has long safeguarded and improved the state of workers and all society… In the quest for a golden age for workers, few would look beyond free markets in modern times. This position is backed up by economists using [...]

“For Once, Then, Something”

By |2025-01-28T21:28:01-06:00July 23rd, 2017|Categories: Poetry, Robert Frost|

Others taunt me with having knelt at well-curbs Always wrong to the light, so never seeing Deeper down in the well than where the water Gives me back in a shining surface picture Me myself in the summer heaven godlike Looking out of a wreath of fern and cloud puffs. Once, when trying with chin [...]

On Mysteries and Miracles

By |2023-04-13T11:45:29-05:00July 22nd, 2017|Categories: Christianity, Dwight Longenecker, Epiphany, History, Mystery, Myth, Science, Senior Contributors|

We can approach the miracles and mysteries of the Bible, accepting the possibility of their essential historicity while allowing for elaboration, exaggeration, and the misunderstandings of the pre-scientific mind. I have had a terrific time researching and writing my new book The Mystery of the Magi—The Quest for the True Identity of the Three Wise [...]

Beginning With Silence

By |2019-11-14T12:01:16-06:00July 21st, 2017|Categories: Christendom, Culture, Faith, Glenn Arbery, Modernity, Religion, Senior Contributors, Wyoming Catholic College|

The more silence can become a way of life in this noisy age, the more a new culture will radiate from its blessings… Last week I suggested that, despite the drift of Western culture, a time like ours can actually shelter a deep hope for renewal. The Catholic historian Christopher Dawson, with his long perspective, has [...]

On the Mystery of Teachers I Never Met

By |2021-04-28T14:37:02-05:00July 21st, 2017|Categories: Aristotle, Christian Humanism, Education, Fr. James Schall, Great Books, Hilaire Belloc, Literature, Philosophy, Plato, St. Augustine, Tradition, Truth|

The mystery is how one person whom I never met, through recountings down the ages of how many others whom I also have never met, could shed light on each other, eventually to enlighten me. In The Apology, Socrates brought up the question of whether he was paid for being a teacher, like the Sophists, who were paid [...]

C.S. Lewis and the Questioned Image

By |2024-12-24T13:55:02-06:00July 20th, 2017|Categories: C.S. Lewis, Christian Humanism, Imagination, Modernity, Order, Philosophy, Science, St. Thomas Aquinas|

It is hard, as a modern, to know the right questions to ask, to know when all questions fall silent in the presence of absolute Truth, of Revelation. In his final book, The Discarded Image, C.S. Lewis writes about the Mediaeval world view: “All the apparent contradictions must be harmonised. A Model must be built which [...]

Go to Top