Nationalism & Globalism in American Politics

By |2025-06-28T19:41:06-05:00June 27th, 2025|Categories: American Republic, Donald Trump, Globalism, Nationalism, Politics, Presidency, Teddy Roosevelt|

In both rhetoric and substance, the ideologies of globalism and nationalism have been playing a major role in current events and controversies. How have they shaped American and world attitudes and actions over centuries? Introduction The current controversy about the violent riots in Los Angeles and President Trump’s military response to them is part of [...]

Mortimer Adler & the Context of an Educational Philosophy

By |2025-06-27T16:20:53-05:00June 27th, 2025|Categories: Books, Christine Norvell, Education, Liberal Arts, Mortimer Adler, Timeless Essays|

Robert Woods’ “Mortimer Adler: The Paideia Way of Classical Education” embodies the life and educational philosophy of one education reformer. Though intended to be informative, most chapters are akin to an educator’s devotional, leaving the teacher inspired to be a more thoughtful and focused Christian tutor. Mortimer Adler: The Paideia Way of Classical Education, by [...]

Laborers in the Vineyard, and Out of It

By |2025-06-26T18:24:37-05:00June 26th, 2025|Categories: Catholicism, Prayer|

The living water of God’s saving work spreads out through the world into many diverse tributaries. Just as much as we need God to call preachers to labor in the vineyard, so we need Christians who aren’t called to preach themselves to support the Church’s mission by their prayers. Saint Paul, the paradigmatic preacher, had [...]

The Dignity of Work

By |2025-07-05T20:43:48-05:00June 25th, 2025|Categories: Books, Catholicism, Cluny, Labor/Work|

The divine plan in nature calls for human completion, as divine grace in man calls for human co-operation. Work then is the redemption of nature as Christ is the redemption of man, and civilization is the product of both redemptive acts, the completion of the circle by which nature serves man and man serves God. [...]

Josemaría Escrivá: The Saint of Ordinary Life

By |2025-06-25T19:38:06-05:00June 25th, 2025|Categories: Catholicism, Labor/Work, Sainthood, St. Josemaria Escriva, Timeless Essays|

Everyday life is the true setting for your lives as Christians. Your ordinary contact with God takes place where your fellow men, your yearnings, your work and your affections are. There you have your daily encounter with Christ. It is in the midst of the most material things of the earth that we must sanctify [...]

Reweaving the Fabric of Our Culture With Love

By |2025-06-24T11:53:33-05:00June 24th, 2025|Categories: Audio/Video, Barbara J. Elliott, Christianity, Community, Love, Religion, Senior Contributors|

Today in America, people of faith are binding up the unraveled fabric of civil society in tangible ways. We hold the threads individually, but when they are bound together, we can reweave a picture of order and beauty in human souls, woven in the vibrant colors of love. People of faith have given our culture [...]

Reviving Christendom

By |2025-06-24T22:28:12-05:00June 24th, 2025|Categories: Catholicism, Christendom, Christianity, Europe, Islam, Protestant Reformation, St. Augustine, Viktor Orbán|

Five-hundred years on from the Protestant revolution and Christendom is not just dismantled, but in full apostasy. Can it be revived, and if so, how? St. Augustine of Hippo (354-430), who was the greatest Christian philosopher of antiquity and certainly the one who exerted the deepest and most lasting influence, maintained that a Christian state is the only [...]

Edmund Burke and the Defense of America

By |2025-06-23T16:08:35-05:00June 23rd, 2025|Categories: American Republic, American Revolution, Books, Bradley J. Birzer, Edmund Burke, Senior Contributors|

The most interesting response from Parliament to the imperial crisis came, not surprisingly, from Edmund Burke. An Irishman by birth, Burke had been raised Church of England though his mother and sister were Roman Catholic. Crucially, this upbringing in a mixed family radically shaped Burke’s understanding of the world, he as always sided with the [...]

The Great Tolkien

By |2025-06-23T08:48:36-05:00June 22nd, 2025|Categories: Catholicism, J.R.R. Tolkien, Literature|

The astonishing appeal of Tolkien’s works to the millions upon millions of readers in the 20th and 21st centuries, joined today by millions upon millions of filmgoers, is evidence that a deep need and thirst for mythical imagery, religious values, and allegories of Good still characterize our fellow human beings. Virgil Nemoianu I [...]

Unsung Heroes of Harvard

By |2025-06-30T08:23:28-05:00June 22nd, 2025|Categories: Catholicism, Christianity, Education, Joseph Pearce, Senior Contributors, Unsung Heroes of Christendom|

Amidst the battered "Veritas" of Harvard, there are a few still heroically walking in the footsteps of their Catholic predecessors. It is ironic and risible in the extreme that the motto of Harvard University is “Veritas” because that once-illustrious institution has long since abandoned any belief in objective verity. It has ceased to seek answers [...]

Saint John Fisher, Bishop & Martyr

By |2025-06-27T16:46:54-05:00June 22nd, 2025|Categories: Catholicism, Sainthood, St. John Fisher|

Saint John Fisher, Bishop & Martyr If more Catholic Bishops were like Fisher more Catholic politicians would be like St. Thomas More June 22nd John Fisher, Bishop of Rochester Born at Beverly, 1469 - martyred June 22, 1535, Tower of London Canonized (with Saint Thomas More) 1935 Saint John Fisher studied theology in Cambridge, England [...]

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