The Risen Christ and Fallen Civilization

By |2025-04-20T20:28:00-05:00April 20th, 2025|Categories: Catholicism, Christianity, Easter, Gospel Reflection, History, Joseph Pearce, Timeless Essays|

With eyes wide open to the degradation we see all around us, we know that things are rotten in the modern world. Who can deny it? And yet there are more Christians in the world today than there have ever been in the past. The Church is not dead. Christendom has had a series of [...]

The Reality of the Resurrection

By |2025-04-20T20:28:54-05:00April 20th, 2025|Categories: Catholicism, Christianity, Culture, Dwight Longenecker, Easter, Gospel Reflection, Philosophy, Timeless Essays|

Too often we Christians have given in to the temptation to sanitize the crucifixion and sentimentalize the resurrection. But the resurrection was not, at first, a cause for rejoicing, but the source of fear—soul-shaking, knee-knocking, heart-pounding, earth-quaking fear. One of the good things about Mel Gibson’s The Passion of the Christ is the gore. He [...]

An Easter Story: The Three Apostles

By |2025-04-18T10:06:03-05:00April 18th, 2025|Categories: Christianity, Easter, Fiction, Joseph Mussomeli|

Evening of the First Day “Where have you been?” she asked. Magdala looked back at her in sullen silence. She repeated: “Where have you been, Magda? We have been worried that something had happened to you.” Still no answer. Magdala silently looked about the inner courtyard where the other two were also keeping their vigil [...]

Good Friday: The First 12 Stations of the Cross

By |2025-04-18T07:26:25-05:00April 18th, 2025|Categories: Audio/Video, Christianity, Easter, Lent, Malcolm Guite, Poetry, Timeless Essays|

The Stations of the Cross, which form the core of my book Sounding the Seasons,  are intended to be read on Good Friday. We will read the 13th and 14th tomorrow on Holy Saturday and then on Easter Morning we will have the 15th’ resurrection’ station and also a new villanelle that I have written for [...]

Cinderella Comes to the Shire

By |2025-04-18T10:12:16-05:00April 17th, 2025|Categories: Fiction, J.R.R. Tolkien, Joseph Pearce, Senior Contributors|

According to J.R.R. Tolkien, fairy stories offer recovery, escape and consolation from the sickness, confinement and hopelessness of this world of wickedness. They provide not an escape from reality but an escape to reality. It is an escape from the world of false philosophies and fake realities, rooted in Pride. I believe in fairytales. Take [...]

The Choice Between Love of God and Love of Self

By |2025-04-16T17:27:32-05:00April 16th, 2025|Categories: Catholicism, Love, Sainthood, St. Augustine, The Witness of St. Augustine|

Putting it in precise Augustinian terms, it is the choice between the love of God and the love of self that will determine the outcome of a man’s life. There are two forces at work in the world—gravity and grace—and each of us must choose to follow one or the other. There is no third [...]

The Classical Girl’s Top 10 Holy Works for Holy Week

By |2025-04-16T08:20:07-05:00April 15th, 2025|Categories: Arvo Pärt, Audio/Video, Easter, George Frideric Handel, Gustav Holst, Gustav Mahler, J.S. Bach, Lent, Music, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart|

Here are ten glorious pieces of music for Holy Week that will remind you that there is beauty in this world. As a lifelong Catholic, I’ve always taken Holy Week seriously in a personal way, and the reading of “The Passion of the Lord” on Palm Sunday always deeply affects me. You’d think I’d never heard the [...]

Why Conservatives Must Support Liberal Education

By |2025-04-16T09:32:37-05:00April 15th, 2025|Categories: Classical Education, Conservatism, Culture, Liberal Learning, Russell Kirk, Western Civilization|

The task of conservation, in our present day, necessarily entails supporting liberal education. Those conservatives who do not support it will fail to conserve our Western identity. That is to say: they will fail to conserve anything significant, no matter how many tributes they pay to some abstract ideas of “freedom” or “liberty.” I’d like [...]

The Faith of E.E. Cummings

By |2025-04-15T17:46:46-05:00April 14th, 2025|Categories: Dwight Longenecker, Faith, Poetry, Religion, Senior Contributors|

E.E. Cummings’ attitude to dogma and formal religion may have remained skeptical, but true to his Unitarian roots, he retained respect for spirituality and a simple reverence towards the Almighty. Echoing the transcendentalism of Emerson, Whitman and Thoreau, Cummings bursts forth with simple, lyrical praise for God and nature. What shall we make of Edward [...]

The Colonel Blimp of the Old Right

By |2025-04-13T19:54:19-05:00April 13th, 2025|Categories: American Republic, Aristocracy, Conservatism, Democracy, Hilaire Belloc, History, Irving Babbitt, World War I|

Hoffman Nickerson and a coterie of essayists in the 1920s and 1930s comprised the “Old Right,” a loose confederation of thinkers and writers animated by anti-modernism, suspicion of democracy, and worries over the debasement of Western culture. In 1934, the cartoonist David Low created the cartoon character of “Colonel Blimp,” an exaggerated caricature of older [...]

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