Making the Impossible Possible

By |2025-03-29T17:26:31-05:00March 29th, 2025|Categories: Christianity, Love, Prayer|

In the prayer that leads from meditation to contemplation, the deep human desire for love that has always been there is gradually transformed. It is set alight by reflecting and ruminating on love – God’s love. This love is made visible to us as we see it embodied in Jesus Christ, and as it is [...]

The Hidden Saints of Seventh-Century England

By |2025-04-01T19:34:40-05:00March 29th, 2025|Categories: Catholicism, England, Joseph Pearce, Sainthood, Senior Contributors, Unsung Heroes of Christendom|

St. Withburga Over the centuries, the English have been something of a curse to the Irish. English rulers, such as Henry VIII, Elizabeth I, and Oliver Cromwell, have sought to impose their will on the people of Ireland, often through the tyrannical use of terror on a defenseless population. There is, however, one [...]

The Stages of Education

By |2025-03-28T11:23:22-05:00March 28th, 2025|Categories: Books, Catholicism, Cluny, Imagination|

As to the principal stages in education, let us note that there are three great periods in education. I should like to designate them as the rudiments (or elementary education), the humanities (comprising both secondary and college education), and advanced studies (comprising graduate schools and higher specialized learning). And these periods correspond not only to [...]

“Anna Karenina”: Aristocratic Life Is All a Stage

By |2025-03-28T11:22:41-05:00March 28th, 2025|Categories: Barbara J. Elliott, Books, Culture, Film, Timeless Essays|

Anna Karenina is a lush, beautiful, stylized film about succumbing to sexual flame and the complicated relationships of infidelity that tear a beautiful woman apart. The themes of love, lust, and forgiveness are depicted in the opulence of aristocratic society in late 19th century tsarist Russia. If you are expecting an experience like Dr. Zhivago, forget it. This [...]

Tradition and Musical Revival

By |2025-03-31T17:15:33-05:00March 27th, 2025|Categories: Christianity, Democracy, Joseph Pearce, Music, Senior Contributors, Tradition|

Tradition is the extension of democracy through time. It is the proxy of the dead and the enfranchisement of the unborn. “Tradition may be defined as the extension of the franchise,” wrote Chesterton. “Tradition means giving votes to the most obscure of all classes, our ancestors. It is the democracy of the dead.” And he [...]

I’ll Fly Away, Oh Glory!

By |2025-03-27T17:28:06-05:00March 27th, 2025|Categories: Books, Catholicism, Sainthood|

Can saints fly? Perhaps levitation is a gift to humanity to puncture our pride—to remind us that we don’t have all the answers, and that our approach to all the things we take with such gravity ought to be spiced with a touch of levity. Pope Benedict XVI wrote somewhere that “Scripture can only be [...]

Putting Penance in Its Place

By |2025-03-26T18:13:31-05:00March 26th, 2025|Categories: Catholicism, Lent, Virtue|

When I think of Lent, I think of suffering—particularly my own suffering. Lent brings up the juvenile dread I felt as a child when I knew that candy and TV were on the chopping block. Even throughout high school and college, I always associated Lent with a melancholic focus on penance. Listening to the Church’s [...]

The Mighty Nine: Reflections on Beethoven’s Symphonies

By |2025-12-17T11:56:11-06:00March 25th, 2025|Categories: Andrew Balio, Beethoven 250, Joseph Pearce, Ludwig van Beethoven, Mark Malvasi, Michael De Sapio, Music, Stephen M. Klugewicz, Timeless Essays|Tags: , , , |

Please enjoy this symposium on the nine symphonies of Ludwig van Beethoven, with contributions from our distinguished panel, including composer Michael Kurek and Principal Trumpet of the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra, Andrew Balio. Clicking on the CD cover art next to each symphony will guide you to a listening recommendation on Spotify; at the bottom of [...]

“The Draft Horse”

By |2025-03-25T17:01:38-05:00March 25th, 2025|Categories: Death, Poetry, Robert Frost|

With a lantern that wouldn't burn In too frail a buggy we drove Behind too heavy a horse Through a pitch-dark limitless grove. And a man came out of the trees And took our horse by the head And reaching back to his ribs Deliberately stabbed him dead. The ponderous beast went down With a [...]

The Poetry and Particularity of Mary

By |2025-03-24T17:28:58-05:00March 24th, 2025|Categories: Christmas, Dwight Longenecker, Mother of God, Poetry, Senior Contributors, Timeless Essays|

At the Annunciation, in a room in Nazareth, the fresh innocence of Eve is recapitulated, but in a new configuration. This is the nature of creation: that all things general, to become real, must become particular. It should therefore not come as a surprise that God Himself should also take particular flesh from a particular [...]

Approaching Weathertop: Anatomy of a Scene

By |2025-03-24T17:09:49-05:00March 24th, 2025|Categories: Books, Bradley J. Birzer, Imagination, J.R.R. Tolkien, Literature, Senior Contributors, Timeless Essays, Tolkien Series, Writing|

Though the approach to the mountain Weathertop is only one scene in “The Lord of the Rings,” it is a telling one. Through romance, imagery of light and color, the voluptuousness of his landscapes, and the holiness of song and poetry, J.R.R. Tolkien brilliantly reveals himself as a master of the English language and, especially, [...]

A War Hero’s Life: A Tribute to My Father

By |2025-03-23T14:02:22-05:00March 23rd, 2025|Categories: Audio/Video, Heroism, Memorial Day, Military, Stephen M. Klugewicz, Timeless Essays, Veterans Day, World War II|

On January 25, 1945, the Battle of the Bulge ended. But not until a decade after my father’s death did I uncover the fact that he fought in what one historian has deemed the greatest battle in history. Cpl. Joseph D. Klugewicz won a Bronze Star for his actions against the Nazis that winter. But [...]

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