Man of Science, Man of Faith

By |2025-03-01T18:09:52-06:00March 1st, 2025|Categories: Books, Catholicism, Cluny, Reason, Science|

Jesus Christ revealed none of the scientific knowledge that it is possible for man to acquire by the use of his own reason. He confirmed the truth of that which reason can attain concerning God and the human soul, besides enlightening us regarding that sphere of truth which is inaccessible to reason, that is to [...]

Celestial Courtroom: America at the Judgment of the Nations

By |2025-02-28T15:44:01-06:00February 28th, 2025|Categories: American Founding, American Republic, Barbara J. Elliott, Featured, Fiction, Secularism, Timeless Essays|

Through unnamed sources involved in the proceedings, these notes were smuggled out of the Celestial Courtroom, where the ongoing evaluation of the Nations takes place in Committee Hearings in preparation for the Final Judgment. St. Peter was the presiding Chairman, Senator Screwtape the first witness. [Classified Top Secret, Embargo on Distribution] St. Peter: We are [...]

Two Big, Indispensable Catholic Books

By |2025-02-27T19:28:31-06:00February 27th, 2025|Categories: Books, Catholicism, Christianity, Dwight Longenecker, Senior Contributors|

If Scott Hahn’s "Catholic Study Bible" is a monument to the contribution that converts from Protestantism have made, Daniel Gonzalez’ "Mass Explained" is a monument to the solid, reliable, and deep faith of lifelong Catholics. Both books are magnificent accomplishments. A few years after I was received into the Catholic Church, my older brother and [...]

Bureaucracy of, by, and for the Smug

By |2025-02-27T19:42:50-06:00February 27th, 2025|Categories: Books, Bruce Frohnen, Rule of Law, Senior Contributors, Timeless Essays|

If anything saves our constitutional republic at this stage it will be Americans’ sheer unruliness, our unwillingness to sit still and be told what to do by people convinced that their scores on entrance exams (or, perhaps, on the squash court) entitle them to organize our lives for us. Law & Leviathan: Redeeming the Administrative [...]

Historicism or a Theology of History?

By |2025-02-26T20:08:12-06:00February 26th, 2025|Categories: Books, Catholicism, Christianity, Faith, Hans Urs von Balthasar, History, Theology|

Any attempt to interpret history as a whole, if it is not to succumb to gnostic myth, must posit some subject which works in and reveals itself in the whole of history and which is at the same time [the belief in] a being capable of providing general norms. —Fr. Hans Urs von Balthasar, A [...]

What Must Leaders Know to Wield the “Five Swords of Imagination”?

By |2025-02-25T21:31:13-06:00February 25th, 2025|Categories: Barbara J. Elliott, Books, Russell Kirk, Timeless Essays|

How much folly could have been avoided if our contemporary leaders truly understood the deeper patrimony of ordered liberty? To maintain ordered liberty, our leaders need to gird up and learn to wield the five swords of imagination, because all must be swung simultaneously with trained virtuosity. Kudos to Gleaves Whitney for his insightful and [...]

Lord, Hear My Prayer

By |2025-02-25T20:50:33-06:00February 25th, 2025|Categories: Catholicism, Christianity, Nature of God, Prayer|

Praying to God is tricky business. It’s obviously very important to pray—how else can our relationship with God grow and become more intimate? How else can we love God if we never talk to him? Prayer is a loving conversation. More simply, it is a loving gaze at God our Creator, Redeemer, and Friend. And [...]

C.S. Lewis on Patriotism

By |2025-02-26T20:21:53-06:00February 24th, 2025|Categories: C.S. Lewis, Love, Patriotism|

Love of one’s country stands better when it finds its office within a higher love. Lewis disaggregates ‘love’ into loves In his book The Four Loves, published in 1960, three years before he died in 1963, the Irish/Englishman C.S. Lewis says that, although goodness itself cannot turn bad, things that we associate with goodness and [...]

What John Locke Really Said

By |2025-02-24T14:30:52-06:00February 24th, 2025|Categories: Conservatism, Featured, John Locke, Natural Law, Timeless Essays, Willmoore Kendall|

Willmoore Kendall contended that the conventional interpretation of John Locke, depicting him as an exponent of individualism and natural rights which transcended majority sentiments, was in error. By any reasonable standard of measurement, Willmoore Kendall would have to be included in a list of the most important political scientists of the post-World War II era. [...]

Heroes of the Vendée

By |2025-03-18T14:06:53-05:00February 23rd, 2025|Categories: Catholicism, Enlightenment, History, Joseph Pearce, Senior Contributors, Unsung Heroes of Christendom|

The Catholic people of the Vendée, aware of the horrors being unleashed by the stormtroopers of the French Revolution, responded courageously to the threat to their Faith and their way of life. Many people will have heard of the French Resistance, the name given to the various underground organizations that fought against the Nazis during [...]

Apocalyptic Ponderings

By |2025-02-23T17:55:25-06:00February 23rd, 2025|Categories: Bradley J. Birzer, Christianity, Fiction, Senior Contributors, Timeless Essays|

So, is it the End? Possibly. Christians have been worried about the End since the days that Christ walked the earth. Could it happen three minutes after you have read this? Maybe. Could it happen three thousand years after you read this? Just as likely. Toward the end of the twentieth century, closing two thousand [...]

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