Time to Return to the Prayer of Our Fathers

By |2025-02-01T18:57:06-06:00February 1st, 2025|Categories: Catholicism, Prayer, Sainthood, St. Teresa of Avila, Theology|

Just as the Catholic Faith has been reduced to little more than an intellectual philosophy of life for the clergy—all head and no heart—the same happened to the laity, who depend on them for their spirituality. In the immediate aftermath of the Council of Trent, Catholic spirituality, in both theory and practice, reached a height never [...]

Temple Building

By |2025-02-01T18:18:06-06:00February 1st, 2025|Categories: Catholicism|

For thus said the Lord God, the Holy One of Israel, “In returning and rest you shall be saved; in quietness and in trust shall be your strength.” (Isa 30:15) While visiting my family a few weeks ago, I witnessed my nephew’s baptism. Little Leo Michael became a saint of God on December 28, 2024. Without [...]

Defending the Faith of the Bard: Strindberg on Shakespeare’s Catholicism

By |2025-01-31T13:23:13-06:00January 31st, 2025|Categories: Catholicism, Joseph Pearce, Senior Contributors, William Shakespeare|

Many great writers have affirmed Shakespeare’s Catholicism. G.K. Chesterton asserted that “convergent common sense” pointed to the belief that the Bard of Avon was a Catholic and that such common sense was “supported by the few external and political facts we know”. Over a hundred years earlier, the French writer, François René de Chateaubriand, insisted [...]

Faith, Civil Society, and the American Founding

By |2025-01-31T11:03:46-06:00January 31st, 2025|Categories: American Founding, American Republic, Barbara J. Elliott, Community, Religion, Timeless Essays|

We have increasingly placed our faith in the power of government to provide solutions for human misery. What was once a strong level of responsibility and autonomy at the city, county, and state level has shifted toward a massive concentration at the federal level. When Alexis de Tocqueville visited America in the 1830s, he marveled [...]

Lee Edwards: A Life in Pursuit of Liberty

By |2025-01-30T15:13:05-06:00January 30th, 2025|Categories: Books, Conservatism, Federalism, Libertarians, Presidency|

If a single descriptor would define conservative activist and scholar, Lee Edwards, it would have to be Lee Edwards, anti-communist. And that would be anti-communism at home and abroad. Just Right: A Life in Pursuit of Liberty by Lee Edwards. (378 pages, Regnery, 2024) If the repeated call of the old Popular Front was “no [...]

Schubert’s Seductive “Death and the Maiden”

By |2025-01-30T15:30:31-06:00January 30th, 2025|Categories: Audio/Video, Franz Schubert, Music, Timeless Essays|

Franz Schubert composed his “Death and the Maiden” quartet—one of the most compelling, soulful, profound, irresistible pieces of classical music—while battling syphilis and depression. It’s not just the maiden that Death is after in the music. It’s Schubert. I don’t consider myself to be someone easily seduced, much less by Death, but Franz Schubert’s “Death [...]

Making Sense Out of Our Childless & Childish Age

By |2025-01-29T16:41:56-06:00January 29th, 2025|Categories: Civil Society, Civilization, Faith, Family, John Horvat, Western Civilization|

Suddenly, a demographic winter is upon us. We’ve seen it coming for decades. However, the effects of this population implosion are now starting to be felt. Nation after nation report low birth rates and aging populations. No amount of monetary incentive is enough to change people’s minds—even in more traditional societies. Women and couples seem [...]

Unsung Heroines of the Early Church

By |2025-01-29T16:40:52-06:00January 29th, 2025|Categories: Catholicism, Joseph Pearce, Sainthood, Senior Contributors, Unsung Heroes of Christendom|

Let us look at some holy women of the early centuries of the Church who are not well known. Whenever the Roman Canon of the Mass is celebrated, there is also a celebration of the saints, dozens of whom are invoked by the priest at the altar. Among these saints are seven women: Felicity, Perpetua, Agatha, [...]

The Exorcism of Bilbo Baggins

By |2025-01-28T20:08:38-06:00January 28th, 2025|Categories: Catholicism, Christianity, Evil, J.R.R. Tolkien, Literature|

Victims of obsession, like Bilbo, struggle to see reality clearly, and even more to make the necessary choices. The exorcist, like Gandalf, helps the victim recognize what he is doing that enables the diabolical activity—in this case, keeping the ring—and to renounce whatever it is. “He said that it was ‘growing on his mind,’ and [...]

The Forgotten American System

By |2025-01-28T17:34:20-06:00January 28th, 2025|Categories: American Republic, Economic History, Economics, Free Trade, History, Politics, Republicanism, Timeless Essays|

President William McKinley championed the American System: “We lead all nations in agriculture; we lead all nations in mining; we lead all nations in manufacturing. These are the trophies which we bring after twenty-nine years of a protective tariff.” A return to the American System would be a major step toward increasing prosperity and restoring [...]

Be Still and Read

By |2025-01-27T12:32:38-06:00January 27th, 2025|Categories: Catholicism, Classical Education, Dwight Longenecker, Great Books, Literature, Senior Contributors|

The future will belong to the literate, not the un-literate, and the decline of reading will invariably be corrected by those at the forefront of the educational revolution sweeping America—and that is the rise of classical education. Some years ago I was discussing with a Benedictine abbot the trends he was experiencing among postulants and [...]

On Nature and Grace: The Role of Reason in the Life of Faith

By |2025-01-27T12:36:40-06:00January 27th, 2025|Categories: Christianity, Essential, Faith, Nature, Peter Kalkavage, St. John's College, St. Thomas Aquinas, Timeless Essays|

We may say that the world for Thomas Aquinas does not merely have but is blessed with intelligibility, just as man is blessed with reason. Nature’s beauty is not confined to the senses but extends to the mind. “Ever since the creation of the world his invisible nature, namely, his eternal power and deity, has [...]

Why Literature Still Matters

By |2025-01-26T17:22:13-06:00January 26th, 2025|Categories: Books, Literature, Western Tradition|

In the post-Enlightenment world in which we live, we are rarely left alone in peace and quiet. We are continually pushed to do more and to be more and to do so more quickly and efficiently. Traditional works of literature, however, beckon us into a world that is frozen in time yet alive with desire, [...]

Go to Top