A Friend Remembered

By |2026-03-17T14:53:07-05:00March 10th, 2026|Categories: Barbara J. Elliott, Books, Catholicism, Death, Love, Senior Contributors, The Imaginative Conservative, W. Winston Elliott III|

John Rocha with Winston & Barbara Elliott On Saturday evening, I went to sleep reflecting on a text I had received from Winston Elliott about the film The Emperor’s Club. On Sunday morning, as I awoke—still a little groggy from Daylight Saving Time—I saw another text from him saying that his beloved bride, [...]

C.S. Lewis on Miracles: A Call to Those Who Do Not Believe

By |2026-03-09T20:49:20-05:00March 9th, 2026|Categories: C.S. Lewis, Christianity, Nature of God|

C.S. Lewis believes in the laws of nature, but he argues that miracles do not violate them because miracles are done by the Creator of the natural world Himself. Miracles are, therefore, exceptions to the laws of nature. The Great Commission commands all Christians to share the Gospel with non-Christians. Different groups of non-Christians want [...]

God Is a Great Gift-Giver

By |2026-03-09T20:32:51-05:00March 9th, 2026|Categories: Catholicism, Gospel Reflection, Lent|

Lent is a great time to take stock of all the good things that God has given us and to realize our utter dependence on God, while also realizing he is with us every step of the way. In my time in ministry, first as a diocesan seminarian and now as a Dominican student brother, [...]

The Law and the Machine

By |2026-03-08T21:21:11-05:00March 8th, 2026|Categories: Christianity, Civilization, Natural Law, Nature of Man, Technology|

The machine we face today is an all-encompassing technological, cultural, and economic system oppressing us—driven by profit and a misguided ambition. In the name of public health and progress we have allowed ourselves to be enslaved to the machine. You will have a window in your head. Not even your future will be a mystery [...]

The Decline of the Book & the Fall of Western Civilization

By |2026-03-08T21:18:08-05:00March 8th, 2026|Categories: Books, Encyclopedia Britannica, Timeless Essays|Tags: |

Soon the shelves will be gone, the books sold, leaving only the people, staring mesmerized at their screens. They won’t even notice that the books have been taken away. After libraries have all closed down or become free computer centers, there will still be people like me, feeling like monks in monasteries preserving books in [...]

The Evil Empire and Ronald Reagan

By |2026-03-07T21:17:35-06:00March 7th, 2026|Categories: Alexander Hamilton, Bradley J. Birzer, Communism, Ronald Reagan, Timeless Essays|

On March 8, 1983, Ronald Reagan delivered a speech that shocked many, amused some, and inspired more. Attending the annual meeting of the National Association of Evangelicals in Orlando, Florida, Reagan decided to address the topic of sin and evil in the modern world. Drawing significantly upon C.S. Lewis’s The Screwtape Letters, Reagan offered a [...]

Wagner versus Nietzsche

By |2026-03-06T20:22:18-06:00March 6th, 2026|Categories: Friedrich Nietzsche, Joseph Pearce, Music, Philosophy, Richard Wagner, Senior Contributors|

“Strong art destabilizes the self,” a reader commented on my recent essay, “that’s its job.” Really? On the contrary, great art edifies. It engages the isolated and alienated self with goodness, truth, and beauty. It moves us beyond the confusion of the unstable self towards the true stability found in the fusion of sanity and [...]

Mimetic Desire and the Seven Deadly Sins

By |2026-03-05T21:16:08-06:00March 5th, 2026|Categories: Catholicism, Dwight Longenecker, Lent, Rene Girard, Senior Contributors|

During this season of Lent it is helpful to reflect on how mimetic desire—defined as “imitation envy"—connects with and influences the classic seven deadly sins. The French thinker Rene Girard had a seminal insight which has shed light on just about every aspect of human endeavor from theology and anthropology to economics, politics, psychology, and [...]

Caring About Home

By |2026-03-05T20:38:54-06:00March 5th, 2026|Categories: Civil Society, Community, Timeless Essays|

People in my hometown of Galveston, Texas don’t have a superb explanation or philosophy for their city. It’s just their home. It’s a beautiful place with a beautiful history. Statues still stand. The streets are largely clean; the police take care to contain crime to the smallest radius possible. That all is a clear contrast [...]

Combatting the “Naked Public Square”

By |2026-03-04T14:36:59-06:00March 4th, 2026|Categories: American Republic, Catholic Culture Series, Catholicism, Christendom, Civil Society, Government|

What is it that finally holds a society together? What enables it to cohere? Nothing less, St. John Henry Newman reminds us, “than a common reverence for a certain sacred possession.” Does anyone know what the central myth of America might be? I mean, isn’t there a story out there we tell ourselves about our origins? Our [...]

Winston Churchill’s “Iron Curtain Speech”

By |2026-03-04T18:51:09-06:00March 4th, 2026|Categories: Communism, Foreign Affairs, Leadership, Politics, Timeless Essays, Winston Churchill|Tags: |

Rarely has one speech created a whole new political condition. While Winston Churchill did not create the Cold War, he gave the amorphous condition plaguing relations between the free and Communist worlds a new dramatic image in his phrase about an Iron Curtain de­scending upon Europe. “We looked for peace, and there is no good; [...]

Go to Top