Frankenstein: Prometheus Mythic & Modern

By |2016-08-03T10:37:09-05:00May 31st, 2013|Categories: Books, Christendom, Culture, Joseph Pearce|Tags: , , , , |

The womb and the tomb—one of the most striking mirror images that our lives have to offer. Babies are buried alive in their warm mothers’ girth. Bodies are dead and buried in their cold mother earth. For one, there is the darkness of genesis and growth, for the other, the darkness of death and decay. [...]

On the Reading of Books

By |2017-07-31T23:48:29-05:00May 12th, 2013|Categories: Books, Christianity, Fr. James Schall|Tags: |

On Thursday, May 1, 1783, with “the young Mr. (Edmund) Burke” present, Samuel Johnson remarked: “It is strange that there should be so little reading in the world and so much writing. People in general do not willingly read if they can have anything else to amuse them.” The word “reading” here does not mean, say, [...]

Subsidy or Subsidiarity

By |2014-06-16T13:08:39-05:00March 2nd, 2013|Categories: Books, Catholicism, Ethics, Gerald Russello|Tags: |

Individualism and community are the opposite halves of the American character. For every myth of the self-made man, there is the image of the closely knit New England small town. For every lone cowboy on the frontier, there are the social, political, and cultural groups that Americans have formed since the beginning of the Republic. [...]

Shining Night: A Portrait of Composer Morten Lauridsen

By |2017-06-05T13:03:06-05:00February 5th, 2013|Categories: Beauty, Film, Music|Tags: , |

One of the privileges of writing this column is that I occasionally get to meet the composers of the music I review. I had a meeting this past year with a musician with whom I have been in correspondence for some time. Morten Lauridsen, the most frequently performed American choral composer, came to Washington, D.C. [...]

Christopher Dawson: The Twofold Nature of Christian History

By |2016-08-03T10:37:18-05:00January 29th, 2013|Categories: Christendom, Christian Humanism, Christianity, Christopher Dawson, Culture, Gerald Russello, History|Tags: |

Christopher Dawson Christopher Dawson wrote with two different audiences in mind. He sought both to displace the bankrupt Victorian and Edwardian liberalism of his own day and to shake the complacency of his coreligionists who preferred to bask in the quickly fading light of false medievalism. His carefully crafted prose revealed a nuanced and original understanding [...]

Matchmaking and Imagined Sentiments: Jane Austen’s Emma

By |2018-11-21T14:41:11-06:00January 15th, 2013|Categories: Jane Austen, Marriage|Tags: , |

What do matchmakers know that eludes the common man? What does the common man know that escapes the matchmakers? Austen’s novel Emma shows that true romance originates from equality of social background and education, compatibility of temperaments, similarity of moral ideals and manners, natural attraction based on reason and feeling, and mutual admiration. Matchmaking ignores [...]

Creatio Ex Nihilo: The Universe We Know In

By |2017-07-31T23:48:29-05:00January 1st, 2013|Categories: Christianity, Fr. James Schall, Philosophy|Tags: |

Socrates was fond of repeating the advice of the Oracle: “Know thyself.” He probably said, “Know thyself,” rather than, “Know the world,” because it is more difficult to know oneself than to know the world. Self-introspection yields not ourselves, but something approaching infinity beyond ourselves. The first thing we know about ourselves is that we [...]

The Right to Happiness

By |2019-12-26T11:25:10-06:00December 16th, 2012|Categories: Christianity, Declaration of Independence, Featured, Fr. James Schall, Happiness, Rights|Tags: |

An amusing citation from Margaret Thatcher reads: “The problem with socialism is that you eventually run out of other people’s money.” The socialists, however, were not the only ones who would run out of other people’s money. Democracies are quite capable of duplicating this feat.

 The question is this: What entitles us to acquire other [...]

Toleration and Reciprocity

By |2016-02-12T15:28:35-06:00November 12th, 2012|Categories: Anthony Esolen, Catholicism, Christianity, Featured|Tags: , |

Thomas Aquinas, practical fellow that he was, understood that not all bad things can feasibly be proscribed by human law. It isn’t because people disagree about what is bad, but rather that a well-governed polity should require few laws, easily promulgated and understood, broadly promoting the common good, wherein the lawgiver can attend to things [...]

Faith and Freedom: Why Liberty Requires Christianity

By |2020-04-13T00:16:50-05:00October 13th, 2012|Categories: Christendom, Christianity, Joseph Pearce, Ordered Liberty, Politics|Tags: |

In an age that seems to believe that Christianity is an obstacle to liberty it will prove provocative to insist, contrary to such belief, that Christian faith is essential to liberty’s very existence. Yet, as counter-intuitive as it may seem to disciples of the progressivist zeitgeist, it must be insisted that faith enshrines freedom. Without [...]

The Desires of Man

By |2017-07-31T23:48:31-05:00October 8th, 2012|Categories: Christianity, Constitution, Education, Fr. James Schall, Liberal Learning, Virtue|Tags: , |

At the beginning of each academic year, we talk of a desire to learn. We think we have developed institutions that facilitate this learning. True, we question the cost of a university education. Many students end with significant debts; jobs are often scarce. Many do not actually learn much in college, especially about the important [...]

Is Totalitarian Liberalism A Mutant Form of Christianity?

By |2016-07-17T10:01:33-05:00September 20th, 2012|Categories: Catholicism, Christianity, Communio, Constitution, Featured, Pope Benedict XVI, Tracey Rowland, Tyranny, Western Civilization|Tags: |

When the Obama Administration began its Kulturkampf against American Catholics my husband suggested to me that if the Church is forced to pay for its employees’ contraceptives then there should be an option clause for practicing Catholics. An equivalent amount of the Church’s money spent on other people’s recreational sex should be given to faithful [...]

Recovering Words and Culture in the Unsociety: Anthony Esolen

By |2016-02-12T15:28:37-06:00September 11th, 2012|Categories: Anthony Esolen, Christianity, Community, Culture, Featured|Tags: |


“Where,” asks the editor, “will your town get the money to build new school rooms, and pay better salaries to more teachers? Thousands of communities are wrestling with this problem, or will soon be faced with it. We offer a suggestion.” It is really quite simple. Everyone, from the PTA to the local Rotarians, should [...]

Jane Austen’s “Pride and Prejudice”: A Book of Love & Marriage

By |2018-10-16T00:20:02-05:00August 26th, 2012|Categories: Books, Jane Austen, Marriage|Tags: , |

Jane Austen’s genius comprehends the subject of marriage and the book of love in all its intricacy, practicality, goodness, and mystery. Her novels center on the importance of marriage as one of life’s most important choices and life’s greatest source of happiness—“all the best blessings of existence” to use a phrase from Emma. In Emma [...]

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