“On the Incarnation” & the Fresh Breath of Style

By |2025-03-04T13:53:30-06:00March 4th, 2025|Categories: Books, Christianity, Sainthood, Theology|

If you are unfamiliar with theological classics and want an easeful entryway, here is what you should do: run to On the Incarnation, a short treatise written by St. Athanasius of Alexandria in the fourth century, in the English translation done by Sister Penelope Lawson in 1944. It features an introduction by C S. Lewis, [...]

After Weber: Michael Novak & the Theology of Economics

By |2025-03-03T17:13:16-06:00March 3rd, 2025|Categories: Books, Catholicism, Economics, Theology|

Often placed, more or less justifiably, in the lineage of John Courtney Murray S.J. (1904–1967), Michael Novak (1933–2017) distinguished himself through systematic efforts in the direction of building a theology of economics. At the risk of making a statement that may seem too daring, I believe that Michael Novak’s work can be considered one of [...]

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 [...]

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 [...]

How Should We Rank the American Presidents?

By |2025-02-16T18:58:39-06:00February 16th, 2025|Categories: American Founding, American Republic, Books, Constitution, Featured, Presidency, Stephen M. Klugewicz, Timeless Essays|

Traditional rankings of the American presidents ask whether our chief executives did what was necessary for the good of the country. But should we look to their fidelity to the Constitution as a better way to evaluate their behavior in office? 9 Presidents Who Screwed Up America: And Four Who Tried to Save Her, by [...]

Hemingway’s Faith

By |2025-02-14T09:15:20-06:00February 13th, 2025|Categories: Books, Catholicism, Faith, Literature|

Ernest Hemingway's spiritual sensibilities were the foundation of everything he wrote. Indeed, despite his own weaknesses and flaws, his Catholic spirituality infused his writing. Robert Lazu Kmita: Dear Ms. Mary Claire Kendall, thank you for agreeing to engage in this dialogue. For our readers, I specify that it relates to your recently launched volume, shortly [...]

Sounding Faith: Conversations With a Baroque Composer

By |2025-02-10T11:07:18-06:00February 9th, 2025|Categories: Audio/Video, Books, Catholicism, Michael De Sapio, Music, Senior Contributors|

The music of little-known Baroque composer Francesco Antonio Bonporti embodies a kind of Arcadian serenity and joy, like the music of Mozart. Art conceived along those lines is closely tied to the refinement of the spirit, in which the senses do not go their own brutish way but are reconciled with the mind by means [...]

Donald Trump and Daniel Boorstin’s “The Image”

By |2025-02-06T10:21:16-06:00February 6th, 2025|Categories: Books, Donald Trump, History, Presidency|

“The book that explains Trump’s dominance may well have been published in 1962.” Or so contend the editors of the Atlantic Monthly. Amazon apparently agrees, since its blurb to promote current sales of Daniel Boorstin’s The Image borrows directly from the editors of the Atlantic and their leap into an increasingly distant past. But is [...]

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 [...]

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