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The Editors
In today’s On the Square feature, Geoffrey M. Vaughan considers how American Catholics will respond to the new translation of the Order of the Mass : There will certainly be challenges with the new translation for everyone. For instance, And with your spirit is not idiomatic, nor . . . . Continue Reading »
In his latest On the Square column , Joe Carter offers a very brief theology of new media culture: One of the areas that I think about most is online media and how Christians can use them to influence the production, consumption, and redemption of culture. The first step in developing a theology of . . . . Continue Reading »
In her latest On the Square column , Elizabeth Scalia laments the government’s attempts to reshape the notion of rights and entitlements: A big story getting barely any press outside of Catholic media is that the government is getting ready to press ahead with policies intendednote the . . . . Continue Reading »
In his latest On the Square column , R.R. Reno shares his reflections on the Jewish High Holy Days: Rosh Hashanah began last Thursday evening. For Jews, this two-day holiday celebrates the beginning of a new year, evoking the creation of the world and the dawn of time. It is a holiday of new . . . . Continue Reading »
In his latest On the Square column , Russell E. Saltzman explains how to give a sermon to children: Liturgical purists hate them, childrens sermons. I have a friend in New York who positively sneers whenever I mention that, yes, I do childrens sermons. He doesnt like red . . . . Continue Reading »
In his latest On the Square column , Joe Carter explains the importance of thinking morally about reproductive technologies: From the time of Adam and Eve until the late 1970s, there waswith one notable exceptiononly one way to make a baby: the sexual bonding of a man and a woman. That . . . . Continue Reading »
In her latest On the Square column , Elizabeth Scalia discusses baseball and other things that’ll break your heart: Baseball fans understand each others afflictions. We could laugh in that moment, because our team was winning, but we recognized all too well the sound of anguish . . . . Continue Reading »
In the latest On the Square feature , William Doino Jr. reviews John Julius Norwich Absolute Monarchs: A History of the Papacy : As one reads on, it becomes clear that Absolute Monarchs has no real interest in the popes, other than to mock or marginalize them, and rob them of their saving grace: . . . . Continue Reading »
In his latest On the Square column , Peter J. Leithart discusses the influence of German philosopher Johann Georg Hamann: In the current climate, it seems high time to rehabilitate Johann Georg Hamann. With his opaque style, his irony and obscure jokiness (which appealed to Kierkegaard), his . . . . Continue Reading »
In today’s On the Square feature, Christopher Tollefsen and Alexander Pruss argue that lying is always immoral: The controversy over Live Actions tactics in exposing Planned Parenthoods abuses is now well known. And in the face of that controversy, some who are willing to . . . . Continue Reading »
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