Confident Pluralism Indeed
by Carl R. TruemanJohn Inazu offers a winsome vision of the future. I hope he is right but fear he is wrong. Continue Reading »
John Inazu offers a winsome vision of the future. I hope he is right but fear he is wrong. Continue Reading »
How God Messed Up My Happy Atheist Life
Nicole Cliffe, Christianity Today
Philosophy and Art Criticism
Kate Havard, Claremont Review of Books
Vatican Liturgy Chief Urges Priests to Celebrate Mass Facing East
Staff, Catholic Herald
An Elite Faith
Bill McMorris, Washington Free Breacon
The Enduring Legacy of The Twilight Zone
Brian Murray, New Atlantis
Why I Didn’t Attend My Notre Dame Graduation
Alexandra DeSanctis, Ethika Politika
The Case for Banning Pornography
Matthew Schmitz, Washington Post
Movies on Marriage: The Lobster vs. Love and Friendship
Tim Markatos, Acculturated
The Convict-Bourgeois
Eve Tushnet, University Bookman
Breaking down is easier than building up. Continue Reading »
It's time for our political intelligensia to wake up. So argues Walter Russell Mead in a thoughtful piece in The American Interest, “The Meaning of Mr. Trump.” Forget about handicapping the race between Trump and Clinton. Forget about itemizing Trump's liabilities and failings. What's important . . . . Continue Reading »
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The politicizing of the language of love is confusing and lethal for freedom. Continue Reading »
Subverted recounts the untold history of how the feminist and pro-abortion movements became allied. Part exposé, part conversion memoir, Browder’s book defies easy categorization, but by the end, I understood her approach. Browder’s honest account of her personal life—including her choice to have an abortion, despite being in a loving marriage—highlights the contradictions between reality and the flashy fantasy of the sexually liberated woman. . . . Continue Reading »
Franz Jägerstätter, born in 1907, led a wild youth in Austria, turned to God after fearing he had killed another man in a fight, and settled down with a wife to run a farm and father children. In 1943, he refused the draft out of a conviction that a Catholic could not fight for Nazism. Defying the entreaties of mother, neighbors, priest, and bishop, he went to the guillotine. Even after the war, Jägerstätter’s countrymen called him a traitor and denied his widow, Franziska, and their three daughters any aid. Only in 2007 was Jägerstätter beatified by Benedict XVI. . . . Continue Reading »
Mercersburg theology has a small but devoted following among evangelically-oriented Calvinists. It was a nineteenth-century movement centered in the German Reformed seminary at Mercersburg, Pennsylvania. Leading scholars John Williamson Nevins and Philip Schaff criticized the individualism and . . . . Continue Reading »
The Geeks Can't Defeat Death
David Mills, Aleteia
Catholic Archdiocese to Offer 12 Weeks Paid Parental Leave
David Gibson, Religion News Service
Desire, Deicide, and Atonement: René Girard and St. Thomas Aquinas
Edmund Waldstein, O. Cist., Sancrucensis
Europe's Cheesy Musical Proxy War
Ivan Plis, National Interest
Secret History of Bioluminescence
Ferris Jabr, Hakai
Your Brain Does Not Process Information and it is not a Computer
Robert Epstein, Aeon
This is How Fascism Comes to America
Robert Kagan, Washington Post
Lewis on Tolkien: “Only Needs A Smack or So”
Jonathan McDonald, Dappled Things
The Meaning of Food
Ian Sansom, Times Literary Supplement