Support First Things by turning your adblocker off or by making a  donation. Thanks!

MODERN AND AMERICAN DIGNITY is now in print.

Here is a fair-and-balanced review: Peter Lawler is today’s wisest guide through the conceptual thicket of dignity, virtue, and democracy in America. His usual wit and charm are on display in this new book, a tour of technology and tradition, faith and freedom. Lawler doesn’t flinch from . . . . Continue Reading »

Love’s Consuming Fire

In today’s second “ On the Square ” article, Peter J. Leithart points out that what poets have always seen in love (“It’s a burning thing”) can be appreciated by theologians with equal attention—a lesson available to us since the Fall of our first parents. Most . . . . Continue Reading »

Hammers that Didn’t Quite Fall

We all knew that when Stanley Hauerwas, a post-Constantinian if there ever was one, was given the opportunity to review Peter Leithart’s book Defending Constantine , things were going to get ugly.  For a pacifist, Hauerwas sure can get rhetorically violent.  Here is an excerpt from . . . . Continue Reading »

Interfaith Kumbaya

Distinguished sociologist Peter Berger defends what he regards as American civil religion, the first commandment of which is (he says)  “Thou shalt be tolerant!”  He takes as his text this story about an interfaith Thanksgiving service in suburban Westchester, New York. In the . . . . Continue Reading »

Lucid, Simple Beauty

In today’s first “On the Square” article, David Hart reflects on the reality of holiness and the places we find it. “The wonderful thing about holiness, when you really encounter it, is that it testifies to itself,” he writes in The Abbot and Aunt Susie . This is . . . . Continue Reading »

Preachments of a Catholic Chair

I think of myself as a fairly jaundiced academic, unlikely to be taken aback by shrill, politically correct rhetoric. But I guess I’m wrong, because the crude pronouncements of Robert Orsi, holder of the Grace Craddock Nagle Chair in Catholic Studies at Northwestern University, shocked me. . . . . Continue Reading »

Confessing one another’s sins

In a new twist on the “drag your wife out to your public confession of adultery” meme, televangelist Marcus Lamb has his wife confess his adultery for him:The confession was apparently prompted to preempt extortionists who were threatening to break the news unless Lamb coughed up $7.5 . . . . Continue Reading »

Pope Endorses Monsanto

Along with his other dilemmas, Pope Benedict is also said to have a “genetically modified crop dilemma.” As New Scientist explained editorially: In a statement condemning opposition to GM [genetically modified] crops in rich countries as unjustified, a group of scientists including . . . . Continue Reading »

Tags

Loading...

Filter First Thoughts Posts