From time to time we will be publishing reports and articles from outside our usual circles and subjects, when readers might find the information or the analysis of interest. (Hence the use of the “guest” byline.) Posting it doesn’t mean we agree with it, or with all of it, only . . . . Continue Reading »
After I left the Episcopal Church to enter the Catholic Church a half a dozen years ago, a good and wise friend told me to avoid taking pot shots from afar. Sage advice. But a video by Gene Robinson this is part of the It Gets Better campaign has a line that strikes me as telling, and I can’t . . . . Continue Reading »
1. Okay, so that title makes no sense. But I did see part of the CMA awards show the other night. 2. Marc Guerra, America’s leading theologian, reminds me that I haven’t posted on the wonderful conference (the first in our University of Chicago Science of Virtues/Stuck with Virtue . . . . Continue Reading »
For those of you who didn’t look at the list of resources at the end of R. R. Reno’s The Idols of Revisionist Theology , let me point you to the very interesting essay he quotes and commends: the Lutheran theologian David Yeago’s Gnosticism, Antinomianism, and Reformation . . . . Continue Reading »
Despite the pleasure he took in the election results, writes David Hart in today’s “On the Square” article, Anarcho-Monarchism : as is always the case here below in the regio dissimilitudinis , the pleasure is accompanied by an inevitable quantum of pain. The sweetest . . . . Continue Reading »
Matt Anderson makes a very astute observation about the younger generation of evangelicals : Heres my hypothesis as to why young evangelicals tend to be drawn toward Randian libertarianism or Obama-style pragmatic liberalism: we think of ourselves as elites, even though most of us . . . . Continue Reading »
Daniel Born wonders , “What if every soldier and politician were required to be a lit major?” It sounds far fetched, I know. Textual critics would run the Pentagon. Generals and colonels commanding the tanks, Predator drones, and Green Berets would all be required to carry well-worn . . . . Continue Reading »
The animal rights leader, Rutgers Law School Professor Gary Francione, and I debated before more than 100 law students today at Columbia Law School in NYC, at a lunchtime event co-sponsored by the Federalist Society and the Student Animal Legal Defense Fund. The debate question was, “Do . . . . Continue Reading »
There is only “case of collective conversion to Judaism in Europe in modern times,” and it occurred in a small southern Italian village in fascist Italy. The prime minister of Canada describes what that country is doing to combat anti-semitism , which “targets the Jewish people by . . . . Continue Reading »
Pity the person who looks at the night sky and sees only hot glowing balls of gas. If he starts to speak, you are likely to get a great deal of hot air, but little romantic glow. Knowing the composition of a thing is good, but it is at least as good to know what a thing is to mankind.Stars are more . . . . Continue Reading »