Over at Postmodern Conservative, Peter Lawler writes about indicting Christie, while Kate Pitrone buys old books.Peter Leithart returns to tragic conversions, writes about Walter Benjamin and Derrida, and once again has a set of posts on Isaiah (here’s the first).Here at First Thoughts, Mark . . . . Continue Reading »
I greatly admire Jonathan Haidt’s work on moral psychology, particularly his recent book, The Righteous Mind, on the differing moral intuitions of conservatives and liberals. So I was intrigued by a recent test Haidt published in Timea series of questions that, Haidt says, . . . . Continue Reading »
Although the biblical Psalms are a product of the old covenant, for centuries the Christian Church has sought and found Jesus Christ in its historic song book. A number of Psalms have been designated messianic in character, including Psalms 2, 22, 30, 69, 72, 110, and 118. This is due either to . . . . Continue Reading »
That’s the conclusion of The New Republic guys. I’m sorry if my immediate thought is that makes the thinking of the MSM a lot like the ambitious U.S. Attorney and certain FBI agents portrayed in the award-winning movie American Hustle.It goes without saying that I . . . . Continue Reading »
Hard Times and Books’ VocabulariesJoseph Stromberg, SmithsonianWhat Sharon Tried to DoYossi Klein Halevi, TabletObjective Reality vs. ReificationRobert John Araujo, S.J., Mirror of JusticeHunting the Lynx with Old BelieversBen Judah, StandpointA Dark Path to RecoveryGladden J. Pappin, . . . . Continue Reading »
The Mercersburg theology of John W. Nevin and Philip Schaff offers a sacramental understanding of Reformed theology centered on union with Christ. Their efforts to return to the Church catholic is finding new followers in ways that suggest there might be a Mercersburg moment in Reformed circles, a welcome development. Continue Reading »
I buy secondhand books. My collecting habit began in New York, when I was young. We could go to the remainder floor of certain publishers located in Manhattan and buy hardback books for twenty-five cents or a dollar. Paperbacks were five or ten cents. These were books that no . . . . Continue Reading »
At the Library of Law and Liberty, Greg Weiner reconsiders Daniel Patrick Moynihan’s criticisms of the War on Poverty, and suggests conservatives who frequently cite his work on the subject miss Moynihan’s broader point: It was not that too much money was being misspent on the poor, but . . . . Continue Reading »
Over at Postmodern Conservative, Carl Scott is listening to Jefferson Airplane and dubious about getting an English degree, while Peter Lawler has a slightly higher opinion of majoring in English.What Peter Leithart is reading about: J. Louis Martyn on Paul, gnostic Protestantism, Sergei Bulgakov, . . . . Continue Reading »
About a year and a half ago, Mere Orthodoxy published a piece by Hannah Peckham on the oft-quoted expression: “You don’t have a soul. You are a soul. You have a body.” It’s frequently attributed online (and in print) to C.S. Lewis, but he never actually said it. In fact, . . . . Continue Reading »