Love in the Academic Ruins
by Dwight A. Lindley IIIIf a work of literary art tells a unique and critical truth, then it is good—worth giving oneself to—and its beauty has not misled us. Continue Reading »
If a work of literary art tells a unique and critical truth, then it is good—worth giving oneself to—and its beauty has not misled us. Continue Reading »
Marilynne Robinson's Gilead should be read as a summa pietatis rather than a summa theologiae. Continue Reading »
Proverbs’s epic poem throws our own cultural battles into high relief. Continue Reading »
We should defend the new Alabama law because it clarifies the moral stakes of abortion. Continue Reading »
We pray that Visitation’s leaders will reaffirm their commitment to teaching the Catholic faith in its fullness. Continue Reading »
In three weeks, a panel of senior judges will hear Cardinal George Pell’s appeal. Continue Reading »
Despite his record of abuse reform, many will remember Wuerl only for asserting that he never heard a rumor about McCarrick. Continue Reading »
Policies are only as reliable as the officials who enforce them. Continue Reading »
James Carroll can point to a diseased and depraved priesthood, but he has no awareness of its healthy state, no comprehension of its authentic purpose. Continue Reading »
The Australian election reflects wider realignments throughout the West. Continue Reading »