Impossible, irrational, delusionary, absurd, untrustworthy, fictitious, imaginary: You cant read much about religion today without encountering these adjectives, each intended to leave religious belief with a tired, messy, belittled sort of look.You see it most with those who claim to be . . . . Continue Reading »
A curious teapot tempest of the sort one only finds in the hothouse of Extremely Earnest Conservative Christianity has been going on for several years, ever since the release of Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone and the subsequent popularity of the Potter phenomenon. Various concerns . . . . Continue Reading »
The word competence has several meanings, most of which congregate around ability and authority . It is not clear which meaning is pertinent to the announcement that the national bishops’ conference will be meeting with congressional Democrats who are Catholics in order to devise a way to . . . . Continue Reading »
The October issue of First Things is out, at last. Ive spent the morning browsing in it, and Ive just about decided that my favorite pages are where Richard John Neuhaus takes up, in his monthly column The Public Square , the popes much-discussed motu proprio on the Latin Mass, . . . . Continue Reading »
The unfortunate publicity and distortions to the point of calumny that have surrounded the publication of the book Mother Teresa: Come Be My Light , edited by Fr. Brian Kolodiejchuk, M.C., the postulator of her cause, have caused confusion to many and much pain to the Missionaries of Charity and . . . . Continue Reading »
G.K. Chesterton once described lunatics as people who have lost everything but their reason. What he meant was this: When human reason cuts itself off from conscience, experience, and common sense, it subverts itself. It becomes a logical-sounding form of lunacy. The results are usually bad. This . . . . Continue Reading »
In the October issue of First Things (which hits newsstands today), I draw attention to the powerfully persuasive new book by Paul Collier, The Bottom Billion: Why the Poorest Countries Are Failing and What Can Be Done About It (Oxford). One billion of the world’s population are rich; four . . . . Continue Reading »
When it arrived in the world, Christianity announced the end of sacrifice. But in its growth over the long centuries since then, it may have muted its own founding message, a victim of its own success. Does Galatians have much to say to people who have never worried about ritual contagion or the . . . . Continue Reading »
At first glance, the expression "the dictatorship of relativism" sounds like a paradox, maybe even an oxymoron. After all, aren’t dictatorships a form of absolutism? And don’t relativists find it difficult, if not impossible, to make judgments about differing moral systems? So . . . . Continue Reading »
Astounded as I was by the phenomenal bestselling success of Rhonda Byrnes’ The Secret ¯gobsmacked by the sheer weight of its pages, the width of its margins, and the commodious depths of its solipsistic inanities¯I wondered: How can I cash in on the gullibility of the average . . . . Continue Reading »