Catholicism
A selection of recent articles on this topic
Virtue vs. Virtue-Signaling
Last weekend I attended the “Higher Education Summit,” an annual gathering sponsored by the Classical Learning Test…
Stigmatize Social Media
For a few hours on October 4, the developed world experienced a temporary increase in emotional health…
We Are All Double Agents
No,” I wearily repeat, “the spy novel did not lose its raison d’être when the Cold War…
America Needs a Kosher Diner
America has given the world two things: baseball and jazz,” said a great professor of political philosophy…
Becoming Signs of Contradiction
Last week, British judges upheld a law that permits children with Down syndrome or other disabilities to…
Canada More Divided Than Ever
Canadians went to the polls this week in a snap election called by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.…
Bob Dylan in Plain Sight
You Lose Yourself You Reappear: Bob Dylan and the Voices of a Lifetime by Paul Morley simon…
Suffering and Sanctification
The latest installment of an ongoing interview series with contributing editor Mark Bauerlein. Harold Senkbeil joins the podcast to…
Honoring the Dignity of Work
Our country faces a fundamental question. Emerging from the pandemic, will we renew the promise of a…
Parenting in a Digital World
The latest installment of an ongoing interview series with contributing editor Mark Bauerlein. Sean Clifford joins the podcast to…
Goodbye Robert E.Lee
The latest installment of an ongoing interview series with contributing editor Mark Bauerlein. Catesby Leigh joins the podcast to…
A Tribute to Thomas Levergood (1962–2021)
Chicago has lost the sultry aura it had in the days of Al Capone. But its university…
The Courts and Christ
The latest installment of an ongoing interview series with contributing editor Mark Bauerlein. David Lloyd Dusenbury joins the…
Remembering 30 Years of Journalism
The latest installment of an ongoing interview series with contributing editor Mark Bauerlein. Andrew Sullivan joins the podcast…
Great Books Every Thoughtful Person Should Read
For almost twenty years, I taught a four-seminar rotation of “Great Books” for The College at Southeastern.…