Letters
by VariousOnsi Kamel’s article (“Arabic, A Christian Language,” August/September) reminded me of an experience I had while I was a high school student at the American School of Kuwait. The Kuwait Ministry of Education required all non-Arabic-speaking students in the school to take Arabic as a foreign . . . . Continue Reading »
Liberalism’s Fourth Turning
by John M. Owen IVSomething is wrong with America. A generation after the Great Republic vanquished the Soviet Union and established the superiority of constitutional self-government and free markets, voices in the public square lament domestic threats to “our democracy,” and it has become commonplace to list the . . . . Continue Reading »
Why Ecclesiocentrism?
by Mark BauerleinJames R. Rogers joins in to discuss his book Hell Shall Not Prevail: Essays on Ecclesiocentric Postliberalism.
Continue Reading »
Liberating Authorities
by R. R. RenoOur disordered and disintegrating societies need our witness. Continue Reading »
The End of Prestige
by James F. KeatingFor most of the Church’s history in the United States, Catholics have sought to demonstrate to their often suspicious neighbors the possibility of being a faithful Catholic and a patriotic American. This has been no easy task, given the modern and Protestant character of the nation’s founding . . . . Continue Reading »
Hitler’s Second Coming
by R. R. RenoIt was surreal. President Biden began his State of the Union speech by invoking the Nazi threat. More than eighty years ago, Biden reminded us, Franklin Roosevelt rallied the nation, as “Hitler was on the march,” and “freedom and democracy were under assault.” Today, the president warned, . . . . Continue Reading »
The Liberal of the 18th Century
by Mark BauerleinAaron Alexander Zubia joins the podcast to discuss his new book The Political Thought of David Hume. Continue Reading »
Liberalism’s Cold War
by Matthew SchmitzIn the 1940s and 1950s, liberalism betrayed itself. Whereas once it had offered an ambitious vision of human perfection, now it began to insist on man’s fallen nature. Rather than propose a bold account of historical progress, it warned that visions of a blissful tomorrow could justify bloody . . . . Continue Reading »
Integralism and Liberalism
by Mark BauerleinKevin Vallier joins the podcast to discuss his new book All the Kingdoms of the World: On Radical Religious Alternatives to Liberalism.
Continue Reading »
influential
journal of
religion and
public life Subscribe Latest Issue Support First Things