Why We Remain in Flyover Country
Far too often we hear stories of Christians who have moved to the city, gained the world, but lost their souls.
Far too often we hear stories of Christians who have moved to the city, gained the world, but lost their souls.
It is a political imperative that conservative and Christian magistrates obstruct the cathedral’s dangerous “priests of democracy,” or we may lose what is left of our heritage.
Novelists very often explore the realities of the human condition and illuminate many of the dysfunctions of our modern world.
The reality of the negative world is this: We are all already canceled, we just don’t know it yet.
What if the next major technological shift to threaten Christian discipleship isn’t sitting in some R&D lab but in our homes right now.
The notion that art and architecture have meaning and communicate truth—contrary to aesthetic relativism—will naturally follow from a traditional Christian understanding of the world.
It is not sufficient to say that Christians must be bold, confident, and faithful, as if gentleness, always normative, simply need be supplemented with courage.
As Stewart Goetz argues, the evidence for C. S. Lewis’s reliance on Thomas Aquinas and Thomistic thought is "hard to come by."
Never before has the Left come so utterly close to reconditioning culture through institutional means.
As the first season ended in “Rings of Power,” Amazon’s entrée into the cape-and-dragon genre, I found myself cheering for the Orcs. Let me explain.