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Via Crucis, 2026

George Weigel

The Way of the Crossโ€”and the third, seventh, and ninth stations in particularโ€”has been an especially appropriate Lenten devotion this year. Every day, it seems, some new craziness erupts...

The Donatist Comeback

George Weigel

My Lenten reading has included an interesting, if somewhat odd, book about the greatest of the Latin Fathers of the Church: Augustine the African by Catherine Conybeare, a philologist...

Three Great Lenten Themes

George Weigel

The entire purpose of Lent, now past the halfway mark, is to prepare us for the glory of Easter and its revelation of the destiny that God first intended...

John Allen, Nonpareil Vaticanista

George Weigel

Early Sunday morning, July 28, 2002, things were looking grim for the closing papal Mass of World Youth Day in Toronto. The previous four days had been a tremendous...

Redemptor Hominis: More Important than Ever

George Weigel

Forty-seven years ago, Pope John Paul II issued his first encyclical, Redemptor Hominis (The Redeemer of Man). The first letter in the centuries-old encyclical tradition devoted to the Christian...

The Casaroli Myth vs. the Historical Record

George Weigel

Cardinal Agostino Casaroli, Vatican secretary of state from 1979 to 1990โ€”and before that, the architect and chief diplomatic agent of the Ostpolitik of Pope Paul VIโ€”initially played hard to...

Remembering Angelo Gugel

George Weigel

Those who remember the epic pontificate of St. John Paul II may recall a tall, handsome layman with well-combed, iron-gray hair, dressed in a black business suit, white shirt,...

Might Does Not Always Make Right, or Even Sense

George Weigel

The “Melian Dialogue,” from Thucydides’s classic History of the Peloponnesian War, is the foundational text of the realist school of international relations theory. It’s 416 b.c., and the island-statelet of...

Cardinal Dolan: By No Means Finished Yet

George Weigel

There’s a steakhouse on East 50th Street in midtown Manhattan, to which Cardinal Timothy Dolan and I would sometimes walk for dinner after a preprandial or two in his...

P. D. James and Designer Parkas for Chihuahuas

George Weigel

P D. James’s detective novels, featuring Inspector Adam Dalgliesh of New Scotland Yard, are every bit as gripping as those penned by Agatha Christie, Dorothy L. Sayers, Edith Pargeter...

Fact-Checking the New Yorker

George Weigel

Back in the day, when the New Yorker set the standard for literary elegance among serious American journals, writers were driven to distraction by the fanatical fact-checking characteristic of...

The Evangelist in Stanley Prison

George Weigel

In a 1974 address to a group of lay Catholics, Pope Paul VI noted that “Modern man listens more willingly to witnesses than to teachers, and if he does...

Semiquincentennial Prep with HBO

George Weigel

Having recently lamented in this space that book reading is on life support in these United States, I find myself in the awkward position of recommending a made-for-television series...

Secularism, Security, and โ€œCivilizational Erasureโ€

George Weigel

Twenty years ago, I published a small book, The Cube and the Cathedral: Europe, America, and Politics Without God. It enjoyed a fair sale, got translated into French, Spanish,...

Lessons from the Christmas Gospels

George Weigel

The Roman Missal provides four distinct Mass texts for the celebration of the Nativity of the Lord: the โ€œVigil Mass,โ€ the โ€œMass During the Night,โ€ the โ€œMass at Dawn,โ€...