
-
Robert P. George
When I met the great Lutheran theologian Robert Jenson, I was a young man, just starting out in academic life. He treated me like an equal, though—and did it in a particular way that I will describe. Continue Reading »
The Court can either invalidate Mississippi’s law under Casey and Roe, or consign them to the ash heap of history. Continue Reading »
Let me offer a prediction, free of any face-saving hedge: Next year, the Supreme Court will hold that there is no constitutional right to elective abortions. In Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization, a case pending before the court, it will return the issue to the states for the . . . . Continue Reading »
Roe must go. It is morally and, more to the point for the Court, constitutionally indefensible—and has been from the moment it was handed down. Continue Reading »
If secular progressives can identify as “devout Catholics,” then surely I can identify as a “secular progressive.” Continue Reading »
By declining to investigate and punish Joshua Katz’s speech, Princeton has honored—and thereby reaffirmed—its commitment to free speech and robust discussion. Continue Reading »
Father James Martin set a fine example of correcting oneself when one has erred or misspoken. Continue Reading »
Infidelity—literally the lack of faith—is at the heart of recent scandals in the Catholic Church. Continue Reading »
We should first be focused on the question, “What is true?” Continue Reading »
A Barrett nomination would drive a stake through the heart of what has aptly been described as “the last acceptable prejudice among American elites.” Continue Reading »
influential
journal of
religion and
public life