Support First Things by turning your adblocker off or by making a  donation. Thanks!

The 9 Best Magazine Covers (1920-2010)

Two weeks ago we listed the best magazine covers of the decade. This week I present the best (or at least a close contender) for each decade from 1920 to today: The New Yorker (1926) Ever since their launch in 1925, The New Yorker has set the standard for magazine cover art. Boys Life (1931) This . . . . Continue Reading »

Neighbor Love and the Doctrine of God

It’s confusing yet strangely gratifying all at the same time. We live in a culture that is moving further and further from the exclusive claims of Christianity yet almost equally—and inconsistently—holds select passages in the Bible in high regard. They hold forth as though they . . . . Continue Reading »

Dangerous Language

One of the rules for our small town’s park reads: “Persons engaging in horseplay and/or using foul language without regard for the safety of others will be expelled from the park.” It’s wonderful to find a town that recognizes profanity as dangerous. . . . . Continue Reading »

New York’s Third World Airport

I was enjoying the sharp and angular writing at Taki’s Magazine, an online journal that offers delicious little appetizers, or as the website puts it “Cocktails, Countesses & Mental Caviar”. Yes, caviar—tasty and salty. In a fun, rambling piece about . . . well, about lots . . . . Continue Reading »

Afternoon Links — 9.23.10

Classics scholar and translator Sarah Ruden explains what she learned when reading St. Paul against the classics . For example, “there’s a single civilization, and it moves toward greater idealism . . . . You have all these philosophies arising from the ancient world as educated people . . . . Continue Reading »

Western Australia Nixes Euthanasia

During my recent anti-euthanasia national tour of Australia, I was brought to Perth, the capital of Western Australia, because opponents expected a legalization bill to come up for a vote.  I met some state MPs, gave a speech to a good size crowd, and was very encouraged by the energetic . . . . Continue Reading »

God & Country Well-Paired

Now up on “On the Square”: Joseph Knippenberg’s Moderating Patriotism , examining the differences between the conservative pairing of God and country and what he calls the “liberal cosmopolitan” pairing of universal empathy and human rights. It’s a kind of . . . . Continue Reading »

Sneak Federal Funding for Cloning Attack

As promised, I have an extended article on the DeGette/Castle/Specter—two of three of which have been booted from their jobs already by voters—bills in Congress that would not only set Obama’s ESCR funding policy in statutory concrete, but also surreptitiously fund human cloning . . . . Continue Reading »

Tags

Loading...

Filter First Thoughts Posts