Well, I said you couldnt tell much from one interview. Last week, I posted about Pope Franciss much discussed interview in an Italian Jesuit journal. I observed that the Pope seemed to be a mystic trying to place the Catholic Church outside politicseither progressive . . . . Continue Reading »
John Presnall’s commments in the thread deserve—again in the cause of advancing the “conversation”—to be posted separately. (This is only an excerpt.) Surely the government shutdown is one further message to the best and brightest that their employment is contingent . . . . Continue Reading »
We’ve decided to experiment with extending our reposting of On the Square pieces to reposting items from our hosted blogs. Usually this should only include posts from that day; today, however, I’ll also highlight some pieces from a few days ago. Let’s start: Over at Postmodern . . . . Continue Reading »
“When leaders in various fields ask me for advice, my response is always the same: dialogue, dialogue, dialogue.” So Pope Francis said during his visit to Brazil in the first days of his papacy. After two recent interview with La Repubblica and La Civiltà Cattolica . . . . Continue Reading »
After many years of comparing manuscripts, compiling chants, and refining translations, the treasures of the Dominican chant tradition have at last been compiled into an impressive new hymnal for the Divine Office, the traditional prayer of chanted psalms, which sanctifies the hours of the day. For . . . . Continue Reading »
Anyone who understands logic could see this kind of thing coming, but it’s still a shock. A Belgian transsexual woman chose to be euthanized , which is to say, killed by a doctor, when her operation didn’t work out. From the Daily Mail story Wesley Smith reports: Nathan Verhelst, . . . . Continue Reading »
Heres something that makes me wish I had a research leave coming up. The Center for Theological Inquiry in Princeton, New Jersey, has announced a year-long project on law and religious freedom, which it will host in cooperation with Princeton Universitys program in law and public . . . . Continue Reading »
James R. Rogers’ recent essay “Credit the Calvinists” asks why Calvinists and not Lutherans have become the public faces of the doctrine of predestination. “For whatever reason,” he writes, “Lutherans are not widely identified with predestinarian . . . . Continue Reading »
The Pew Religion and Public Life Project released its most recent survey yesterday, A Portrait of Jewish Americans. It turns out that Jews, who make up a little less than two percent of the population, mirror larger trends in American religious life. For example: The Rise of the Nones: . . . . Continue Reading »
Don Jon Jackson Cuidon, Christianity Today The Sagrada Familia in 2026 The Age A Theological Wreck Russell D. Moore, Moore to the Point On Listening to the Pope Francis Cardinal George, OMI, Catholic New World John Hollander, 1929—2013 David Yezzi, New Criterion . . . . Continue Reading »