Immigration again

In response to some comments by Richard Neuhaus about immigration that I posted a few days ago, Jim Rogers of Texas A&M offers this alternative scenario: “My prediction is that within 20 years, if not sooner, the U.S. will be begging Mexicans, and others, to immigrate to the U.S., perhaps . . . . Continue Reading »

He who has an ear

In Psalm 40, David says that Yahweh has “dug” or “pierced” or “opened” his ear. He is referring to the ritual for permanent slaves, according to which the slave’s ear is pierced at the doorway of the house to symbolize that his ear is open to one master. . . . . Continue Reading »

Savior of Europe

Wilson was the first sitting American President ever to venture out of the Western Hemisphere. He left the U.S. on December 4, 1918 to conclude the treaty that ended World War 1 in person. He got a hero’s welcome. Beinart writes: “When Wilson disembarked, Europe’s battered masses . . . . Continue Reading »

American liberators

In his The Icarus Syndrome: A History of American Hubris , Peter Beinart describes a Wilson-era American action that sounds vaguely familiar. Wilson was convinced that what Latin Americans wanted was identical to what he wanted for themselves, but he was happy to let them choose, so long as they . . . . Continue Reading »

WormWear

Isaiah 14:11 describes the king of Egypt descending to Sheol to speel on a bed of maggots and cover himself with worms. I’ve commented in a previous post on the connection of worms with ancient dyeing techniques, but there’s another aspect to this. Robes are a “Day 5” . . . . Continue Reading »

The Catholic Advantage

Between Time Toward Home and his last book, American Babylon: Notes of a Christian Exile , Neuhaus converted to Catholicism. Whether as cause or result or some of each, the latter book gives ecclesiology a much higher and more satisfying profile. Neuhaus’s final work is marked by a recurring . . . . Continue Reading »

God Ever New

God is a spring. So says Gregory of Nyssa: “As you came near the spring you would marvel, seeing that the water was endless, as it constantly gushed up and poured forth. Yet you could never say that you had seen all the water. How could you see what was still hidden in the bosom of the earth? . . . . Continue Reading »

Immigration and Patriotism

Neuhaus makes the cogent observation that American patriotism has been regularly refreshed by the influx of immigrants who find that the American dream is still realizable: “Perhaps taken-for-granted Americanism needs to be regularly refreshed by the Americanism of those who discover America . . . . Continue Reading »