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Theology, liturgy, and the slow questions. The kind of writing you read twice.
What the Sturgeon-Murrell story reveals about modern marriage
At the heart of the Sturgeon-Murrell story lies not only a political scandal, but a cultural question about what marriage is for
Michael J Robinson
Abbot stands firm in Transylvania
The head of Oradea’s Norbertine community says a dispute over Church property has become a test of religious freedom in modern Romania
Andrew Cusack
Why falling birth rates should concern everyone
Ireland’s fertility rate has fallen well below replacement level, raising difficult questions about family formation, childlessness and the choices people are able to make
David Quinn
Fertility is not a policy problem
Governments across the developed world are searching for policy solutions to falling birth rates, but the crisis stems from a deeper failure to understand the purpose of womanhood
Patrick Neve
The Traditional Latin Mass does not need the SSPX
Gratitude for the preservation of the old Mass does not require Catholics to accept that the SSPX is indispensable to Catholic tradition or to the life of the Church
Wouter J Suenens
Pride’s retreat is not yet a conservative victory
Declining corporate support for Pride events may signal a political shift, but conservatives should be cautious about mistaking a tactical retreat for a lasting cultural transformation
David Hahn
Pride Month and the search for belonging
Behind the symbols and slogans of Pride Month lies a universal search for belonging that ultimately points beyond self-definition towards communion with God and others
Delphine Chui
Why you should watch 'The Exorcist'
William Friedkin’s film remains shocking, but beneath the profanity and terror lies a profoundly Catholic vision of evil, sacrifice and grace
Luke Collins
We should welcome America’s ‘medieval’ future
A growing interest in faith and the supernatural reflects not a rejection of reason but a rediscovery of truths that modern secular culture has struggled to replace
Jacqueline O'Hara
Sleepwalking into eugenics
From Down’s syndrome screening to assisted suicide, modern Britain is embracing choices that previous generations would have recognised as eugenic
James Jeffrey
Two cheers for Stoicism
Marcus Aurelius’s Meditations contain profound moral insights that often resonate with Christian teaching, yet Stoicism ultimately cannot answer the deepest questions about suffering, grace and eternal hope
Clement Harrold
Lola Salem on… the erosion of taste
The collapse of criticism as a rigorous practice has left contemporary culture increasingly unable to recognise or cultivate excellence
Lola Salem
A grave new threat to religious freedom in India
New powers under India’s foreign funding regime could have significant consequences for churches, charities and NGOs working with marginalised communities
Msgr Michael Nazir-Ali
Why Catholics should sing together again
Music has become increasingly passive in modern life, but the folk tradition offers Catholics a way to recover shared culture and fellowship through singing together
David Hahn
The human cost of Colorado’s abortion regime
The death of a Colorado teenager following a second-trimester abortion has reignited debate over whether unrestricted abortion laws truly serve women’s health and safety
Jacqueline O'Hara
Henry Nowak and the limits of secular idealism
The modern obsession with racism rests upon a flawed understanding of human nature, while Christianity offers a more demanding ethic centred on the love of neighbour
Gavin Ashenden
How the monasteries made Britain
Joseph Kelly's 'Long Reign of Silence' argues that monasteries shaped Britain's learning, government and culture – and that their destruction transformed the nation
Jan C. Bentz
The dangers of AI in a decadent society
The greatest cultural threat posed by artificial intelligence may not be job losses or misinformation, but the erosion of the time and discipline needed for genuine human creativity
Patrick Neve
How AI is helping readers rediscover Benedict XVI
Patrick Gruhn and the Benedict XVI Society hope technology can make one of the Church’s most important modern thinkers more accessible to scholars and ordinary readers alike
Andrew Cusack
The false divide between “pelvic theology” and Catholic social teaching
The Church’s teachings on sexuality are not a distraction from Catholic social doctrine but one of its essential foundations
Noelle Mering
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