We Do Not Need a New, Very Different St. Benedict, Part III
Perhaps we do not need a new and very different St. Benedict. We need old-fashioned, traditional Benedictines, and we need them everywhere.
Perhaps we do not need a new and very different St. Benedict. We need old-fashioned, traditional Benedictines, and we need them everywhere.
Reconciliation to the highest degree possible between Conservative Christians is essential.
The Incarnation of the Eternal Logos in Jesus Christ is the great pivotal repudiation of the reign of false spirits in history.
Platz argued that only through cultural and spiritual renewal could the West recover its lost solidarity.
This new book by a senior lecturer at the University of St. Andrews is a bracing, short but expansive, study of poetic expressions of the fall of two fabled civilizations.
It seems that many people in power think that if they play the ostrich, the threat of jihad or Sharia oppression of non-Muslims will go away.
Every revolution begins with just one man. So does every counter-revolution. All of our many foes have taken that lesson to heart. We have not. And unless we demand total victory, as they do, all we’ll get is more lumps.
What one finds here is a wonderful group of people from many walks of life, gathered together in friendship and comradery, to learn together, pray together, eat together, and rediscover what it is to be an heir of the great Christian civilisation that the modern West is now dedicated to repudiating.
Churchill was remarkably clear-eyed about the dangers of the soulless and secular statism promoted by everyone from the Bloomsbury elites to the twin barbarisms of Bolshevism and Nazism.
The main objective of this conference is to facilitate an awareness that could be summarised in the following phrase from Isaiah: If you do not stand firm in your faith, you shall not stand at all.
To submit a pitch for consideration:
submissions@
For subscription inquiries:
subscriptions@