The Narthex
Judas Kiss
Will our governments offer bribes for snitching, as in China?
By Richard DellOrfano | January 31st 2022 3:12 PMBetrayal is a part of human nature. If someone determines he may benefit by snitching on a friend, he may indeed give the Judas Kiss, an act appearing as one of friendship but which is harmful to the recipient. Judas is the model betrayer: weak-willed and full of selfish interest…
READ FULL BLOG POSTAgitate and Educate
Peace movements limit the abuses of power to which world leaders often resort
By James Hanink | January 10th 2022 7:51 PMIn my last post Alasdair MacIntyre, a Marxist turned Thomist, had my full attention. Of late he’s argued that anything human dignity can do, justice can do better. I’m not persuaded, since it’s dignity that decides membership in the moral community, that is, the community of all those to whom…
READ FULL BLOG POSTDoes Dignity Work?
On the year’s most discussed philosophical lecture
By James Hanink | December 29th 2021 1:05 PMIn the year’s most discussed philosophical lecture, Alasdair MacIntyre—at Notre Dame, no less—argued that appeals to dignity don’t work very well and can even be dangerous. On MacIntyre’s view, dignity can be lost. Hitler shows us just how. Moreover, recognizing that dignity is incompatible with slavery is of little worth…
READ FULL BLOG POSTNo Reply, Here’s Why
Questions for a Jesuit university president
By James Hanink | November 16th 2021 7:00 PMTen days ago a student group, Women in Politics, hosted a fundraiser for Planned Parenthood of America. Loyola Marymount University (LMU) provided the venue. The University did so despite a nationwide protest and Los Angeles Archbishop Gomez’s expression of deep disappointment. In the sponsoring group’s estimation, the event—a semi-formal party…
READ FULL BLOG POSTCall to Be Brave
We cannot take our liberties for granted; they can be snatched away if we drop our guard
By David Daintree | October 7th 2021 2:10 PMTo my mind the greatest challenge of human education is the building and maintaining of historical awareness. How can we have even an inkling of where we stand and where we’re heading if our grasp of the past is feeble or non-existent? Human memory is so short, and deliberate bias…
READ FULL BLOG POSTAfraid to Die
To the end we must persevere in our belief in Christ’s mercy
By Richard DellOrfano | October 4th 2021 2:19 PMI received a phone call from my 91-year-old friend Lou, who had asked me for advice on several occasions. I had just awakened from a nap, but my grogginess vanished on hearing the urgent tone of his voice. Lately his health had been failing from a hiatal hernia that caused…
READ FULL BLOG POSTBlood and Treasure
Twenty years of war in Afghanistan cost over 241,000 lives and $2.26 trillion
By Barbara Rose | August 24th 2021 5:40 PMThe Watson Institute for International and Public Affairs, at Brown University, has a "Costs of War" website which presents "U.S. Costs to Date for the War in Afghanistan, in $ Billions, 2001-2021" (published in April 2021). The cost in blood and treasure is immense. A link to the web page…
READ FULL BLOG POSTTLC for the TLM
Counsel for the discouraged Traditional Latin Mass faithful
By Barbara Rose | August 4th 2021 7:24 PMPope Francis recently placed excessive restrictions on the Traditional Latin Mass (TLM) with a motu proprio called Traditionis Custodes. TLM communities were shocked, to say the least. The traditionalist website OnePeterFive now features a three-part series by Peter Kwasniewski -- many of whose books have been reviewed in our pages…
READ FULL BLOG POSTOur Task
Education is a ground where our cultural battles will be fought
By David Daintree | July 19th 2021 1:44 PMToday, crazy notions spread like wild fire and become wilder as they spread, often claiming the authority of science, and using the muscle of popular mass culture to cower most people into acquiescence, if not belief. We are indeed in the midst of a pandemic, but it’s much bigger than…
READ FULL BLOG POSTSlow-Motion Disasters
Unintended consequences of worldwide economic shutdowns continue on
By Barbara Rose | June 10th 2021 4:03 PMAs the pandemic crisis wanes for wealthy nations, the unintended consequences of worldwide economic shutdowns will continue to unfold for years in poorer parts of the globe. Two examples of this are found in two Church-affiliated news outlets. The first is a LiCAS News article, "Child labor rises to 160…
READ FULL BLOG POSTOf Hell and Heaven
Bernard Madoff was fortunate that he had a chance to repent
By Richard DellOrfano | May 27th 2021 6:04 PMChristians don’t believe in Hell as much as they did 50 years ago. The number of Americans who believe in it has dropped, whereas Heaven has fared much better. People can’t accept that God would be so cruel as to condemn souls to eternal punishment just for behaving badly. They…
READ FULL BLOG POSTA Third Howler
A hard test case is the judicial killing of the guilty to serve the common good
By James Hanink | May 4th 2021 7:22 PMAppeals to the common good can go wrong. In my last post I argued that Thomas Aquinas was wrong to tolerate legal prostitution on the grounds that without it the commonwealth would suffer worse evils. Earlier I argued that he was wrong to conclude that a judge with personal, but…
READ FULL BLOG POSTAnother Thomistic Howler?
The selling and buying of sex, its commodification, is a grave evil
By James Hanink | April 19th 2021 9:58 PMIn my last post I argued that St. Thomas Aquinas got it wrong when he suggested that a judge who had private knowledge, and only that, of a man’s innocence could find that man guilty based on the evidence properly adduced in a court of law. Thomas rightly notes that…
READ FULL BLOG POSTThomistic Howlers?
In Aquinas's vast oeuvre, a bit of internal tension is predictable
By James Hanink | April 12th 2021 1:10 PMSome years ago a Jesuit, and yet a friend, warned me of “Thomistic howlers.” That is to say, sometimes, though rarely, St. Thomas Aquinas -- I like to refer to him as the Church’s Common Doctor -- made bad mistakes. Right. And who of us has not? Did not Aristotle…
READ FULL BLOG POSTEndless Cycle of Revenge
Entire nations cannot easily do what we individuals can do in imitation of Christ
By Richard DellOrfano | March 17th 2021 2:56 PMI stood with 50 other engineers the morning of September 11, 2001, staring at a widescreen TV. In shocked disbelief, we gawked at another Boeing 767 passenger plane colliding into the second WTC tower, and finally, both towers cascading into a smoky heap. I shook my head, thinking this will…
READ FULL BLOG POST