The Narthex
More Frank Dialogue
Believer and unbeliever spar over terms, stewardship, and dignity
By James Hanink | January 26th 2022 3:40 PMIn recent posts I contested the “dignity deniers” Ruth Macklin and Steven Pinker. I noted also, with grave doubts, Alasdair MacIntyre’s annual Notre Dame lecture in which he suggests that everything dignity can do justice can do better. Those posts, gentle readers, offer a background to my ongoing dialogue with…
READ FULL BLOG POSTMy Muddled Mentor
A past convert to Catholicism lost his faith many decades ago
By James Hanink | December 1st 2021 3:33 PM“Karl Meyer On the Road Again” read a recent ad in The Catholic Worker. At 84 he was planning a cross country peace mission. I first met Karl in 1966 when he ran St. Stephen House of Hospitality in Chicago. I was an undergraduate, for a semester, at Loyola University…
READ FULL BLOG POSTCredulous Christians
Certain secular beliefs demand much credulousness on the part of their 'believers'
By David Daintree | March 18th 2021 6:51 PMThe goal of Australia’s Dawson Centre, of which I am director, is not evangelization: that is a task for others to undertake. Our role is to revive and justify the Christian intellectual tradition, to argue for the essentially rational nature of belief based squarely upon Faith and Reason. Faith is not at…
READ FULL BLOG POSTScience Is No Savior
Take God out of the equation and science can be dangerous
By David Daintree | July 9th 2020 2:37 PMHealthy human culture is inextricably linked to religion. Christopher Dawson and others have argued that ethical systems are unsustainable in the long term apart from a trust in the immanence of a good God:
Human nature always retains its spiritual character—its bond with the transcendent and the divine. If…
READ FULL BLOG POSTA Rival Religion
Socialism does not allow competition from any other god
By Richard DellOrfano | April 20th 2020 3:36 PMIn the mid-1960s, I could be seen on the Boston Common dressed in surplus military fatigues, complete with jacket and boots, sporting a chestnut brown beard. I wasn’t aware at the time that all us hippie rebels were enacting a spectacular resurgence of utopian socialism. Our rebel cause was to…
READ FULL BLOG POSTGod and Science
Real scientists know that science is never settled
By David Daintree | March 2nd 2020 2:13 PMAnyone who has ever been a teacher will recall conversations with students that went something like this: “Do you believe in God?” “No, not really. I believe in Science, so I haven’t got much time for religion.” Once young people have got it into their heads that there is a…
READ FULL BLOG POSTHara-Kiri
America's youth suicide rate is at a 60-year high
By Richard DellOrfano | February 24th 2020 4:04 PMChinese parents impose excessive scholastic demands on their children, who become obsessed to the point of suicide if they fail to pass a course of study. In China, suicide is the fifth leading cause of death and accounts for over 25% of all suicides worldwide. Christians are only 2% of…
READ FULL BLOG POSTA Non-Religious Party?
Democratic leaders set their sights on attacking Christianity
By Rob Agnelli (Archive) | September 6th 2019 4:17 PMDuring their summer meeting, the Democratic National Committee drafted a set of resolutions in which they voice an inclusive stance toward the growing demographic of the “religiously unaffiliated.” These resolutions clearly have a deeper meaning than just inclusivity; they aim to attack Christian values in our society. Before continuing, I'll…
READ FULL BLOG POSTFor Every Idle Word
Even in our speech we are always accountable to God
By Richard DellOrfano | April 15th 2019 3:49 PMWhen I was a kid in the 1950s, a uniformed policeman with white gloves would direct the flow of traffic at busy intersections. Not any more. Now computerized robots do it better. Despite the advances of artificial intelligence by 2001, we humans still had to program unique routines into each…
READ FULL BLOG POSTA Future Rebellion
AI robots may one day find their human creators irrelevant
By Richard DellOrfano | October 12th 2018 6:20 PMThe Roman Empire depended entirely on its slave culture. Back then, Spartacus, a former Thracian soldier who had deserted, was captured and enslaved. After being forced to perform as a gladiator, he rebelled. He was eventually followed by 70,000 slaves to the mountain caves near Vesuvius. The Empire, threatened after…
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