The Narthex
Captive Nations Week
Freedom still needs to come to places like China, North Korea, Vietnam, Laos, and Cuba
By John M. Grondelski | July 26th 2024 11:53 AMJuly 21-27 is Captive Nations Week. Congress designated in 1959 the third week of July as Captive Nations Week and asked the President to proclaim it annually. (Congress initially designated Captive Nations Week by itself in 1953). Joe Biden issued an executive proclamation on July 19. Captive Nations Week commemorates…
READ FULL BLOG POSTInterreligious Suffering
Jews and Christians were united as victims of godless atheists
By John M. Grondelski | July 24th 2024 11:37 AMJuly 22 used to be a state holiday in Communist Poland marking the day that the traitors imported by the Soviet Army installed themselves in Lublin in 1944 as the “Provisional Government of National Unity” and would proceed, for the next 45 years, to torture Poland with their pretensions to…
READ FULL BLOG POSTUnmeltable Ethnicity
Stereotypical 'Americanism' distorts the U.S. Church & the two big political parties
By John M. Grondelski | July 22nd 2024 11:34 AMMichael Novak’s The Rise of the Unmeltable Ethnics (1972) generated an ethnic pride movement in the 1970s. Americans of Eastern and Southern European ancestry, Latinos, and others came out of the WASP shadows to acknowledge that their heritage remained -- and legitimately remained -- part of their American identity. I…
READ FULL BLOG POSTSlavery: Not Born in the USA
What is unique about European slavery is that it stopped
By David Daintree | July 18th 2024 3:32 PMComparisons between different “systems” of slavery never read well. Every discussion of this repulsive practice that appears to excuse or exonerate it is indefensible. But Wilfred Reilly, in “Why slavery is not America’s original sin” (in Spiked, linked below), demonstrates that the horrors endured by Africans in “the Middle Passage”…
READ FULL BLOG POSTRandom Ruminations #10
Downers... Not His Daddy's Boy... An Economy that Serves... and more
By John M. Grondelski | July 3rd 2024 2:11 PMGood Question Bumper stickers are often great statements of truth, largely because they have to be short and pithy. A message to Catholic tailgaters seen on the rear of a car parked outside St. James in Falls Church, Virginia: “Do you follow Christ as closely as you do me?” …
READ FULL BLOG POSTRev. Jerome R. Daly, R.I.P.
On the most decorated helicopter pilot in the Vietnam War
By James Thunder | May 22nd 2024 12:03 PMJerome R. Daly was the most decorated helicopter pilot during the Vietnam War. After retiring from the Army in 1982, he became a Catholic priest. Vietnam was a war in which combat helicopters played a pre-eminent role. According to a 2018 report by Gary Roush of the Vietnam Helicopter Pilots…
READ FULL BLOG POSTCultural Diversity and Unity in the Church
Vatican II's rich vision of the human right to culture remains anemic in the U.S. Church
By John M. Grondelski | May 21st 2024 12:43 PM“Diversity” is a mantra very much in contemporary vogue, although arguably one whose end-goal is often unclear. Any group needs some principle of unity; even the poster children of diversity have to have something that unites one diverse group vis-à-vis others. Otherwise, they’d not be a group but simply a…
READ FULL BLOG POST'The Old Man's Tree' and 'The Boy's Tree'
Stories of men who enjoyed a deep familiarity with other living things
By James Thunder | April 24th 2024 11:56 AMYou may remember having an adult read to you, or you reading to a child, The Giving Tree (1964), written and illustrated by the late Shel Silverstein (1930-1999). This book was the subject of a sophisticated symposium in the January 1995 issue of First Things, a magazine edited by the…
READ FULL BLOG POST‘It Can’t Happen Here’
How can we point the accusing finger when we ourselves are so compromised by evil?
By David Daintree | April 12th 2024 2:22 PMOn several occasions at the end of WWII, army commanders who liberated German concentration camps forced local people to file through, under guard, meet some of the prisoners, and witness for themselves the horror of it all. For most of those people the experience must have been deeply traumatic, and…
READ FULL BLOG POSTTrue and False Abortion History
It’s not true that abortion was unregulated in America before 1821
By John M. Grondelski | April 11th 2024 2:35 PMMuch wailing and gnashing of teeth followed the Arizona Supreme Court's recent upholding of the state’s 1864 abortion act. The wailers' false narrative asks: How can we be governed by a 160-year-old law? If you listen to abortionists, they will try to spin a fake history of abortion law, originally…
READ FULL BLOG POSTThe Earliest Christians Were Not Proto-Socialists
Acts 4 was not a people's republic with some holy water added
By John M. Grondelski | April 8th 2024 11:50 AMActs 4:32-35 speaks of the spiritual and temporal unity of the early Christian Church, exemplified in the common holding of property. The text no doubt makes visions of socialist sugar plums dance in some “social justice-plus” types' heads. I hate to wake them up from their dreams. The Church in…
READ FULL BLOG POSTThe Big Lie About Women and the Church
Claims of oppression ignore Christ and the history of His Church
By James Thunder | March 15th 2024 11:49 AMA big lie is that Catholics oppress women by, for example, not allowing them to be ordained priests or deacons, by not giving them (enough) positions of power in the Vatican, by keeping them “barefoot and pregnant” by opposing contraception and abortion, and by holding marriage up as a realizable…
READ FULL BLOG POSTCriminal Gangs, Then and Now
For criminals and criminal states alike, it is in no way lawful to slay the innocent
By James Hanink | February 15th 2024 1:04 PMChange is a constant, with mixed results. But so, too, is a grim stasis, a permanent condition in this Vale of Tears. With regard to change, the players surely change. In St. Augustine’s time, the Roman Empire still held sway, though invaders from the North stormed its borders and sought…
READ FULL BLOG POSTLincoln, Douglass & Black History Month
The Month evolved from Black History Week, which was promoted by an eminent scholar in 1926
By James Thunder | February 12th 2024 3:50 PMFebruary 12 is Abraham Lincoln’s birthday. It is not by coincidence that Lincoln’s Birthday falls within Black History Month. Since President Ford’s proclamation in 1976, every February has been proclaimed Black History Month. The Month evolved from Black History Week, which had been first promoted in 1926 by eminent scholar Dr.…
READ FULL BLOG POSTProperly Celebrating the Liturgy & Sacraments
Improvisation belongs in the comedy club, not the Church
By John M. Grondelski | February 8th 2024 12:55 PMOn February 2, the Vatican's Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith (DDF) issued the Note Gestis verbisque, reiterating that sacramental ministers, when celebrating the sacraments, must adhere to their matter and form. From February 6-9, the Dicastery for Divine Worship and Discipline of the Sacraments (DDWDS) is conducting a…
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