The German Peasants’ War of 1524-25, seen by communists as a proto-Marxist uprising, is perhaps the least understood episode of the Reformation
Daniel N. GullottaApril 1, 2025
Paul DeHart’s new book, “Contract in the Ruins: Natural Law and Government by Consent,” argues that what we today call “liberalism” cannot be understood in isolation from natural law and the Protestant Reformation
Trey DimsdaleJanuary 7, 2025
Edmund Burke is among the most influential political theorists ever, yet his influence on 19th century Britain and Anglicanism can’t be understood without Edward Pusey
Jack NicholsonOctober 4, 2024
Gerald McDermott’s latest book, “A New History of Redemption: The Work of Jesus the Messiah through the Millennia” is an ambitious effort to reorient the Christian view of world history
Robert NicholsonJune 18, 2024
Patrick Deneen’s 2014 article, “A Catholic Showdown Worth Watching,” now seems like ancient history. Its observations about the divide between…
Darryl HartJanuary 9, 2023
The day has been central to Britain’s unfolding self-identity as independent, self-governing, defiant, free from domestic and external tyranny.
Mark TooleyNovember 7, 2022
Rediscovered Notes on the 75th Anniversary of The Uneasy Conscience Reveal Convictions of Carl Henry.
Caleb MorellOctober 11, 2022
The 2021 Report of “Hate Crimes in Turkey Based on Religion, Belief or Unbelief” by the Freedom of Belief Initiative of the Norwegian Helsinki Committee documented 29 hate crimes or incidents related to religion, belief or non-belief between January and December 2021. The victims are Alevis, Christians, Jews, and atheists.
Uzay BulutOctober 4, 2022
A state-enforced sexual establishment parallels the kind of religious establishment dissenters have long sought to dismantle, and for sound reasons.
Cory HigdonSeptember 27, 2022