Happy New Year’s Eve!!
(What, you were expecting something more on a day when nobody is going
to read this thing, anyway?)
Thursday, December 31, 2015
Wednesday, December 30, 2015
News from the Network, Vol. 8, No. 53
Last week we had a retrospective on
the news items from January through June of 2015. Today we present the big news items from July
through December 2015. As you can see,
the year got off to a slow start, but a large number of projects came to
fruition (or at least started to bud) in the second half of the year:
Tuesday, December 29, 2015
The American Chesterton, VII: Socialism and the New Religion
As we saw in previous postings in this series, Fulton
Sheen’s “obsession” with socialism was founded solidly on his commitment to the
principles of reason found in Aristotelian-Thomism, the philosophy of common
sense. Socialism, as Pope Pius XI
explained, “is based . . . on a theory of human
society peculiar to itself and irreconcilable with true Christianity. Religious socialism, Christian socialism, are
contradictory terms. (Quadragesimo Anno, § 120.)
Monday, December 28, 2015
What Would Aquinas Do? — The Abraham Federation
Two weeks ago (we had to reschedule this conclusion to our short refugee crisis series) we mentioned that there is a specific program that
could be adapted and implemented to resolve the refugee crisis, once the global
community has dealt with the immediate situation. Rather than rewrite the original description,
we present it here, with links to the full proposal:
Friday, December 25, 2015
Christmas Day, 2015
What? Back
again? What are you doing here? Are there no prisons? Are there no workhouses? Er, have you no family to be with or
charitable works to occupy you? Well,
then . . .
Thursday, December 24, 2015
Christmas Eve, 2015
Purely in the interests of maintaining a regular series of
blog postings on weekdays, we’ve put up this little reminder that if you are
reading this, you probably should be out doing something else:
Wednesday, December 23, 2015
News from the Network, Vol. 8, No. 52
Since this was a very short week
(and this is a Wednesday instead of the usual Friday), we’ve put together a
short “news roundup” for the first half of the year as a retrospective. Leading off, of course, is CESJ’s
participation in the Amazon Smile program, since it’s an all-year thing:
Tuesday, December 22, 2015
The American Chesterton, VI: The Logic of Christian Socialism
As we saw in the previous posting in this series, despite “Branch
Theory” — the idea that the Anglo-Catholic, Roman Catholic, and Eastern
Orthodox Churches are all part of the larger Catholic Church — there was more
dividing the Anglican Church from the Catholic Church than a matter of mere
politics. From its founding by Henry VIII Tudor, the man-centered Church of
England was necessarily in direct conflict with the God-centered Catholic
Church, and (at least in the eyes of G.K.
Chesterton, Msgr. Ronald Knox, and Msgr. Robert Hugh Benson) this orientation was leading the
Anglican Church away from Christianity altogether.
Monday, December 21, 2015
Chicken Little Economics
The financial world is in an absolute panic, the economic
mavens are freaking out, politicians are starting to wonder if they should
start looking for honest work . . . until they remember that their financial
and economic policies have ensured that there won’t be any jobs waiting for
them. What to do, what to do? And (for us normal people) what the heck is
going on, anyway? What is causing all
the fuss?
Friday, December 18, 2015
News from the Network, Vol. 8, No. 51
This is the last full work week of
the year, so this will be the last full “News from the Network” for 2015 —
we’ll content ourselves with a retrospective of the important events for the
Just Third Way for our next two “issues.”
Unusually for this time of year we have quite a bit to report:
Thursday, December 17, 2015
The American Chesterton, V: Socialism as Social Justice
In the previous posting in this series we saw that, just as
modern theology and philosophy separate religion from God, socialism and
capitalism separate creation from the Creator.
This results in putting man before God.
Wednesday, December 16, 2015
The American Chesterton, IV: Sheen’s Obsession
One of the more unusual things (one might almost say “odd”)
about the veneration accorded to Fulton Sheen is the fact that his tremendous
intellectual achievements and social insights are almost always marginalized
or ignored. John A. Hardon’s entry on
Sheen in The Catholic Lifetime Reading
Plan (1989) makes no mention of that aspect of Sheen’s work — something
that is also missing from the entries on G.K. Chesterton and Ronald Knox. Adherents of all three seem to focus primarily
on the admittedly great faith, spirituality, and mysticism of the three — those things that, with a few
twists and adjustments, can easily be fitted into New Age thought.
Tuesday, December 15, 2015
The American Chesterton, III: The Esoteric Twenties
As we noted in the previous posting in this series, Academia
was in terrible shape in the 1920s — at least when it came to upholding
orthodox Jewish, Christian, and Islamic belief systems and philosophies in a
world that seemed to have completely lost its mind, or at any rate its sense of
identity. As Fulton Sheen commented in
the Preface to Religion Without God,
published in 1928, “Present-day religion is not in evolution, but in
revolution.” As he continued,
Monday, December 14, 2015
Saving the Middle Class
According to a new study by the Pew Research Center, “The
American Middle Class is Losing Ground,” the number of “middle class”
households is now less than those in the “upper class” and “lower class”
combined. We put “name of class” in
quotes, because we just have a gut reaction to being described as belonging to
a class in a legally classless society.
We’ll try not to do it again, at least today. We’ve made our point.
Friday, December 11, 2015
News from the Network, Vol. 8, No. 50
The stock market has been up and
down this week like a rubber ball. This
is bad, because people think that the fluctuations actually mean something, and
are taking the stock market as a leading economic indicator. News flash, folks, it’s not. It’s not a real economic indicator at all.
Thursday, December 10, 2015
The American Chesterton, II: The World of Fulton Sheen
One of the things that strikes the reader of Fulton Sheen’s God and Intelligence in Modern Philosophy
— assuming that Chesterton’s The “Dumb Ox”
and Knox’s Enthusiasm were read first
and the reader has a little knowledge of what was really going on in the world
of the 1920s — is the pervasiveness of certain ideas that Sheen found in both
civil and religious life. Understanding
these ideas and becoming somewhat familiar with the environment and culture
within which Sheen wrote go a long way toward helping us understand what Sheen
was doing. By that we mean the world in
which he lived and that provided the environment within which he formed his
thought when he began writing, and against which, in large measure, he was
reacting.
Wednesday, December 9, 2015
The American Chesterton, I: The Triumph of the Will
We come now to the third and final book in our series on
“Three Key Books on Common Sense.” Paradoxically
(but consistent with the thought of Chesterton, Knox, and Sheen), Fulton J.
Sheen’s God and Intelligence in Modern Philosophy
was the first written (in 1925), but would make little sense to the reader
unless it is read last. This is because,
unlike many books, God and Intelligence
is easier to understand by reading it in light of what came after publication,
rather than before.
Tuesday, December 8, 2015
Enthusiasm, XV: Remaining Characteristics of Enthusiasm
In today’s posting we conclude our brief overview of the
characteristics of enthusiasm — at least, those that we selected. Not by coincidence, we also conclude that
portion of the blog series dealing with Msgr. Ronald Knox’s Enthusiasm and his take on the
development of a new concept of religion. So, today we look at 10) Antinomianism, 11)
Lust for Martyrdom, 12) Invisible Church, 13) Desire for Results, and 14)
Experimentalism (Novelty).
Monday, December 7, 2015
What Would Aquinas Do? — The Refugee Solution
Last week on this blog we decided that trying to solve the
refugee problem strictly as a refugee problem was not a solution — viable or
otherwise. Nor is military action, while
it may be necessary, a solution to a refugee problem. What is needed, frankly, is a two-pronged
approach. The first prong would be to
take care of the immediate situation.
The second prong is to implement an actual solution.
Friday, December 4, 2015
News from the Network, Vol. 8, No. 49
Oddly enough for a week so close to
the end of the year when things usually slow down substantially, we’ve had a
significant number of happenings this week. Mostly this has been due to the
large number of outreach efforts we’ve been making, and the door-opening that
has resulted. Of course, there are other
things going on, too:
Thursday, December 3, 2015
Enthusiasm, XIV: Further Characteristics of Enthusiasm
In the previous posting in this series, we looked at two of Msgr.
Ronald Knox’s fourteen characteristics of enthusiasm as identified and summarized
by Dr. James Hitchcock in his book, The
New Enthusiasts, 1) Excessive Piety and 2) Schism.
Wednesday, December 2, 2015
Enthusiasm, XIII: The Laws and Characteristics of Enthusiasm
In the previous posting in this series we had a graphic
illustration of the dangers of abandoning Aristotelian-Thomism and the
intellect as the basis of the natural law.
This was Dr. John D. Mueller who, by going outside the
Aristotelian-Thomist framework for his analysis of a system based on Aristotelian-Thomism, invalidated his own theories.
Tuesday, December 1, 2015
Enthusiasm, XII: Damning Economics
In the previous posting in this series we noted that G.K.
Chesterton, Ronald Knox, and Fulton Sheen (in common with Mortimer Adler),
traced many — if not all — of today’s “philosophical mistakes” and the failure
of common sense in academia and elsewhere to the abandonment of
Aristotelian-Thomism. In its place there
has been an almost universal reliance on a distorted Platonism. This is achieved by exaggerating and twisting the thought of Augustine of Hippo.
By this
means the principles of reason are jettisoned and a reliance on personal will
substituted as the basis of the natural law and the principles of a just social
order. This is usually in the form of a
personal interpretation of something accepted on faith as God’s Will.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)