Conversation, Character, and the Cost of Truth in a Fractured Public Square
What often passes for conversation is something else entirely: the pursuit of validation.
What often passes for conversation is something else entirely: the pursuit of validation.
Through choked back pain and tears, Erika Kirk gave America a lifeline to turn from its godless revelry.
The female obsession with Jane Austen’s captivating look into Regency-era England can quickly turn from an innocent diversion to a deeply unrealistic vision of marriage.
Over decades, through his roles at Sacred Heart Major Seminary and Renewal Ministries, Martin has consistently sounded the alarm—not with panic but with sobriety.
In the brave new world of online discourse, objective truth will not be tolerated by the ghostly “anons” who exist in the shadows of tribal “truth.”
Influencer culture has captured the hearts and minds of our youth—and if we are not watchful, it could capture their souls as well.
The distorted image of God that many Christians have come to hold amounts to nothing more than a fuzzy “safe-space.”
Christ looks the most religious men of His day in the eye and calls them morons. He does this not to demean but to awaken; not to shame but to judge rightly—and to invite us to do the same.
The direction of the Church will never change, but will we resist or assist her divine directive.
The idea that commonsense Americans who voted for Trump, support Musk’s free speech absolutism, or resonate with J.D. Vance’s working-class advocacy are somehow secret Nazis is textbook delusion.
It is not power, wealth, or numbers that will determine our fate, but rather our allegiance to truth, virtue, and the discipline of reason.