Crisis Magazine

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Sense and Nonsense: The Point Of Human Existence

My brother-in-law in Medford, Oregon, ever alert to the cause of my continuing education, sent me a “Calvin and Hobbes,” a cartoon series I confess not to read much in spite of its explicit metaphysical and theological overtones. The scene begins in a schoolroom. The schoolmarm is standing before the blackboard instructing the class on … Read more

Sense and Nonsense: No Light Sorrow

In an Easter meditation he published in The Tablet of London on April 8, 1939, Monsignor Ronald Knox wrote that in comparison to other political and civil societies in history, the Church has not changed much. The sequence of rebellion and radical change that appears to be inherent in other institutions does not seem so … Read more

Sense and Nonsense: Government in a Perfect Society

The first day of the Clarence Thomas Senate Hearings, Mr. Kennedy read from an interview with Mr. Thomas in which Thomas suggested that perhaps in a perfect society we would not need things like the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, the Department of Commerce, and other such worrisome bodies. Mr. Kennedy was appropriately appalled at this … Read more

Sense and Nonsense: The Alphabet of Gratitude

On the stacks of books by my computer monitor, I noticed a paperback novel with a black cover. I did not pay too much attention to it, except that I wondered where it came from, as I did not remember buying it nor did I recall anyone giving it to me. Perhaps I picked it … Read more

Sense And Nonsense: To Understand Better All the “Whys”

The feast of St. Luke was one of those perfectly beautiful October days in Washington, a Friday.  After a noon class in which I was discoursing on Hobbes, a Saudi student in class told me that he liked this material. Machiavelli and Hobbes were not allowed to be studied in his country, he explained. His … Read more

Sense and Nonsense: Speak, So That I May See You

On my desk is a postcard I received several years ago from the Bodleian Library in Oxford. The imprint on the card is a most curious one. It shows Socrates sitting on a throne-like chair with a kind of dunce cap on. He is behind a writing table, with a stylus in each hand. Perhaps … Read more

Sense and Nonsense: Harsh Principles of Justice

Justice,” I tell my classes, “is the harshest of the virtues. It is blind and relentless and in its own way inhuman.” If the world were built on justice alone, or even perhaps justice at all, it would be a terrible place. Fortunately, as St. Thomas says, the world is not so built. The world … Read more

Sense and Nonsense: Truth, Bitter and Glorious

Charlie Brown and Lucy are looking over the brick wall. Lucy has her elbows on the wall, with a sort of forlorn, not-again look on her face as she listens to Charlie Brown affirm, “I want to be liked for myself.” Charlie then turns on her with a kind of determined earnestness, “I don’t want … Read more

Sense and Nonsense: On Making Welcome

Every so often on a recorded or live concert, I will hear a program, usually a musical program, often bluegrass or country-western, in which the master of ceremonies will introduce some singer. As the singer approaches the microphone, the announcer will say, most friendly like, “Ladies and Gentlemen, won’t you please make welcome. . . … Read more

Russian Diary: A Spiritual Chernobyl

Read Dostoevsky before going to the Soviet Union. Dostoevsky said that there are two ages of man: from the ascent of man to the death of God, and from the death of God to the annihilation of man. A grasp of this chronology is the only fitting preparation for what one sees and experiences in … Read more

Sense and Nonsense: On Where the Other Foot Is

One morning I noticed a striking filler piece at the end of a column on the editorial page of the Wall Street Journal. I did not read the explanatory italics, so I did not realize just why this particular passage was there. What it contained was the following brief citation from Malcolm Muggeridge, from an … Read more

Sense and Nonsense: The Dawning of the Grace of God

Readings at Mass are designed for our instruction, for our salvation, for our minds, that we may know the truth. The Second Reading for the Midnight Mass of Christmas is taken from St. Paul’s Epistle to Titus. We go along in our ways. Suddenly we read or hear something at Midnight Mass where we never … Read more

Sense and Nonsense: The Strangest Century

In an interview in Humanities (May-June 1989), the late Walker Percy called this century “the strangest century that I’ve ever heard or read about.” What does this strangeness consist in? For Percy, this century is at the same time the most humanitarian century and “the century in which men have killed more of each other … Read more

Sense and Nonsense: James Baker’s Prayer Breakfast

Initially, I confess, a “prayer breakfast” strikes me as a very Protestant thing. We Catholics are more likely, by ourselves, to have Mass together quietly, then go out for breakfast as a kind of overflow from worship. Faith with fellowship typifies the one; sacrament then sociability the other, however much faith, fellowship, and sacrament belong … Read more

Sense and Nonsense: The Hallmark of Truth

In Eric Voegelin’s book Plato and Aristotle we find these words: “The contemporaries of a crisis, however, are reluctant to recognize the magnitude of the problem.” I had only read snippets of the address that Josef Cardinal Ratzinger had given the American archbishops in March until I received the April issue of 30 Days, which … Read more

Meet Uncle Sam, Pickpocket: Exposing the Private Vices of the Public Sector

Self-interest has long been recognized as the dominant factor in most people’s private decisions. Not the only consideration, of course, but usually the most important one. The car one buys, the job one chooses, and the party one attends all normally reflect a judgment as to what best advances one’s own interests, whether financial, social, … Read more

Sense and Nonsense: In Pursuit of Nobody

This all started when I needed some sort of quotation suggesting that, lacking all else, civilization needed but two books, the Bible and Shakespeare. Searching my highly fallible memory, I vaguely recalled something that Scott Walter had written to me about a passage in A.N. Wilson’s book on Hilaire Belloc. According to my memory, this … Read more

Sense and Nonsense: The Preacher’s Wisecracks

In 1770, Boswell set down many pages of brief remembrances of what Samuel Johnson had said during that year. Johnson at one point, it seems, was speaking of “a certain Prelate.” This clerical gentleman evidently “exerted himself very laudably in building churches and parsonage-houses.” Johnson did not find him a man of much “professional learning,” … Read more

Sense and Nonsense: What Resurrection?

I believe … in the resurrection of the body and life everlasting. Recently, I heard from a young graduate student whom I did not know. He told me he was becoming a Catholic. In the process, he was taking instructions at a local parish. Evidently, there were a number of people also taking instructions. One … Read more

Sense and Nonsense: The Man Upstairs

The Greyhound San Francisco Express left from Harrah’s Casino in Reno at 7:45 in the morning — supposedly. Clearly, it is the fastest ground way to return to the City. It was January 2, the day of the Rose and Fiesta Bowls, games I wanted to see. Plenty of time. In the line in front … Read more

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