The Genealogies of Modernity Journal
The Whole Mystery of Christ: Part I
It is possible to frame the entire theological enterprise as an attempt to answer the following question: How does the Creator relate to creation?
Joseph Reigle on Jordan Wood’s The Whole Mystery of Christ
In Search of Ordinary Time
Everyday life—that boring and mundane, trivial and profane measure of our existence—assumed tremendous significance when modern artists like Vermeer gave depth perception to our daily doings.
Joshua Hren on ordinary time in art and the Gospels
Inscribing Devotion between the Medieval and the Modern
The donation of portable Mass kits was a way for non-combatants to participate in the war effort in a way that is uniquely tied to religious material culture.
Sarah Luginbill on medieval and modern liturgical inscriptions
Wilfrid Ward and the Modernist Crisis in England
At the heart of the modernist controversies was the question of how human subjects are able to experience the transcendent God.
Elizabeth Huddleston on the perplexity of modernism
Fry and Arendt: A Philosophical Debt
It is fitting that Arendt, a thinker who celebrates the possibilities of natality—the joy of new beginnings and of unpredictable ripple effects—made such a long-distance friendship possible.
Sanjana Rajagopal on intellectual debts and friendships
What is the Task of Political Theology?
The political is a lived medium through which we gain insight into the theological concepts that inform the political as one human hierarchy amongst others (economic, social, and so on).
Ali Harfouch on recovering the political through political theology.
Gaining the Eternal
How it is that the Christian past can be present here and now when it travels to us in the medium of a historical process not only fraught and irregular, but so often saturated with evil and sin?
Jonathan Heaps reviews Nothing Gained is Eternal
The Peasant of the Garonne and the Pharaoh Within
If all contemplative elements are driven out of life, it ends in a deadly hyperactivity. The human being suffocates among its own doings.
James Lawson on Jacques Maritain and Byung-Chul Han
Malforming the Law of Nature
The most pernicious problem is his political Nestorianism: he thinks that if politics is conventional or humanly constructed, it cannot be sacral or divine.
Matt Boulter reviews Simon Kennedy’s Reforming the Law of Nature
A Black Philosophy of Liberation
The path toward greater intellectual, social, and spiritual wholeness cannot bypass the enactment of Black dignity but must run through it.
Andrew Prevot reviews Vincent Lloyd’s Black Dignity
Getting the Timing Right
Reading Smith’s “How to Inhabit Time” is itself a practice of spiritual timekeeping, granting the attentive reader a space and time in which to give herself over to reflection.
Caroline Arnold on living in hope
Vatican II’s Departure from the Anti-Modernist Paradigm: Part II
Ultimately, the council majority was victorious: anti-Modernist doctrinal documents failed to achieve a ‘controlling function’ at the Council.
Shaun Blanchard on leaving anti-modernism behind
Vatican II’s Departure from the Anti-Modernist Paradigm
Understanding how anti-Modernism was evoked and how anti-Modernist critiques were rebutted sheds light on Vatican II as a fundamental shift in the relationship between Catholicism and modernity.
Shaun Blanchard on Modernism and Vatican II
More to Virtue than Justice
While the ancients understood justice as one virtue among many, we often view justice as the sole, super-virtue… thereby distorting justice itself and re-ordering it into something very different.
Br. Nicodemus Thomas on reuniting the cardinal virtues
On Divine Space
There is a genealogical case to be made that the solidity of the modern scientific world picture may have been unwittingly grounded upon a theistic metaphysic.
JD Lyonhart on Henry More and the origins of modern space
Petrarch's Augustinian View from Mont Ventoux
Petrarch was a founder of an alternative modernity, which emphasizes the compatibility between the ancients and medievals by adhering to the traditional prioritizing of the contemplative over the active.
Michael Krom on spiritual ascents
Forever Young: Hannah Arendt and Natality
If we lose track of natality, newness, and birth, we will ourselves become gray-haired obstructers of the new. Genealogists do not just trace the past. We are students of birth.
Terence Sweeney on genealogy and old age with Arendt and Nietzsche
Tradition is Apocalyptic
The unity and coherence of Christian tradition is derived from the antecedent finality of its futural fulfilment and can’t be secured by appeal to a procrustean deposit of faith perduring through history.
Jack Pappas reviews David Bentley Harts’s Tradition & Apocalypse
Portable Mass Kits and American Catholics in WWI
The patriotism and religious piety felt by U.S. Catholics during WWI through efforts to supply devotional objects paved the way for the solidification of American Catholic identity.
Sarah Luginbill on portable altars and Catholics becoming American