Recent Posts - page 5
-
Hungary’s New Church Law is Worse than the First
Hungarian Parliament on December 11, 2018 / source: AP Download a copy of this article here This article was published in, and can be cited as, “Hungary’s New Church Law is Worse than the First,” (2019) Occasional Papers on Religion… Read More ›
-
Return of the Tyrants
My latest column for The Cresset, about lessons from Aristotle and Plato on current politics. “Democracy today is under siege. It is being replaced in parts of the world with soft authoritarian regimes that preserve but manipulate democratic trappings to… Read More ›
-
The Orthodox Church and Democracy: Can They Coexist?
Here’s a review I wrote of Christianity, Democracy, and the Shadow of Constantine (2017) for the journal Occasional Papers on Religion and Eastern Europe. “Western Christians committed to the ideal of liberal democracy, like the author of this review, are often… Read More ›
-
Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood and the Work of Childhood
I usually miss the big movie releases. In fact I still haven’t seen the latest Star Wars movie, The Force Keeps Waking Up, or whatever it’s called. But I did make a point to see the new documentary about Mister… Read More ›
-
Russia’s Influence on Cultural Conservatives
Here’s my latest piece for The Cresset on how cultural conservatives have lost their moral bearings. “Cold War themes have returned unexpectedly with the renewal of Russian informational warfare. But unlike the Cold War, Russian propaganda today targets those on… Read More ›
-
Is the Idea of the Centrist Project Realistic?
Evangelizers often run into resistance, and so I’ve noticed not everyone I talk to about the Centrist Project gets excited. “Sorry, but it’s a waste of time. Third parties can’t succeed in America. We’ve got a two party system and… Read More ›
-
An Excited Crowd
This Easter Sunday sermon is from 1961. To learn more about the history behind it, click here. Now on the first day of the week Mary Magdalene came to the tomb early, while it was still dark, and saw that… Read More ›
-
Hearsay or Experience – How Do We Know God?
This Palm Sunday sermon is from 1961. To learn more about the history behind it, click here. So Pilate entered his headquarters again and called Jesus and said to him, “Are you the King of the Jews?” Jesus answered, “Do you say this… Read More ›
-
The Fall of Hungary: Viktor Orbán’s Push to Destroy Democracy
Demonstrators protesting Lex CEU / Source: CEU webpage Early in April, the Hungarian parliament, tightly controlled by the country’s autocratic prime minister, Viktor Orbán, passed a law aimed at forcing the closure of Budapest’s independent and prestigious Central European University…. Read More ›
-
One Thing is Needful
This Lenten Sermon is from 1965. To learn more about the history behind it, click here. Now as they went on their way, he entered a village; and a woman named Martha received him into her house. And she had… Read More ›
Featured Categories
Critique of Conservatism ›
-
Katolikus teokrácia Amerikában? J. D. Vance politikai kereszténységének színe és fonákja
April 7, 2026
-
Viktor Orbán’s Use of Soft Power to Create a Sonderweg
April 1, 2025
-
Why Are Some Catholic Intellectuals Enamored with Austrofascism?
January 17, 2025
Faith ›
-
Are Science and Religion Compatible?
January 1, 2022
-
The War in Ukraine and the Churches
July 28, 2021
-
Can Christians in Good Conscience Get the COVID Vaccine?
April 23, 2021
Hungary ›
-
Orbán Will Lose Hungary’s Election in Two Weeks–If It’s Clean
March 31, 2026
-
Growing Fears That Hungary’s Orbán May Cancel Next Month’s Election
March 3, 2026
-
Hungary Could Free Itself from Orbánism Next Spring
September 6, 2025
Poems ›
-
Shakespeare Selfie
April 1, 2016
-
Even Baloney’s Better in Italy
July 6, 2014
-
A Very Scary Catacomb
July 3, 2014