Crown Features

Original items from the Trinity Forum

How to Vote for the President

FeatureWed 20 Aug 2008 • Responses: 1 • by William Edgar

photo by greywulf (Flickr, CC license)

Character, discernment, trust

Senior Fellow William Edgar looks at the factors we should consider in the upcoming U.S. elections—or any election, for that matter.

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The Greatness of Solzhenitsyn (1918–2008)

FeatureMon 11 Aug 2008 by David Aikman

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A Second Look

David Aikman looks back at his three interviews with the great Russian writer and offers a different assessment of his life, message, and influence.

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America’s Most Important Export

FeatureWed 16 Jul 2008 • Responses: 0 • by Don Eberly and Joseph Loconte

U.S. flag segment, photo: Peter Edman

The Upside of Globalization

In the face of reported growing anti-American sentiment, Senior Fellows Don Eberly and Joseph Loconte look at factors critics often overlook—most notably the transformative power of America’s civil society in the developing world.

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Driving in the Fog

FeatureTue 03 Jun 2008 • Responses: 1 • by Nathan A. Baxter

illustration by Thomas Hawk, CC-BY

A paradox of revelation

Sometimes the air we look through becomes part of what we see. Nathan Baxter reflects on the paradox of fog and the ways, by forcing us to slow down, it both hides and reveals.

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Temperature-Controlled Governments

FeatureFri 30 May 2008 by Pete Peterson

illustration, Hg by John Miller, CC-BY-NC-SA

Community and the Individual Consumer

Pete Peterson looks at California’s response to its energy crunch and the problematic nature of responses from many people on the right. 

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Steep Trajectory

FeatureWed 07 May 2008 by Al Sikes

Illustration by Kelly Crull, CC-BY

Free Lunch Writ Large

We are deep in the blame game over the housing bubble, writes Al Sikes. Mortgage brokers, banks, rating agencies, property flippers, and regulators have all made the list. Perhaps somebody should go upstream in a search for the real culprit. 

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A Brief Chat with Screwtape

FeatureMon 28 Apr 2008 by Max McLean

Max McLean, courtesy Fellowship for the Performing Arts

Playing the Devil in D. C.

Actor Max McLean describes what it is like to play Screwtape in the stage adaptation of C. S. Lewis’s The Screwtape Letters, playing at the Lansburgh Theatre in Washington D.C. through May 18, 2008.

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Christ for Culture

FeatureSun 27 Apr 2008 by T. M. Moore

The Goodness Store by Apollo-Jack (Flickr, CC-BY)

Enduring Standards in a Confused Age

Surely there is a better way to do culture than the one which has produced American Idol? T. M. Moore makes a radical proposal that there is. He says we must learn to look beyond mere personal preference and our current sensual and materialist agenda to discover divine standards for beauty, goodness, and truth in the person of Jesus.

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Confessions of a Small Business Fanatic

FeatureMon 24 Mar 2008 • Responses: 2 • by Jo Kadlecek

Florist in Barcelona

'The underdogs around the block'

In this short reflection, Jo Kadlecek looks back on her experience with small businesses as a link to what is human in the capitalist system.

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Whatsoever Things Are True

FeatureFri 07 Mar 2008 • Responses: 3 • by Wilfred M. McClay

Wings by Marilylle Soveran, CC-BY

A Few Thoughts on Education in Modern America

Senior Fellow Wilfred M. McClay suggests that we may have reached a point where the most radical and liberal people in society are those who pursue old-fashioned wholesomeness. He suggests a model of education that is equally radical, because we take on the shape of the things we study. So what things are exemplary? What things are worth imitating? Perhaps humanity is not just something we are, it is something we achieve. 

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For although, unless he understands somewhat, no man can believe in God, nevertheless by the very faith by which he believes, he is helped to the understanding of greater things. For there are some things which we do not believe unless we understand them; and there are other things which we do not understand unless we believe them.

Augustine of Hippo

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Recent Articles

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Featured Resource from the Fellows

Cover image via AmazonFlesh-and-Blood Jesus: Learning to Be Fully Human from the Son of Man by Dan Russ.

Dan Russ helps readers get to know Jesus Christ more fully through reflecting on his humanity.

Gleanings Quick Links

The Real Digital Revolution: Social networking is changing the marketing landscape: “Brand advertising can’t stretch the truth anymore or try and gild the lily. Because if it does, we’re going to find out about it, find out that you’ve been lying to us all along about extras that don’t work and specials that aren’t special. And our reaction is not going to be pretty.” (Alan Wolk, AdWeek; h/t: Ryan Moede • 2008 08 27)

Après Lewis: ‘As it turns out, Tim Keller’s “The Reason for God” (2008), the book recommended by my friend, is the best of the “Mere Christianity” wannabes. Mr. Keller argues that the usual objections to Christianity—that it is a straitjacket, that there cannot be just one true religion—are themselves the product of a particular (secular Western) point of view. He then builds an affirmative case for Christianity, suggesting that the Big Bang and our appreciation of beauty are clues pointing to God and that Christ’s resurrection was so unlikely both to Greeks and Romans (who viewed the material world as weak and corrupt) and to Jews (who expected any resurrection to come at the end of time) that it cannot be dismissed as the clever marketing strategy of a new religion. If this sounds a little like N.T. Wright, it isn’t accidental: Mr. Keller draws liberally from him, as well as Lewis, Christian philosopher Alvin Plantinga (a professor at Notre Dame) and others. “The Reason for God” is as sensible and winsome as one would expect from the pastor of a latticework of churches that draw more than 5,000 attendees in New York City every Sunday, most of them young, single, urban professionals. But it too is no “Mere Christianity.” It does not have the original arguments or the magical prose of Lewis’s classic.’ (David Skeel, Wall Street Journal2008 08 15)

Alexander Solzhenitsyn: the line within: ‘Solzhenitsyn was far from endorsing the thesis of the “banality of evil” as Hannah Arendt had expounded it. Nor did he see totalitarianism as the ultimate source of the evil that it promotes. Rather totalitarian government is the great mistake, made for whatever noble or ignoble purpose, of putting the final goal before the present dilemma. It is this which gives evil intentions the same chance as good ones, which enables the criminal and the psychopath to compete on a level with the saint and the hero. Yet even in totalitarianism the evil belongs to the human beings, and not to the system. This is the remarkable message that Solzhenitsyn, crawling from the death-machine, carried pressed to his heart.’ (Senior Fellow Roger Scruton, in openDemocracy2008 08 11)

Atheism and Evil: Could it possibly improve things to believe that the long pain of human evolution was set in motion by chance alone? The atheist view of the world is actually rather bleaker than that of Jews and Christians: Suffering under the weight of evil is meaningless, and so is any struggle against evil. Everything in the atheist’s world begins and ends in randomness and chance. Few atheists seem to be as rigorously honest as Friedrich Nietzsche, who warned that if God is dead, it is wishful thinking to hold that reason alone can confer “meaning” on life. Reason has been outmoded by chance. (Michael Novak, First Things: On the Square2008 07 29)

Christopher Nolan’s Achievement: The Dark Knight (2008 07 22)
Unplanned Parenthood (2008 07 21)
What makes a supervillain? (2008 07 19)
Pope’s Speech at Barangaroo (2008 07 17)
Hollywood’s Hero Deficit (2008 07 17)

more . . .

Other Resources from the Fellows

Cover image via AmazonThe End of Illusions: Religious Leaders Confront Hitler's Gathering Storm by Joseph Loconte.

In The End of Illusions, Joseph Loconte brings together pieces from the most significant religious thinkers of the day about the responsibilities of America and Europe in the face of Nazi agressions.