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Becoming a Thousand Men: How Children’s Literature Forms Virtue

Becoming a Thousand Men: How Children’s Literature Forms Virtue

Blog ~ by Emily Brigham ~ Legend has it—and I don’t believe it’s apocryphal—that my older sister was talking like Anne Shirley at the age of three. Immersed in Lucy Maud Montgomery’s Anne of Green Gables from this young age, the verbose and imaginative language of the...
Making Christmas New—The Old-Fashioned Way

Making Christmas New—The Old-Fashioned Way

Blog ~ by Fr. Chris Marchand ~ An underlying concern lies at the heart of how we go about our annual Christmas customs: how do we pass meaningful traditions down to our children? Indeed, in many ways children are the primary consideration behind nearly all our...
From Slander to Sanctity

From Slander to Sanctity

Blog ~ by Phaedra Shaltanis ~ Our culture is suffering a grave injustice, and I’m distressed about the effects it’s having on us. For months we’ve been nearly smothered by conflicting reports on public health, political intentions, and social justice. Polite...
Parallels of Writing and a Pursuit of Justice

Parallels of Writing and a Pursuit of Justice

Blog ~ by Amy Morgan ~ In his book The Four Cardinal Virtues, Joseph Pieper shares Plato’s definition of Justice as “the virtue which enables man to give to each one what is his due” (Pieper 44).  Pieper later paraphrases Thomas Aquinas’s explanation that justice...
Wonder and Piety as the Basis of a Liberal Arts Education

Wonder and Piety as the Basis of a Liberal Arts Education

Blog ~ by Lylah Molnar ~ Yesterday my husband and I, who are both teachers, were pondering how much having a child changes our perspective on the way children learn.  Though we are both familiar with the latest research on how to motivate and teach students, there is...