In this episode, Noah Gould, Acton’s alumni and student programs manager, speaks to Jane Clark Scharl about her verse play, Sonnez Les Matines, which asks, What if John Calvin, Ignatius of Loyola, and Francois Rabelais had their convictions put to the test while navigating their involvement in a brutal crime?
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Sonnez Les Matines | Wiseblood Books
Calvin, Loyola, Rabelais: A Murder Mystery | Religion & Liberty
The Violent Faith of Cormac McCarthy | Acton Unwind
Helen Raleigh on how China is destroying Hong Kong's freedom
Ryan Patrick Hanley on François Fénelon, the forgotten philosopher
Anthony Bradley on George Floyd, police reform, and riots
Rev. Ben Johnson on the universal basic income
Lyman Stone on the decline of religiosity in the US
Bradley J. Birzer on Christian humanism
Rev. Robert Sirico on the church's response to COVID-19
Stephen Barrows on COVID-19 and job loss
Kerry McDonald on a Harvard prof's call to ban homeschooling
Randy Barnett and David French on 'common-good Constitutionalism'
Rebroadcast: Russell Kirk and the genesis of American Conservatism
Adam MacLeod on how to talk about rights in our polarized age
A hopeful message in a time of crisis from Rev. Robert Sirico
Helen Raleigh on how Communist China's coverup caused a pandemic
Rebroadcast: Samuel Gregg on the life and impact of Michael Novak
Stephanie Slade on the biggest problems of national conservatism
John D. Wilsey on Who was John Foster Dulles?
Yuval Levin on why trust in institutions is declining
Rev. Robert Sirico on responding to the Pope's call for wealth redistribution
Michael Wagenman on Abraham Kuyper and how Christians should engage the world
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