What’s in a Name?

We all have the power to name ourselves—collectively, not individually

Garden With Children

I am happy that the boys enjoy the garden too. But who knows how it will be in five years?

Can Good Deeds Become Like Murmurations?

The lessons of murmuration are clear. There is power and safety in community

A Phone that Does not Ring

Jess never missed calling me today, even when I was half a world away. This marks the eleventh year that my phone will not ring.

The Race to the Bottom: A Review of Ross Benes’s ‘1999’

It never fails—whenever Benes defends low culture, he does so in the exact terms that he ought to be using to criticize it

Crisis Response and the Remembering of Nightlife Hample

A peaceful crisis response paves the way for restoration and wholeness.

On Lear, Lent, and Christian Tragedy

The man of faith knows that even the deepest darkness may be irradiated

In Between on the Camino de Santiago

Whether the remains of St. James lie there or not, most of our band will likely return again to travel a new way to Santiago.

Sweet Tea and Sacraments: Flannery O’Connor, the American South, and the Catholic Intellectual Tradition

O’Connor’s fiction does not offer sentimental portraits of faith—it tests faith.

From Postliberalism to Preliberalism: A Review of The Church Against the State

Next time we’re drinking bourbon together, I look forward to telling him that he’s got all the right impulses and is coming to the wrong conclusions.

Sowing Winter Wheal: Preparing Seed and Soil for the New Era

As my hibernal title indicates, my sense is that this trajectory will be difficult.

The Hidden Sorrow of Easter

Christ’s resurrection offers assurance in the face of inevitable, implacable death. But it doesn’t come easily

News, Notes, and Podcasts

Students are invited to submit an essay for our 2025 essay contest.

If you value FPR, consider supporting our work, purchasing books at our Bookshop page, and subscribing to our print journal.

New from FPR Books

From the Archives

Laudato Si’ and the Feverish Summer

For many, this summer was long, hot, and awful — at least politically; no one particularly recalls the weather. Why so rotten? Laudato si',...

Puritans and The Pope: The Conflicted Christian History of American Ecological Ethics

The responses from American Christians to Pope Francis’ encyclical Laudato Si’ have fallen into two predictable categories: Economic conservatives push back against Francis’ critique...

The Cardinal and the Capitalist

A cleric with the ear of Pope Francis recently sent Catholic defenders of free markets into a tizzy. At a press conference, Cardinal Oscar...