Humanistic learning and jokes for Protestants in Shakespeare’s bloodiest play.
Rhys Laverty
Shakespeare Notebook 2023: “Richard II”
Contemplating the tension between divine right and popular rule with the Bard and the Reformers.
Shakespeare Notebook 2023: “King Edward III”
Thoughts on oaths and loyalty in the Reformation, from a Shakespeare play you’ve never read.
The Apologist Retires: An Interview With Alister McGrath
Alister McGrath reflects on apologetics, the New Atheism, and Reformation thought.
Shakespeare Notebook 2023: “The Taming of the Shrew”
Failed farce? Cheap misogyny? Or simple insight into the sexes?
Shakespeare Notebook 2023: “The Two Gentlemen of Verona”
Reflecting on Shakespeare with Plato’s “Phaedrus”, and thoughts on repentance.
“Cor Novum, Canticum Novum”: A New Year’s Sermon from John Donne
On New Year’s Day 1625, John Donne exhorted his hearers to circumcise their hearts.
Ad Fontes – Editor’s Choice 2022
Our Senior Editor picks the best of Ad Fontes from 2022.
Syllables Cannot Hold Him: “In the Bleak Midwinter” and the Grandeur of God
Christina Rossetti’s choices of meter and scriptural allusion are no accident.
A Bawdy Theological Joke from C.S. Lewis?
Is a pointed quote from “Pride and Prejudice” carrying double meaning in an overlooked Lewis essay?