Wayne Link > Wayne's Quotes

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  • #1
    Thomas Howard
    “We are doing one of two things when we sing to our children. We are either indulging in a cynical duplicity that is only creating the conditions for disenchantment, or we are passing on to them, as we had passed on to us, something that the human imagination has sanctioned as being in some way perennially valid.”
    Thomas Howard, Chance or The Dance?

  • #2
    G.K. Chesterton
    “A dead thing can go with the stream, but only a living thing can go against it.”
    G.K. Chesterton, The Everlasting Man

  • #3
    Rod Dreher
    “It is not feasible for most of us to abandon the Internet entirely. But at the very least we can impose on ourselves a discipline similar to the Benedictine monks, who, observing the Rule, strictly limit themselves to particular tasks during certain hours. We can also do more things with our hands. Put that way, it sounds almost childish, but there’s a serious point here. Technology enables us to treat interaction with the material world—people, places, things—as an abstraction. Getting our hands dirty, so to speak, with gardening, cooking, sewing, exercise, and the like, is a crucial way of restoring our sense of connection with the real world. So is doing things face to face with other people.”
    Rod Dreher, The Benedict Option: A Strategy for Christians in a Post-Christian Nation

  • #4
    Christopher Henry Dawson
    “Today everybody admits that something is wrong with the world, and the critics of Christianity are the very people who feel this most. The most violent attacks on religion come from those who are most anxious to change the world, and they attack Christianity because they think that it is an obstructive force that stands in the way of a real reform of human life. There has seldom been a time in which men were more dissatisfied with life and the more conscious of the need for deliverance, and if they turn away from Christianity it is because they feel that Christianity is a servant of the established order and that it has no real power or will to change the world and to rescue man from his present difficulties. They have lost their faith in the old spiritual traditions that inspired civilization in the past, and they tend to look for a solution in some external practical remedy such as communism, or the scientific organisation of life; something definite and objective that can be applied to society as a whole.”
    Christopher Henry Dawson, Religion and World History: A Selection from the Works of Christopher Dawson

  • #5
    John Zmirak
    “Hence it's funny to read in the New York Times that liberal Catholic activists are pushing for a change in Church teaching on issues relating to -- well, let's admit it, sex. Nobody is out there demanding the popes revisit the condemnation of Jansenism (don't ask), or settle the question of whether divine grace is or isn't resistable. No, journalists want to know what the Church thinks about whether one person should poke another and, if so, where, when, and how. What liberal Catholics and the journalists who love them are really asking for isfor the Church to admit that it was teaching a set of harsh, repressive errors for nineteen centuries and that now it is very, very sorry.”
    John Zmirak, The Politically Incorrect Guide to Catholicism

  • #6
    Christopher Henry Dawson
    “The whole tendency of modern life is towards scientific planning and organisation, central control, standardisation, and specialisation. If this tendency was left to work itself out to its extreme conclusion, one might expect to see the state transformed into an immense social machine, all the individual components of which are strictly limited to the performance of a definite and specialised function, where there could be no freedom because the machine could only work smoothly as long as every wheel and cog performed its task with unvarying regularity. Now the nearer modern society comes to the state of total organisation, the more difficult it is to find any place for spiritual freedom and personal responsibility. Education itself becomes an essential part of the machine, for the mind has to be as completely measured and controlled by the techniques of the scientific expert as the task which it is being trained to perform.”
    Christopher Henry Dawson, Religion and World History: A Selection from the Works of Christopher Dawson

  • #7
    Edward Feser
    “Better for them to deny the mind--and with it rationality, truth, and science itself--than to admit the soul. Once again, the secularist manifests the very dogmatism of which he accuses the religious believer, and in rationalizing it is willing to contemplate absurdities of which no religious believer has ever dreamed.”
    Edward Feser, The Last Superstition: A Refutation of the New Atheism

  • #8
    John Emerich Edward Dalberg-Acton
    “The issue which has swept down the centuries and which will have to be fought sooner or later is the people versus the banks.”
    Lord Acton

  • #9
    John Emerich Edward Dalberg-Acton
    “Every thing secret degenerates, even the administration of justice; nothing is safe that does not show how it can bear discussion and publicity.”
    John Emerich Edward Dalberg-Acton

  • #10
    T.S. Eliot
    “[A]t the moments when the public's interest is aroused, the public is never well informed enough to have the right to an opinion.”
    T.S. Eliot, Christianity and Culture: The Idea of a Christian Society and Notes Towards the Definition of Culture



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