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
Anne Bradley & Iain Murray on socialism and poverty
Tim Carney on Alienated America (Rebroadcast)
Rev. Robert Sirico on what we learned in 2020
Maryann & Barry Keating on rebuilding social capital
Philippa Stroud & Anne Bradley on pandemic and poverty
Walter Williams on Frederic Bastiat & American political culture
Jordan Ballor on Abraham Kuyper's "Common Grace"
Ismael Hernandez & Peter Greer on addressing poverty
Joel Sercel on the ethics of space exploration
Sam Gregg on woke capitalism
Gerald McDermott on 'Race & Covenant' and racial reconciliation
Scott Lincicome on Section 230 and social media
P.J. Hill on religious origins of the rule of law
Rev. Robert Sirico & Dr. Samuel Gregg on analyzing Fratelli Tutti
Nate Hochman on conservative environmentalism
Ilya Shapiro on Supreme Disorder and SCOTUS politics
Stephanie Slade on will-to-power conservatism
Dylan Pahman on Charles Malik and 'Christ and Crisis'
Iain Murray on the socialist temptation
Daniel Darling on using social media for good
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