Logos and the Culture Wars

Logos and the Culture Wars

E. Michael Jones has proved to be one of the most brilliant Catholic authors writing today. In this epochal volume ‘Logos Rising : A History of Ultimate Reality’, Jones explores the fascinating history of that metaphysical concept of Logos which alone explains the intelligibility of the universe and man’s rational nature. It is the astonishing achievement of Christianity via the Apostle John to identify Logos/Word with the divine Person of Jesus Christ, declared equal to God, co-eternal with God, and God Himself.

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A Nuclear Weapon in the Culture War

A Nuclear Weapon in the Culture War

Having written several groundbreaking tomes of intellectual and cultural history, E. Michael Jones already has a place among the great Catholic historian-philosophers and philosopher-historians writing today, thinkers like Glenn Olsen, Charles Taylor, Alasdair MacIntyre, John Rao, and Brad Gregory. But with Logos Rising, Jones has truly joined the ranks of the Greats…

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A "Cultural Marxist" Critique of Logos Rising

A "Cultural Marxist" Critique of Logos Rising

This is the most important book of the twenty-first century. E. Michael Jones has thrown down an intellectual gauntlet that cannot honorably be ignored…

.... it will surely not be long before the startling, incendiary ideas expressed in this book reach the ideological mainland. The questions raised here cannot be ignored or dismissed.

Everyone should read this book. Many people should read it twice.

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Extraordinary Guide to American Converts

"This extraordinary guide to American converts shows just how many roads lead to Rome. John Beaumont’s book The Mississippi Flows into the Tiber is an impressive feat, and an invaluable tool for arguing with atheists. … The important thing to say about such a massive work of reference is that it is much more than that: Beaumont has deliberately included long passages, either written by the converts themselves or by their biographers, which are inspiring essays in their own right. There are as many different reasons for joining the Church (or obstacles holding one back) as there are individuals; some of these essays provide excellent material for arguments about the faith one might have with sceptical friends. For this reason the book is invaluable, encompassing as it does an extraordinary range of different characters, with all their human flaws and yet who have all been touched by the grace of conversion. This is not a work of hagiography; Catholic converts are sinners, not saints, some of them spectacularly so. In these pages you will find the notorious mobster, Dutch Schultz, as well as Ernest Hemingway, who married four times and who finally committed suicide. … Clearly, there is nothing as fascinating as the lives of other people – especially when it concerns something as personal as the journey of the soul."

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