Loading...
Loading...
Click here if you don’t see subscription options
JesuiticalFebruary 14, 2025
A painting of Julian of Norwich by Stephen Reid, 1912. (Wikimedia Commons)

On “Jesuitical” this week, Zac and Ashley chat with Simon Critchley, the Hans Jonas Professor of Philosophy at the New School for Social Research in New York and a Director of the Onassis Foundation, about his new book, Mysticism. Among the most prolific of modern academic philosophers, Simon has written over twenty books, from works of philosophy to studies on topics from Greek tragedy and dead philosophers to David Bowie, football and suicide.

Zac, Ashley and Simon discuss: 

  • The historical development of the concept of “mysticism,” how it was suppressed during the Reformation and its resurgent relevance for today.
  • Emotionally-charged forms of piety in the high Middle Ages among women mystics like Julian of Norwich
  • How modern mysticism can provide access to the sacred and transcendent in a melancholic world

In Signs of the Times, Zac is joined by Sam Sawyer, S.J., editor-in-chief of America, for a conversation about Pope Francis’ strongly worded letter of support to the Catholic bishops of the United States in which he denounced the mass deportation of undocumented migrants initiated by President Donald Trump, and corrected Vice President JD Vance’s theology. 

Links for further reading: 

What’s on tap?
Gin Martini

You can follow us on X and on Instagram @jesuiticalshow.
You can find us on Facebook at facebook.com/groups/jesuitical. 
Please consider supporting Jesuitical by becoming a digital subscriber to America Media at americamagazine.org/subscribe

The latest from america

Cardinal Blase Cupich, the archbishop of Chicago and one of the 10 U.S. cardinal electors at the conclave that elected the first ever American pope, discusses the conclave that elected Pope Leo XIV.
Gerard O’ConnellMay 11, 2025
A conversation with Father Robert Hagan, O.S.A., the prior provincial of the Augustinian Province of St. Thomas of Villanova, about the spiritual foundations of our new American pope.
JesuiticalMay 11, 2025
At first glance, it would seem that buying rosaries and listening to the pope cry out passionately against war have little to do with each other.
Sam Sawyer, S.J.May 11, 2025
On his first Sunday appearance as pope, Leo XIV made a passionate appeal for peace and an end to the armed conflicts in the world, especially in Ukraine and Gaza, and cried out, “Never again war!”
Gerard O’ConnellMay 11, 2025