C. S. Lewis’s famous treat was used to show the relationship between pleasure and sin.
View this email in your browser
Latest Issue
Web Exclusives
Media
Subscribe
Donate
In Search of Turkish Delight
Valerie Stivers
From the print edition:
C. S. Lewis’s famous treat was used to show the relationship between pleasure and sin.
More
Is the Foreigner My Neighbor?
James Orr and Joel Looper
Two contributors discuss the ethics of Trump’s immigration policies.
More
One Cheer for Anna Paulina Luna’s Proxy Voting Gambit
Rachel Bovard
Proxy voting is a slippery slope, but Congress should be friendlier to moms and dads.
More
The Night Ozempic Came to Dinner
Kari Jenson Gold
Shared meals are the foundation of a civilized society. Ozempic can ruin them.
More
Marine Le Pen and the Weaponized Judiciary
Michel Gurfinkiel
Le Pen might not be allowed to run in 2027.
Her sentencing seems political.
More
Canceling Easter
Nasser Hussain
In England, an elementary school canceled Easter celebrations in the name of “diversity and inclusion.”
More
A Christian at Passover
R. R. Reno
The spirit of this holiday is Psalm 84:1: “How lovely is thy dwelling place, O LORD of hosts!”
More
Connect
Facebook
Twitter
YouTube
Download
Visit us online at
firstthings.com
Copyright © 2025 First Things, All rights reserved.
You are receiving this email because you opted in at www.firstthings.com.
Our mailing address is:
First Things
9 East 40th Street, 10th Floor
New York
,
NY
10016
Add us to your address book
Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can
update your preferences
or unsubscribe from this list.