Grain of Wheat
Modernist Fish
The Psychology and Anthropology of Compline (Audio Version)
0:00
Current time: 0:00 / Total time: -13:14
-13:14

The Psychology and Anthropology of Compline (Audio Version)

The Principles of Hierarchy, Mimesis, and Local Custom

This is an audio version of “The Psychology and Anthropology of Compline.”

This is also the soft launch of Grain of Wheat’s accompanying podcast Modernist Fish which I will officially launch soon alongside interviews and discussions about all the same topics covered on this site along with audio versions of some of the most popular essays, like this one.

Here’s more about Modernist Fish, which will be available as soon as we produce our first regular episode through this Substack newsletter alongside YouTube, Rumble, and various other podcast platforms:

We're all moderns in a modernist world, swamped and distracted from the truth by secularism, "the deep state", the "deep church" and more. And so, we have to put in extra effort to relearn how to live a fully traditional Christian life again. James Green and Tim Dominik are two such "modernist fish" here to journey with you on this process of relearning. Here, we'll discuss theology, philosophy, free will, Catholic spiritual life, politics, history, and more in conversations sure to be full of hot takes, wild claims, and how to see the world as it really is, which is most definitely not what the world has been telling you it is.

This is the podcast accompaniment to the Grain of Wheat Substack at grainofwheat.substack.com and conversations will often parallel or accompany written pieces from the site, with audio versions of selected articles also to be made available on this podcast feed.

Oh, and also just like our Substack page, everything somehow relates to John 12:24!

Thanks for reading Grain of Wheat! This post is public so feel free to share it.

Share

Also, if you happen to visit Lander, Wyoming, please join us at 8:30 PM Mon-Sat and 7:30 PM on Sunday nights in the Immaculate Conception Oratory at the corner of 3rd St. and Garfield. We also pray Vespers at 4:30 PM on Sundays and major feast days, and also, with an admittedly poorer consistency, various hours of the Little Office of the Blessed Virgin Mary.

Discussion about this episode