Esolen explained that he could have lived with a "somewhat Catholic school that was really committed to the humanities" or "an unreservedly Catholic school where the humanities needed shoring up." However, he concluded Providence offered neither of these options: The campus had become "highly politicized," and the administrative decisions, to him, appeared "basically secular in their inspiration and their aim."
"That is not to say that Providence College is lost," he said. "There are still many excellent people there, Catholics and others who are friendly to the faith, even when they do not share it, and friendly to the humanities. But saving the school is no longer my battle."
The public clash between Esolen's "strong Catholic convictions" and the direction that Providence was going prompted Thomas More's president and several trustees to meet with Esolen at a fundraising event and discuss the possibility of him leaving his tenured position to join Thomas More College.
"It was rather remarkable," Fahey said. "After about an hour of conversation, we were all wondering why it had taken so long to come to the conclusion that Esolen's scholarship, understanding of an integrated Catholic education, and love of traditional Catholic culture were a magnificent fit with the mission of Thomas More College."
'Good Cheer' at Thomas More
In contrast to the exhaustion and isolation he experienced at Providence College, Esolen said a recent visit to Thomas More left him "full of good cheer and energy."
"For somebody who isn't getting younger, those can take you a long way," he said. "They can add many years to your life as a teacher, whereas discouragement and disappointment lead to exhaustion."
Having a community "filled with the faith," Esolen said, strengthens his own faith. He finds it a "considerable advantage" that Thomas More has daily Mass offered outside of the class schedule, followed by lunch, "when you have a chance of sitting with anybody and everybody."
He felt drawn to Thomas More College because the students are meant to be "surrounded by beauty and sanity," where young men and women falling in love and getting married is celebrated – not the "rat poison of the sexual revolution, the 'Lonely Revolution.'" He admires how the education focuses on the "whole human being, not disembodied chunks of him," making it the kind of environment that can produce "leaders in thought, art, public affairs and the Church."
Esolen said Thomas More College's Center for the Restoration of Catholic Culture is a "great opportunity" for him and his family.
"It is as if they had read my mind or I had read their minds when I wrote my book Out of the Ashes: Restoring American Culture," he said.
(Story continues below)
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The Catholic scholar said he is looking forward to helping introduce freshmen to the ancient world and "how to write like human beings and not machines."
He said he will also be focusing on producing other poetic works other than translation. One such project is tentatively called "Centuries of Grace."
But Esolen said he intends to bring to Thomas More what he sought to bring to the students of Providence – "a love for art and poetry and the best of human wisdom, and the trust that such things can bring us into the precincts of the divine."
He added, "Not into the sanctuary itself, but into the neighborhood. And that is no small thing that they can do."
This article originally apperaed in the National Catholic Register.