Andrew speaks at parishes, conferences, and universities on tradition and reform in the contemporary Church. Each talk draws on original research, primary sources, and the arguments of Faith in Crisis.
Why do so many faithful Catholics distrust the Church they love? Andrew addresses the roots of the traditionalist movement, the theology of magisterial authority, and the path from suspicion to communion.
A historically grounded, non-polemical account of the post-conciliar liturgical reform, its theological foundations, and the ongoing questions it raises for worship and formation.
Drawing on three generations of ecumenical scholarship, Andrew explores the doctrinal differences between Catholics and Orthodox, where common ground already exists, the joint agreements of the past half-century, and what the approaching millennium of the 1054 schism demands of both Churches.
Why are young adults leaving the Church, and what does Catholic anthropology have to say about the broader crisis of meaning, identity, and belonging in a post-Christian society?
Andrew speaks at parishes, conferences, and universities on ecumenism, Church authority, ressourcement theology, and the path to Christian unity — from parish formation evenings to academic keynotes.
Parish Formation
Adult-education evenings and parish missions on the liturgy and the reform, discerning apparition and private-revelation claims, and understanding the traditionalist moment with clarity and charity.
Conferences & Keynotes
Plenary and breakout talks on East-West ecumenism and the road to reunion, the crisis of authority behind the traditionalist turn, and clericalism in the contemporary Church.
Universities & Seminaries
Lectures and seminars on ressourcement theology and the nature–grace debate, the history of the liturgical reform, Catholic anthropology in an age of AI, and the ecclesiology of the schism.