On “Tender Age” Shelters, Internment, and Concentration Camps
I want to tell you a story. It is a story about a current national shame, uncertain theological...
Read Moreby Miguel J Romero | Jun 25, 2018 | Current Events | 0
I want to tell you a story. It is a story about a current national shame, uncertain theological...
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by Conor Kelly | Jun 18, 2018 | American Politics, Current Events | 0
Earlier this month, the Catholic Theological Society of America, the self-described “principal association of Catholic theologians in North America,” held its annual convention in Indianapolis, IN. I had the opportunity to...
Read Moreby Jana Bennett | Jun 15, 2018 | Current Events | 0
EZ 17:22-24 PS 92:2-3, 13-14, 15-16 2 COR 5:6-10 MK 4:26-34 For us in the northern hemisphere,...
Read Moreby Kelly Johnson | Jun 15, 2018 | Current Events | 0
Let’s talk about Jeff Sessions’ biblical defense for the policy of separating children from their parents at the US border. It’s a bait and switch game meant to confuse Christians into tolerating an utter rejection of hospitality and blatant denial of human dignity.
Read Moreby Jason King | Jun 6, 2018 | Current Events, Lectionary | 0
Tenth Sunday in Ordinary Time Reading 1:Genesis 3:9-15 Responsorial Psalm: Psalm 130:1-8 Reading...
Read Moreby Maria Morrow | May 29, 2018 | Current Events | 0
Despite the constancy of the faith throughout two millennia, Christianity is always being adapted to the present age, usually with some difficulty, debate, and struggle. Catholic history presents us with so many examples of this...
Read Moreby Jana Bennett | May 28, 2018 | Current Events | 0
I. Memories that Name Who We Are Yesterday, I attended Heritage Day here in Dayton, which is...
Read Moreby David Cloutier | May 23, 2018 | Current Events, Lectionary | 0
Readings: Dt 4:32-34, 39-40; Ps 33; Rm 8:14-17; Mt 28:16-20 Who is God? We think we know, but...
Read Moreby Miguel J Romero | May 22, 2018 | Current Events | 0
Where to begin? I’m not entirely sure I know how to do what I’ve agreed to do as a contributor to...
Read Moreby Kelly Johnson | May 21, 2018 | Current Events | 0
An African-American preached God’s word in the still-unshaken remnant of a colonial empire, to a congregation not notable for their marital fidelity or their evangelical warmth, and he spoke with tenderness and passion and hope. He didn’t flatter or pander. He didn’t cajole or castigate. He didn’t talk about them at all. He talked about the power of God’s love to renew a tired old world. He spoke of the wisdom of slaves who knew the healing balm of Gilead to a congregation whose suffering is more often related to excessive wealth and fame, not to oppression.
And it shook people, which was not what anyone expected of a sermon at a royal wedding.
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