Secret Garden

Among Bruce Springsteen’s greatest hits is one from the mid-nineties entitled, Secret Garden.  The lyrics describe how a particular woman welcomes him into her life.  Spending time together, they enjoy many common experiences, engage in countless conversations, share numerous intimate moments, and go deep into each other’s lives—but only to a particular point.  At that […]

What’s in a Name?

The book of Proverbs (Chapter 21) states: “A good name is greater than riches; high esteem is more valuable that silver or gold.”  When we are born, our parents give us a name.  That name helps to shape our identity.  The Catholic baptismal ritual begins by parents stating their child’s name because the infant’s identity […]

Leo’s Revolution

In 1891 Pope Leo XIII wrote a famous encyclical called Rerum Novarum; the title translates into English roughly as “Of These Things” or “In New Times.” The document became the forerunner to the Catholic Worker Movement and the Catholic Social Teachings that help us maneuver through societal changes with Christ as our compass and guide. […]

America250

As the United States enters our two hundred fiftieth year as a nation, we can look back with much gratitude for the freedom, liberty, and opportunities given to us, while we also call to mind the sorrows of many who sacrificed and suffered in the past as well as those who struggle today.  We contemplate […]

June Sundays

Unlike most liturgical Sundays that are identified by numbers (Second Sunday of Advent, Fifth Sunday of Easter, Thirteenth Sunday of Ordinary Time…), the five Sundays this June are identified by names: Ascension, Pentecost, Holy Trinity, Corpus Christi, and Peter & Paul.  These feasts help us focus on a concept or event that strengthens our relationship […]

Four Key Commitments

Motivational speaker and acclaimed writer, David Brooks, in his book The Second Mountain, articulated four “commitments” that make a person’s life meaningful and fulfilling. The four foundations have to do with home life, work life, social life, and philosophy of life. In discussing them with various people and groups I know they ring true; though it […]

Go Placidly

Ninety-eight years ago, Max Ehrmann wrote the prose poem Desiderata.  It begins with the memorable and soothing line, “Go placidly amid the noise and haste and remember what peace there may be in silence.”  This pensive starter gives contrast to the noisy chaos of our hasty world in which it is so easy for us […]

Pentecost People

A prayer that priests and other religious pray in the cycle of our daily Liturgy of the Hours (or Office/Breviary) reads: “Lord, you renew the face of the earth announcing unforetold wonders.  Through a virgin, you brought forth new birth to our world; through your miracles, new power; through your suffering, new patience; in your […]

Parable of Life

Twentieth century clergyman and author Norman Vincent Peale made famous his Parable of the Prenatal Baby which he first told to a wealthy and powerful aging man who asked him about the mysterious afterlife.  He told it not to explain an unknowable reality but to offer us enlightenment through faith, intelligence, and common sense; he […]

Papacy to Pips

Within the Saint Therese Little Flower faith community, parishioners sometimes refer to common Catholics as “pips” or “people in pews.”  Many pips are interested in what lies ahead for parishes, worldwide and local, since the election of Pope Leo XIV.  There is much speculation based on descriptors of the new pontiff: unifier, multi-cultural, missionary-minded, Christ-centered, […]