The Night Before

The poem below, by an anonymous author, entitled, ‘Twas the Night Before Jesus, will seem rather corny to some readers, including me, but the underlying message is significant. Sometimes we want the resurrection without the crucifixion, the incarnation without the struggles of living, the wood of the crib without the wood of the cross, the […]

Inner City Christmas

Hamilton W. Mabee once said: “Blessed is the season which engages the whole world in a conspiracy of love.”  It’s a wondrous scene in urban parishes each December as numerous inner-city residents line up at churches to receive cart loads of groceries and/or gifts to share with loved ones in their humble dwellings during the […]

What’s In a Name

The Rite of Baptism for Christians begins with parents stating the name of their child.  This ancient tradition gives identity to the beloved baby human.  Proverbs, 22:1, states: “A good name is more desirable than great riches; a family’s high esteem has greater value than gold.”  Some have suggested that this identity is only meant […]

Holy Mother, Hold Me

In the mid-1980s, when Eric Clapton was going through dark personal struggles and loss, he wrote a beautiful song, Holy Mother.  It is a prayer of surrender which expresses his conversion from being self-centered to being centered in the mystery of life, God, and connecting to others in efforts that contribute to society’s good rather […]

Advent Day By Day

Advent is a mystical journey.  Mary and Joseph set the tone for us with their journey to Bethlehem.  It is a journey of trusting in visions and locutions, a journey of being ostracized and ridiculed, a journey of believing in impossible things, an adventurous journey that changed the course of human history.  Their journey weaves […]

Many Ways To Say Thanks

In late November our nation invites us to pause in gratitude for the numerous blessings we receive and share.  The ritual began over 400 years ago, before the country was even born, when pilgrim-people from across the Atlantic sailed to the unchartered land we now occupy.  According to tradition, colonists gathered with indigenous Pokanoket people […]

Second Naivete

I love the Catholic Church and am blessed to have been shaped by it.  It has anchored my life and kept me oriented toward the good.  It has educated me, inspired me, employed me, ordained me, and helped me through difficult times.  Like many other things that I love—my family, my country, my home—I always […]

A Best & Worst Week

The Greek word “metanoia” is sometimes used in church jargon.  It means an about-face or one-eighty-degree change—a total turn-around conversion.  This week in Kansas City many sports fans marveled over how our major league baseball team fared last year with a 56-106 record (tied for worst in their history) compared to where they ended up […]

A New Day

“This is the beginning of a new day.  God has given me this day to use as I will.  I can waste it, or I can use it for good. What I do today is important because I am exchanging a day of my life for it. When tomorrow comes this day will be gone […]

No Need For God

When nineteenth century French scholar Pierre-Simon Laplace was asked by Napolean how God fit into academic equations, he famously responded, “I have no need of that hypothesis.”   Though he was quick to admit that what humans know about our existence is extremely limited and what we don’t know about it is immense, many have used […]