Category: Learn & Live the Faith

Bumper Sticker History: Remembering Some Truly Audacious Military Operations
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Bumper Sticker History: Remembering Some Truly Audacious Military Operations

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On March 19, speaking at a Morris Township, New Jersey Democratic Party fundraiser, Vice President Joe Biden provided what may be the mother of all election year bumper stickers when he asserted, “Osama Bin Laden is dead and General Motors is alive. Think about it.” To help wrap our minds around these two facts, referring […]

Is This Fast Enough?
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Is This Fast Enough?

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My favorite food is peanut butter.  I eat it every day.  I don’t need bread or jelly—I eat it from the jar with a spoon.   Every year I think about quitting during Lent but I never do.  Like an addict, I cannot think about life without peanut butter but I know life cannot go […]

Lazarus
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Lazarus

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Some find it hard to accept that God would love some people more than others.  That wouldn’t be fair, they say. But God became man.  If he did not love some more than others, Jesus wouldn’t be fully human.  For human beings have family and friends.  While we can do good and even risk our […]

The Creed: A Spiritual Treasure
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The Creed: A Spiritual Treasure

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In his masterpiece, An Essay on the Development of Christian Doctrine, Blessed John Henry Cardinal Newman at the age of fifteen describes his initial conversion toward the teachings of the Catholic Church where he, “Fell under the influences of a definite creed, and received into my intellect impressions of dogma, which, though God’s mercy, have […]

Five Practical Ways to Pray with Mary
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Five Practical Ways to Pray with Mary

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During Pope Benedict XVI’s General Audience on March 14 about praying with Mary, he pointed out times in Mary’s life that were pivotal to salvation history and in which she demonstrated particular aspects of prayer. When I read the Pope’s words, I was inspired to take them a step further and to explore ways in […]

Muslim Persecution of Christians: February, 2012
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Muslim Persecution of Christians: February, 2012

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Half of Iraq’s indigenous Christians are gone due to the unleashed forces of jihad, many of them fleeing to nearby Syria; yet, as the Assad regime comes under attack by al-Qaeda and others, the jihad now seeps into Syria, where Christians are experiencing a level of persecution unprecedented in the nation’s modern history. Likewise, some […]

Lent: A Time to Ask, Seek, and Knock
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Lent: A Time to Ask, Seek, and Knock

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Ask and it will be given to you; seek and you will find; knock and the door will be opened to you. For everyone who asks receives; he who seeks finds; and to him who knocks, the door will be opened.  Which of you, if his son asks for bread, will give him a stone? […]

"Sorry" Seems to be the Hardest Word
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“Sorry” Seems to be the Hardest Word

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The association of being a Christian and a Catholic comes with a great personal responsibility. It is no doubt an expectation of those who know us to be a Christian that we act like one. This is a natural expectation. People seem to lose the focus about what they expect from a Christian when it […]

A Short Meditation on Living Water
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A Short Meditation on Living Water

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Ezekiel, caught up in the Spirit of God, has a vision of the Temple.  Water pours from beneath the Temple threshold.  This water is clean and live-giving, restoring everything it touches.  It flows east, east toward Eden, so that the garden may be purified and man redeemed. Ezekiel does not realize that this Temple is […]

Reflections for Sunday, March 25, 2012
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Reflections for Sunday, March 25, 2012

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Meditation and Questions for Reflection or Group Discussion (Jeremiah 31:31-34; Psalm 51:3-4,12-15; Hebrews 5:7-9; John 12:20-33) Bearing Much Fruit for the Kingdom of God “Unless a grain of wheat falls to the ground and dies, it remains just a grain of wheat; but if it dies, it pro­duces much fruit.” (John 12:24) Have you ever […]

Deception for our Times? Questioning Anne a Lay Apostle
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Deception for our Times? Questioning Anne a Lay Apostle

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Scandal is developing around an American woman living in Ireland who claims to be a Catholic mystic but hides her true identity, misleads people, takes in millions of dollars and is protected by influential people. For the past several years, Kathryn Ann Clarke, going under the name of “Anne a lay apostle” has been travelling […]

Streets of Gold, Canals of Green Beer, and Seeing is Believing!
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Streets of Gold, Canals of Green Beer, and Seeing is Believing!

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Rejoice Jerusalem and all who love her.  Be joyful, all who were in morning and be satisfied at her consoling breast —  Isa 66:10-11. “My name is Patrick.  I am a sinner, a simple country person, and the least of all believers.  I am looked down upon by many. … I was taken prisoner … I […]

The Church Wasn't Meant to be the "Cool Mom"
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The Church Wasn’t Meant to be the “Cool Mom”

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When I was asked to share my perspective on the HHS mandate, I thought there must be a mistake. Surely folks would rather hear from a good Catholic. A perfectly NFP-practicing, saved herself for marriage—five, six, seven-kid-having Catholic woman. That hasn’t exactly been my path. Not to mention, what could I possibly add to the […]

CL16 -hbratton notxt
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How’s This For Clarity in Preaching?

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  At some point in the lives of far too many people, they no longer recognize or believe in the existence of sin. They look right at it, desire it, engage in it, but don’t see it for what it actually is — a grave offense and injustice to God, an act of immense ingratitude to […]

On the Shrine of Our Lady of Good Help
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On the Shrine of Our Lady of Good Help

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The Shrine of Our Lady of Good Help in Champion, Wisconsin has been in the news for over a year after the local Bishop, David L. Ricken of the Diocese of Green Bay, approved as supernatural the apparitions to a Belgian immigrant woman named Adele Brise (“Breece”) in the 1850s.[i]  These apparitions went unnoticed by […]

"It Ain't Over Till It's Over:"  My Mother's Deathbed Conversion
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“It Ain’t Over Till It’s Over:” My Mother’s Deathbed Conversion

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  “Never, ever, ever give up.”  Thus said Winston Churchill in October 1941, in the shortest of his speeches.  As the WW II statesman applied this maxim famously to political life, so too might we apply the principle of perseverance to our personal lives when the warfare is spiritual in form. Perseverance works in tandem […]

You Are What You Do / Say / Think….
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You Are What You Do / Say / Think….

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I read once that when a neurosurgeon touches a spot on the human brain with a probe, he elicits memories.  All kinds of memories: a moment in childhood, a school day, a family vacation from years past.  Sights, sounds, tastes, smells, feelings.  Pain and pleasure, fear and fury and fun.  Whatever is stored on that particular […]

The Church’s Mission: Apostolic or Political?
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The Church’s Mission: Apostolic or Political?

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In a recent column at CatholicCulture.org, Phil Lawler criticized the bishops of the United States for issuing statements on “too many debatable political issues” rather than sticking to matters that fall more properly within the scope of their teaching authority. As an example, he pointed to a newly released USCCB statement that “appeared to give […]

Making Good Decisions, Part 2
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Making Good Decisions, Part 2

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Last week, we talked about making good decisions — God’s way. I want to follow up on that. One may ask, “How does a Bible verse that is so abstract make sense regarding my finances.” The fact is that it does have an impact, financially and spiritually. One of the key components in our relationship […]

Fasting That Can Help Your Love Life
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Fasting That Can Help Your Love Life

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Lent is a time when we make an attempt to address things about our corporeal and spiritual lives that need addressing. Many give up sweets as a gesture of putting aside objectively good things associated with feasting to live the days of mourning in preparation for when they will feast again at Easter. Some attempt […]

The Death-Haunted Art of Friendship (Part I)
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The Death-Haunted Art of Friendship (Part I)

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Eve Tushnet is among the most promising young Catholic intellectuals in America. She is a student of art and culture whose writing touches on sexuality, personhood, and faith. Published in journals secular and religious, she was profiled in the New York Times as a “gay Catholic voice against same-sex marriage.” This is the first of […]

woman, prison
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A Heart Full of Repentance: My Time at the Prison

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A smooth shaved head, dark tear drop forever etched by her left eye, and Roxanne scrawled in ink across her neck, this young woman stood before me, arms over crutches to support her newly amputated leg and smiled.  “I can’t believe I’m getting to meet you,” she said.  “I finished your book today.  You’ve been through so much,” she […]

3-Minute Retreat: Marked with Salvation
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3-Minute Retreat: Marked with Salvation

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The brief reflection below is based on a 3-Minute Lenten retreat brought to you by Loyola Press. At the bottom of this reflection is a link for you to access the retreat. About 10 years ago Sarah, my Downs syndrome daughter, was asked to the senior prom by Chris, a disabled boy she had known […]

Love Is the Thing, Even if I Want to Judge
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Love Is the Thing, Even if I Want to Judge

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If you, LORD, kept a record of sins, Lord, who could stand? But with you there is forgiveness, so that we can, with reverence, serve you. ~ Psalm 130:3-4 I’m working on not being so judgmental. I wonder why I judge people, what the need is to reckon another person’s rectitude with God. It’s a […]