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In All Things
Kevin Clarke
The U S Bishops had a busy day In addition to the announcement regarding the CDF s plan for the reform of the Leadership Conference of Women Religious and encouraging the United States to end the embargo and normalize relations with Cuba the bishops endured a return scolding from House Speaker Jo
In All Things
Kevin Clarke
On the same day that the U S C C B and the C D F brought the hammer down on U S women religious because of their controversial taste in conference speakers radical feminism and alleged lack of sufficient enthusiasm for the church s teaching on abortion women s ordination and homosexuality on
In All Things
James Martin, S.J.
In response to the Vatican s investigation of women s religious congregations in the United States and of nbsp the Leadership Conference for Women Religious the main organizing body of women s religious congregations in this country the USCCB has announced the Congregation for the Doctrine of the
In All Things
James T. Keane
Readers of this blog may recall my post from two weeks ago today about Joe Hoover S J a classmate of mine at the Jesuit School of Theology who was found guilty of obstructing a public thoroughfare during an Occupy Oakland march on January 28 2012 nbsp Joe was sentenced on Easter Monday to ten
In All Things
Michael J. O’Loughlin
When Washington state s Governor Christine Gregoire signed signed a bill to legalize same-sex marriage in that state opponents promised to wage a fierce campaign to prevent the law from going into effect through a ballot referendum The Archdiocese of Seattle has pledged to help gather signatures t
In All Things
Sidney Callahan
nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp I rsquo ve been arguing against moral anger ever since the day Dorothy Day chided me in a letter ldquo But isn rsquo t anger a sin rdquo At that period I was arguing that feminists should cultivate anger as a means to energize nbsp the struggle for women s equality
In All Things
Vincent J. Miller
A few texts on taxation plus bonus references to the universal destination of goods and distributive justice Catechism of the Catholic Church nbsp 2240 Submission to authority and co-responsibility for the common good make it morally obligatory to pay taxes to exercise the right to vote and t
In All Things
William Van Ornum
The American Psychological Association has over 50 divisions including interests such as teaching of psychology psychotherapy psychological testing neuropsychology psychology of peace and many other interesting areas Recently Division 36 mdash Society for the Psychology of Religion and Spiritua
In All Things
Vincent J. Miller
It may simply be a sign of my own dubious discipleship but I always feel Thomas gets a bad rap nbsp It rsquo s not like the other disciples leapt eagerly to belief nbsp Jesus rsquo appearance grounded their faith More however than giving Thomas his due I think there is something going on i
In All Things
Francis X. Clooney, S.J.
Cambridge MA Many of you have patiently read and commented on my posts in the past four years and I appreciate your interest But most of you I ve not met and you ve had to rely on the written word But on Friday April 20 there is a chance for more If you are in the New York area and would li
The Word
Peter Feldmeier
Third Sunday of Easter (B), April 22, 2012
Film
Jon M. Sweeney

'Blue Like Jazz' offers an evangelical coming of age story

Editorials
The Editors
From April 2012: 'Rational gun control might save the lives of future Trayvon Martins of every race and age.'
Poetry
Darrin M. McCloskey

When you think of the place,

Books
Paul Moses
The pope who quit
Catholic Book Club
Maurice Timothy Reidy

Marilynne Robinson is best known for her first two novels, Housekeeping and Gilead, which appeared 20 years apart. Reviews of Gilead (2004) were rapturous, yet readers sometimes wondered: what took so long? Robinson’s latest collection of essays, When I Was a Child I Read Books, offers a satisfying answer. The book reveals an agile mind formed by decades of deep reading. A committed Christian and American, Robinson calls upon believers and citizens alike to live up to their highest ideals.

When I Was a Child takes up a number of disparate subjects. Robinson writes about Thomas More, Cicero, Jack Miles, Moses, cosmology and Johann Friedrich Oberlin with equal enthusiasm. The essays are surprisingly, and refreshingly, political. Robinson admits to being an unabashed liberal, and offers an extended critique of capitalism, a word, she notes, which never appears in America’s founding documents despite its widespread invocation today. Citing Walt Whitman, she writes that as a country “we have never fully achieved democracy,” and that we must recommit ourselves to its flourishing and not be distracted by the pursuit of “power and wealth.”

Robinson makes an erudite case for the good of public institutions. She revisits influential but misunderstood figures in support of her argument. It is often said, for example, that we live in a Calvinist society, which prizes an individual work ethic. Yet John Calvin was by no means neglectful of the common good, Robinson writes; he emphasized that we must do “good to our neighbors” and not “seclude them from our abundance.” A similar ethic can be found in the law of Moses, which has often been erroneously contrasted with the law of Christ. “The law of Moses puts liberation theology to shame in its passionate loyalty to the poor,” Robinson tartly notes. “Why do we not know this yet?”

Readers of Robinson’s novels may be surprised by her essay style. Compared to the concise prose of Gilead, the writing of When I Was I Child can seem labyrinthine. Robinson acknowledges this plain fact: “I think anyone can see that my style is considerably more indebted to Cicero than to Hemingway.” Readers daunted by her prose may wish to start with the more accessible essays, like “Wondrous Love” and the title selection, a lovely reflection on the elusive spirit of the West.

But by all means, read the whole book, slowly if need be. Don't be surprised if you find yourself underlining furiously:

“Science can give us knowledge, but it cannot give us wisdom.”

Signs Of the Times
From AP, CNS, RNS, Staff and other sources

Caritas Internationalis is launching an appeal for a preventive strike on hunger in West Africa’s Sahel region.

Signs Of the Times
From AP, CNS, RNS, Staff and other sources

More than 40,000 people from 41 countries gathered in Anaheim, Calif., for the annual Los Angeles Religious Education Congress.

Television
Mary Valle

Why Dolores Hart left Hollywood behind

Of Many Things
Drew Christiansen
Jonathan Haidt's book The Righteous Mind is addressed to our national discontent.