A Reflection for the Memorial of the Passion of St. John the Baptist, by Tim Reidy
Maurice Timothy Reidy
Tim Reidy joined America’s staff in October 2006 and served as online editor for several years before moving into his current role as the deputy editor in chief. Tim oversees America’s newsroom, directing its daily news coverage as well as working with the editorial leadership team to plan each print issue. Tim also edits the magazine’s Ideas section, where he contributes book reviews and essays. Before joining America, he worked at the Hartford Courant, a newspaper in Connecticut, and Commonweal magazine. In addition to writing for America, he has contributed to The New York Times, the Columbia Journalism Review and the Princeton Alumni Weekly. He has been interviewed about the Catholic Church on WNYC in New York, ABC, Bloomberg TV and other media outlets. Tim also serves on the board of directors of Jesuit Refugee Service USA. He lives in Bronxville, N.Y., with his wife and two children.
The church used to dwell too much on fearing God. Have we gone too far in the opposite direction?
A Reflection for Friday of the Eighteenth Week in Ordinary Time, by Tim Reidy
The antidote to anxiety is a firm faith.
A Reflection for Tuesday of the Fifteenth Week in Ordinary Time, by Tim Reidy
God had to ask Jonah twice (and it was all right)
A Reflection for the Wednesday of the First Week of Lent by Tim Reidy
What if the spiritual life came with a GPS?
A Reflection for the Saturday of the First Week of Advent
The Great Ignatian Challenge turns a Thanksgiving food drive into a (friendly) Jesuit competition
Jim Rowen discusses the genesis of the Great Ignatian Challenge, a yearly competition among Jesuit high schools to see which institution can bring in the most donations for local charities.
In gloomy times, God is still the light
A Reflection for the First Friday of Advent.
Review: When grammar becomes a religion
For the title sisters in ‘The Grammarians,’ words are much more than words, and the rules that govern them must be upheld with a believer’s zeal.
A Martha’s Vineyard mystery from Richard Russo
A detective story is not what we have come to expect from Russo, who generally operates at the same, easy-going speed as his male protagonists.
Review: The feuding fathers of the Democratic Party
Both sons of New York, Alfred E. Smith and Franklin Roosevelt were close political allies. Until the national Democratic convention of 1932.
