In the end—at the end—the human heart has only one plea. It wants to live. It knows that it was not created to go down into the darkness.
Terrance Klein
The Rev. Terrance W. Klein is a priest of the Diocese of Dodge City and author of Vanity Faith.
American Christians are called to a heroism beyond bullets and battlefields.
Justice and peace are of God. To receive them, the depths of the human must be laid open.
The fundamental task of life is to stretch our horizons.
That world is no larger than the people and concerns you care about. Everything else is only the wallpaper of your world.
Vows are for life: two senses of a common saying.
Vows exist to foster life, to defend it, to allow it to flourish.
Clem and Richard Neuhaus: the sad settlement of separation
If heaven admitted shame, Clem and Richard Neuhaus might still blush at the separation they chose to create between themselves on earth.
To be an adult, reclaim the best of the child.
Jesus went to the cross, a terribly adult reality, with the trust and the resiliency of a child.
Vision or illusion?
Martin Luther King Jr., Ta-Nehisi Coates and the American Dream
Christ is too beautiful not to be true.
We used to stress (rightly) that to miss Mass was a grave sin. We ought to work harder to make Mass something gracious and beautiful.
Confession: the sacrament of story
In Confession, your act of telling your story opens the way for God’s act of forgiveness.
Adulthood begins with the realization that choices matter.
Adults should know that any choice of substance changes us forever. To use the image of the poet, we don’t just follow one road rather than another.
