If we ourselves cannot hear or see what truly matters, are we the walking dead?
The Good Word
The Trinity reveals the foundation of the universe: Love
The Trinity is not something that we perceive. It is the place where we dwell.
The Holy Spirit is the artist who fashions our humanity
We are what emerges from the action of the Spirit.
What do Winnie the Pooh and Christ’s Ascension have in common? They teach us about imagination.
When we say farewell to those who have meant so much to us, we close up a world like a book.
The Gospel—like motherhood—is a reality beyond words
We can talk about motherhood. We can talk about the Gospel. But both stand beyond talking, beyond words. They’re a dying in living, a dying to live.
The work of the church is ongoing — and we all need to do our part
Our task is not to judge the branches of the vine.
Doubt is normal. The saints have experienced it, too.
There is much more to life and discipleship than death, yet death determines the final meaning of both.
Nothing wonderful in this life will be lost in the resurrection
Intimacy and the honest pleasures of the flesh will not fade away.
It is so easy to forget we are loved. That’s why God gave us his Son — and the church.
Whatever else sin is, it is always a forgetting that we are loved by God. And the more we sin, the more we forget.
Easter Sunday: What a flower can teach us about Jesus’ death (and resurrection)
Louise Glück’s poem, “Wild Iris,” begins with a description of death, the sort of death something made of earth and growing there might recount if it could speak.
