All posts filed under: BLOG POSTS

Snowfall in August

Published by Danielle Peters

Imagine a quick snowfall on an otherwise brutally hot day in August. By all accounts, that’s exactly what happened on the morning of August 5, 352 upon the Esquiline Hill in Rome! Legend tells us that a childless aristocratic couple had asked the Blessed Virgin Mary to show them a worthy cause to which they could donate their fortune. This couple, John and his wife, was privileged to be visited by...

The Science of Love

Published by Catherine Cavadini

A girl is standing in front of the teacher, a girl rather small for her age. The round face is quite childlike, while the slight body already betrays the early maturity of this southern race. The girl is clad in a peasant smock. She wears wooden shoes. But everyone, not the children only, wear them here, except those very few who belong to the so-called better circles. The brown eyes of the girl a...

Teaching and Making Space Holy

Published by Jim Corcoran

Going into a new environment is always stressful, especially when heading into summer school. The kids don’t want to be there. They would rather be goofing around outdoors or spending hours playing PokemonGo on their smart phones. They do not want to be looking at my face trying to teach them study skills. Study skills, I know, is not an actual subject which made the teaching all the more difficu...

From Mother to Daughter: Carrying Out Compassionate Leadership

Published by Clarissa Aljentera

Being born into an extended family with more than 50 first cousins meant never having a shortage of playtime friends and sports buddies. It was easy to come to a family gathering and find my place, as my brother and I were on the younger end of the 55 first cousins. We were born into community and later mentored by numerous cousins who were good role models.

Magdalene and the Problem of Hope

Published by Anthony J. Oleck

Last month, Pope Francis announced that the liturgical celebration of St. Mary Magdalene would be raised from Memorial to Feast, an attempt to honor the “Apostle to the Apostles” and the first witness of the Resurrection, as well as to emphasize the importance of this woman in the life of the Church. But who is Mary Magdalene, and why is this minor liturgical adjustment important? Some people asso...

A Lifestyle of Mercy: Models and Opportunities

Published by Danielle Peters

Having crossed the midpoint of the Year of Mercy, it is time to take stock. During his eighth jubilee audience on June 30, 2016, Pope Francis challenged us by asking whether or not mercy has become our style of life. We can easily recognize this life style, the Pope noted, in a person in whom “mercy has eyes to see, ears to listen, hands to resolve.” In other words, “The works of mercy are not the...

Diagnosing violence: A response to Christine Horner

Published by Deborah Savage

Dear Ms. Horner,

The Hidden Vocation of the Catechist

Published by John Cavadini

Editor's note: These remarks were delivered at the annual Echo Mentor Dinner on July 9, 2016.

Longing for Communion: Catholics, Lutherans, and the Eucharist

Published by The Editors

Honoring the Life of Elie Wiesel: Why Catholics Must Help Humanity to Not Forget the Shoah

Published by Justin McClain

On Saturday, July 2, 2016, the world lost Elie Wiesel at the age of 87. Wiesel, who survived the Auschwitz concentration camp as a teenager, lost many of his family members during the Holocaust, in which over 6,000,000 Jews and other marginalized members of society were mercilessly annihilated by the Nazi German regime. Wiesel most famously chronicled his plight in his now-classic book Night, orig...