Columnists

Marcellino D'Ambrosio, Ph.D.
0

The Holy Family

by

The Passion of the Christ was the most intense movie I’ve ever seen. But there was a moment of comic relief, a flashback to a young Jesus in the back yard, building a new invention. It was the kind of table that is now a commonplace. But in a society where people reclined to dine, […]

Rev. Tucker Cordani
1

The Birth of Christ and Time-Travel

by

On the Second Sunday of Advent I preached a sermon the subject of which was time, specifically on the minutiae that governs our temporal reality. Like sands in an hour glass, so are the days of our lives. Now I would like to revisit the subject of time from a different perspective—time travel. This is […]

Dr. Paul Kengor
0

When Hollywood Celebrated Christmas and Marriage

by

I don’t see a happy ending to this story.

Marcellino D'Ambrosio, Ph.D.
0

The Mystery of the Incarnation

by

“Mystery,” he sneered. “That’s a good Catholic word.” My friend was a fundamentalist who had more than a bit of antipathy towards the Catholic Church, charging that it added to the simple faith of the Bible. But he didn’t read his bible very well. The word “mystery” is a Catholic word, only because it is […]

Rev. Tucker Cordani
0

18 Shopping Days Until the Day of the Lord

by

2 Pt 3:8-14 We await new heavens and a new earth Wasted time is not a prized commodity in American society. We are a people ruled by the calendar and the clock. “Time is money,” we say, because time is to be filled with purposeful controlled activity which is to be productive of things that […]

Marcellino D'Ambrosio, Ph.D.
0

Prepare ye the Way

by

Advent is a time of joyful anticipation. For someone even bigger than Santa Claus is coming to town. The human race has been waiting a long time for his next and final visit. Actually, it waited a long time for the first visit. Things had gone awry quite early in the history of the human […]

Dr. Paul Kengor
0

Wolfboy and Princess Cupcake

by

We were made male and female.

Marcellino D'Ambrosio, Ph.D.
0

You Snooze, You Lose

by

Have you ever had one of those days when you just wish God would show up, snap his figures and work miracles? The people of Israel had about 500 years’ worth of days like that, groaning under the oppression of one tyrant after another. The book of Isaiah gives voice to these sentiments: “O that […]

Rev. Tucker Cordani
7

A Lovely View of Heaven but I’d Rather be With You

by

The Judgment of the Nations (Mt 25:31-46). Solemnity of Jesus Christ, King of the Universe, Sunday, November 23, AD 2014 A disclaimer: this story was written in English but with some Italian and Spanish lingo thrown in. Subtitles are included. Pericle Cordani, my paternal grandfather, left his village in northern Italy and journeyed across the […]

Marcellino D'Ambrosio, Ph.D.
1

Last Judgment

by

On the final Sunday in the liturgical year, it is time to remember things that we’d prefer to forget. For starters, we recall that there is an infinite qualitative difference between us and God. He is immortal and infinite. We are not. Each one of us will come to our individual end. But so will […]

Rev. Tucker Cordani
0

November: Month of the Dead

by

“Vanity of vanities! All things are vanity!” (Eccl 1:2). So says Qoheleth, the Preacher, the protagonist of the Book of Ecclesiastes, the most unique book in the portion of the Old Testament classified as wisdom literature. As “king of Jerusalem,” the Preacher imparts to the reader his musings on life and death, which to him […]

Marcellino D'Ambrosio, Ph.D.
0

The Parable of the Talents

by

I’ve seen it time and time again. Someone decides to seek a better paying job, or pursue and investment strategy, or launch a new business. Invariably some pious person in the parish objects that maybe this is too worldly, that it will be a distraction from Church and family priorities, that one should be satisfied […]

Dr. Paul Kengor
0

Martin Luther King and the Berlin Wall

by

A speech that has slipped through the cracks of time.

Marcellino D'Ambrosio, Ph.D.
0

Who Needs Church Buildings?

by

As a rebellious teenager, I thought that Catholics should stop wasting their money on expensive churches. We ought to sell them all and buy food for the poor, I argued. Funny thing. Jesus, who cared much for the poor, did not have this attitude. As an adolescent he yearned to spend time in Herod’s sumptuous […]

Rev. Tucker Cordani
0

The Dedication of the Lateran Basilica

by

In high school science class I learned that water is the universal solvent. That is the extent of my scientific knowledge. In geography class I was taught that three quarters of the earth consists of water. And the water we drink today is the same water that the dinosaurs drank millions of years ago. I […]

Jake Frost
0

I Get Knocked Down, But I Get Up Again

by

Life is more about getting up than it is about not falling. So my father commented once, long ago, when (of all things) we were watching figure skating. It wasn’t just any figure skating, though, it was the return of Scott Hamilton after his battle with cancer. For those too young to remember, Scott Hamilton […]

E. L. Core
0

Still a Bottomless Pit

by

Shouldn’t this figure be newsworthy?

Dr. Paul Kengor
2

Congress Makes History

by

I honestly didn’t think I’d ever live to see it.

Marcellino D'Ambrosio, Ph.D.
0

Holiness is For All!

by

At age 16, I thought that aspiring to holiness was out of the question. If you really wanted to be holy, I thought, you had to be a priest, nun, or brother. And you had to spend your days doing “religious stuff” like praying, preaching, teaching catechism, or serving the poor. But I had developed […]

Rev. Tucker Cordani
0

Eight Days a Week

by

Saint Paul’s letters addressed to the Thessalonians are the oldest New Testament writings.  He wrote them during his second missionary journey, less than 20 years after the Resurrection.   On that journey he entered Europe for the first time and the Macedonian city of Thessalonica was his second stop.  In 1 Thessalonians he praises the members […]

Marcellino D'Ambrosio, Ph.D.
0

The Radical Rabbi and the Great Commandment

by

They are at it again. In this Sunday’s gospel Jesus’ opponents enlist a lawyer to do what lawyers do best- ask a question that puts a person on the hot seat. “Which commandment of the law is the greatest?” (Matthew 22:34-40). If the law consisted in only the Ten Commandments, this would be tough enough. […]

Dr. Paul Kengor
0

When the Communists Murdered a Priest

by

Fr. Popieluszko was beatified in 2010.

Marcellino D'Ambrosio, Ph.D.
0

Render unto Caesar

by

Despite their flattering words, they were trying to trap him, to force him into a no win situation. Consider the circumstances.  They are living under the iron boot of a brutal empire which filled the earth with its idolatry.  Patriotic Jews longed to throw off the tyrants’ yoke.  They prayed for an anointed king who […]

Jake Frost
0

The Kettle to the Pot

by

We were having oatmeal for breakfast, and the one-year-old handed me his spoon and said: “Feed!” He likes it when I feed him sometimes (as in: as often as I’ll agree to). The morning in question he was just too cute to turn down, so I took the offered spoon and started feeding him. He […]