Is the performance of one’s pastoral duties impacted by disbelief? How?
Throw a little light on the first follower of any old idea, and you could soon have a full-blown movement.
Can a culture that encourages scattershot and rapid-fire thinking embrace the paradox of slow prayer?
Facebook and Twitter continue to be popular ways of getting the word out about our posts, but a funny correlation seems to exist that those which get the most comments on Facebook tend to be the ones that generate the most comments on the blog itself, and it’s not always the ones you might expect.
A wordless three-month performance piece at the Museum of Modern Art says an awful lot about our hunger for contact.
The dead man was being buried, and many friends were conducting him to his tomb. Christ, the life and resurrection, meets him there. He is the Destroyer of death and of corruption. He is the One in whom we live and move and are.
It’s worth noting that many dystopian novels take place in societies where the connection between sex and procreation has been completely severed. In Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World, for example, sex is encouraged, even for the young, as a social activity, and children are manufactured in a process designed for efficiency and the propagation of traits that support a consumer society.