Custodians of the Flame I Discipleship isn't a solitary march toward some austere perfection. It's a companionship, a shared path where the disciple learns not only from the Master but also from the fragile presence of others who walk beside him. Communion, in this sense, isn't merely a sacramental gesture confined to the altar; it's the living tissue of discipleship itself, the way our lives are bound together in Christ. And stewardship—the often narrowed word that people reduce to the management of money or property—emerges here as nothing less than the vigilance required to safeguard this communion. The disciple isn't an owner but a witness. He doesn’t possess Christ; he's possessed by Him. To follow Christ is to be dispossessed of the illusion of autonomy, to live in a world that's no longer “mine” but “ours.” In this, stewardship isn't bookkeeping, but custodianship of grace. The disciple holds vigil over a reality he cannot produce, only receive:...
Each year, the Easter Vigil offers the Church a cosmic interruption. It's the night in which time cracks open and eternity pours through. And this year, Archbishop Sample’s homily reminded us—quietly but unmistakably—that the Resurrection is not a metaphor. It's a rupture. A healing. A mission. We're not permitted to be ungrateful for the miracle of existence. The Most Important Night—Yet the Most Overlooked The Easter Vigil is the crown jewel of Christian liturgy. But in our time, its brilliance is hidden not by persecution, but by indifference. It begins late. It runs long. It is ritual-heavy and slow. For many, it's exhausting. Yet perhaps its very inconvenience is the beginning of its sanctity. In an age that worships efficiency and comfort, the Easter Vigil stands as a silent protest. It doesn't entertain. It doesn't flatter our schedules. It waits. It builds. It dares to make us linger at the edge of the tomb. Its strangeness isn't a liabi...
From Vigil-scale Theology to Parish-scale Practice - or - On Archbishop Sample's Call for Mission Renewal Mission Renewal is simply the parish deciding to live as if the Resurrection is real —not a slogan . If the Easter Vigil is the night when God cracks time open, Mission Renewal is the work of keeping the windows open on Monday. What follows are concrete correctives—habits that keep grace from being quarantined. Call it the Vigil, operationalized. Faith shrinks when treated as a department. It becomes one line among budgets, a committee slot like landscaping or youth sports. But the parish is not a nonprofit with chaplains—it is the Body gathered to meet God. Every choice should bend to that end: does this deepen our encounter with the living God? Finance, bricks, and outreach exist only to make the house hospitable to Him. Cut faith down to a program, and the soul of the parish withers. Metrics fail when cut off from mystery. We count heads, dollars, hours—and call it success...
We keep pretending grace is a scented cloud, a mood, a private glow. But in practice it looks like a woman at the market who gives the better peach to a stranger and keeps the bruised one for herself, because love prefers to pay in flesh. It looks like the last armful of firewood hauled across the yard to a neighbor’s cold stove, and a room thawing into rough laughter. Grace isn’t rare; we’re stingy. What we call “encounters with God” nearly always begin with grit in the shoe. A quarrel with the boy, the bill you can’t pay, the door that won’t latch in the rain. We rub our sore heel and cuss, and there He is between the cuss and the breath, asking if we’ll kneel while standing in the puddle. Heaven loves a splinter; it makes a way through the skin (2 Corinthians 12:7). Sometimes our parishes pretend otherwise, polishing announcements like cutlery, confusing neatness with holiness. Still, the Lord keeps slipping past our committees by the sacristy drain, where the janitor bends over rus...
The worst doesn’t stay in the past; time isn’t a landfill where we bury filth and call it gone. It seeps into vows, into work, into the way a hand hesitates before touching another hand. It teaches the body to mistrust itself, the memory to bite like a dog that was beaten too long. Some carry a secret winter inside them, years after the blows stopped, long after the door was changed and the voice silenced. They laugh on schedule, they perform competence like a liturgy, and still the hour comes—always the same hour—when the old room opens and the light dies. That’s what's wearing on the adult: not melodrama, but attrition. The soul eroded grain by grain till it fits precisely inside the lie it was taught. Now if “Mission Renewal” won’t kneel here—before this particular hell where innocence was used as kindling—it’s a cowardly gospel. Healing can’t be a slogan. It has to be a descent. It has to look the history in the face and refuse to blink. Justice must be served in daylight, and ...
Thoughts on The Great Catholic Church Reconfiguration The trouble with “the numbers” isn’t that they lie; it's that we ask them to become prophets. In the above-linked analysis, the Church in North America appears to be simultaneously collapsing and converting—parishes closing while OCIA lines lengthen; vocations thinning while Easter Vigil photos look like springtime. The impatient mind resolves this contradiction by selecting whichever statistic flatters its mood: revival! or ruin! But reality isn’t obliged to be emotionally coherent. The present context isn't a slogan; it's a landscape—uneven, wind-scoured, and full of ridges that distort our sense of distance. Staying Grounded: The Asceticism of Refusing “Cherry-picked” Consolation To remain grounded today is to practice a kind of intellectual humility that feels, at first, like deprivation. We're tempted to make one bright number a sacrament and one dark number an excommunication. Yet the report’s “radical reconf...
"Everyone who knows that he is in doubt about something, knows a truth, and in regard to this that he knows he is certain. Therefore he is certain about a truth. Consequently everyone who doubts if there be a truth, has in himself a true thing on which he does not doubt; nor is there any true thing which is not true by truth. Consequently whoever for whatever reason can doubt, ought not to doubt that there is truth."—St. Augustine, De vera religione liber unus # # # Augustine’s little syllogism about doubt is less a trap for skeptics than a candle for the night within us. The moment I notice that I doubt, I meet a truth that doesn’t waver with my wavering: I’m doubting. That insight, that small, self-evident light, is already an encounter with something more than myself, for I didn’t mint its certainty; I discovered it. Doubt, therefore, becomes a strangely Eucharistic phenomenon: it offers, in the very poverty of not-knowing, a real contact with the Bread of truth. What is t...
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