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A number of years ago I attended a funeral. The man to whom we were saying goodbye had enjoyed a full and rich life.

Published in Fr. Ron Rolheiser

There鱿鱼视频app a real difference between our achievements and our fruitfulness, between our successes and the actual good that we bring into the world.

Published in Fr. Ron Rolheiser

I don鈥檛 always find it easy to pray. Often I鈥檓 over-tired, distracted, caught-up in tasks, pressured by work, short on time, lacking the appetite for prayer or more strongly drawn to do something else.

Published in Fr. Ron Rolheiser

A colleague of mine shares this story: Recently, after presiding at Eucharist, a woman from the congregation came up to him with this comment: 鈥淲hat a horrible Scripture reading today! If that鱿鱼视频app the kind of God we鈥檙e worshipping, then I don鈥檛 want to go to Heaven!鈥

Published in Fr. Ron Rolheiser

What is the real root of human loneliness? A flaw within our make-up? Inadequacy and sin? Or does Augustine鱿鱼视频app famous line, 鈥淵ou have made us for yourself, Lord, and our hearts are restless until they rest in you,鈥 say it all?

Published in Fr. Ron Rolheiser

They say that the book you most need to read finds you when you most need to read it. I鈥檝e had that experience many times, most recently with Heather King鱿鱼视频app book Shirt of Flame, A Year with St. Therese of Lisieux.

Published in Fr. Ron Rolheiser

No generation in history, I suspect, has ever experienced as much change as we have experienced in the past 60 years. That change is not just in the areas of science, technology, medicine, travel and communications, it is especially in the area of our social infrastructure, of our communal ethos. And perhaps nowhere is this change more radical than in how we understand sex. In the past 70 years we have witnessed three major, tectonic shifts in how we understand the place of sex in our lives.

Published in Fr. Ron Rolheiser

When I first began teaching theology, I fantasized about writing a book about the hiddenness of God. Why does God remain hidden and invisible? Why doesn鈥檛 God just show Himself plainly in a way that nobody can dispute?

Published in Fr. Ron Rolheiser

The world takes our breath away as we honour its author, the Lord

鈥淏ecause, my God, though I lack the soul-zeal and the sublime integrity of your saints, I yet have received from you an overwhelming sympathy for all that stirs within the dark mass of matter; because I know myself to be irremediably less a child of Heaven and a son of Earth.鈥

Published in Fr. Ron Rolheiser

There are now more than seven billion people on this Earth and each one of us feels that he or she is the centre of the universe. That accounts for most of the problems we have in the world, in our neighbourhoods, in our families.

Published in Fr. Ron Rolheiser

Recently, at an academic dinner, I was sitting across the table from a nuclear scientist. At one point, I asked him this question: 鈥淒o you believe that there鱿鱼视频app human life on other planets?鈥 His answer surprised me: 鈥淎s a scientist, no, I don鈥檛 believe there鱿鱼视频app human life on another planet. Scientifically, the odds are strongly against it. But, as a Christian, I believe there鱿鱼视频app human life on other planets. Why? My logic is this: Why would God choose to have only one child?鈥

Published in Fr. Ron Rolheiser

God, as I understand Him, is not very well understood. A colleague of mine, now deceased, was fond of saying that. It鱿鱼视频app a wise comment.

Published in Fr. Ron Rolheiser

Some time soon we will witness the canonization of Dorothy Day. For many people, especially those who are not Roman Catholic, a canonization draws little more than a yawn. How does a canonization impact our world? Moreover, isn鈥檛 canonization simply the recognition of a certain piety to which most people cannot relate? So why should there be much interest around the canonization of Dorothy Day 鈥 who in fact protested that she didn鈥檛 want people to consider her a saint and asserted that making someone a saint often helps neutralize his or her influence?

Published in Fr. Ron Rolheiser

An American humorist was once asked what he loved most in life. This was his reply: I love women best; whisky next; my neighbour a little; and God hardly at all!

Published in Fr. Ron Rolheiser

Just because something is politically correct doesn鈥檛 mean that it might not also be correct. Sometimes we have to swallow hard to accept truth.

Published in Fr. Ron Rolheiser
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