August 20, 2021 | A Word to Enkindle, Fr. John Bayer
May we all live “among the mountains” with our hearts fixed on the summit — God himself, as he invites us to continual conversion, to continual ascent, casting down every false peak as an idol and staying hungry for the glorious view we hope to enjoy with him in heaven.
August 13, 2021 | Continuum
Taking Nothing for Granted: Seniors Navigate the Pandemic Together, by Fr. Stephen Gregg ’01, A Beautiful Language of Rigor and Expression: Cistercian’s Math program, Past and Present, by Jon Erickson ’12, In Memoriam: Francis G. “Jerry” O’Brien, and Carl Fischer ’89, Afterthoughts: Ice-cream Trucks and the Art of Surprise by Patrick Spence ’08, Humility and Audacity: “Magni magna audent” by Fr. Roch
July 21, 2021 | A Word to Enkindle, Fr. Thomas Esposito
The extraordinary but relatively unknown philosopher and martyr also known by her religious name of Theresa Benedicta of the Cross.
June 19, 2021 | A Word to Enkindle, Fr. John Bayer
On Father’s Day in this year dedicated to St. Joseph, let’s pray for the men in our lives, that every day they might grow more like St. Joseph.
May 8, 2021 | A Word to Enkindle, Fr. John Bayer
I’ve come to realize that the phrase “social justice” provokes very different reactions in Catholics, often according to their knowledge of the Catholic tradition and to their political sympathies. My sense is that some Catholics are very frightened by it. So, what should we think when our schools and parishes use this phrase? What could it mean?
April 18, 2021 | A Word to Enkindle, Fr. Thomas Esposito
The first Christian Bible study was held Easter Sunday on the road to Emmaus. Cleopas and his anonymous traveling companion are wallowing in despair about the death of Jesus, to such an extent that they are fleeing Jerusalem moments after hearing reports that the tomb was empty. Jesus, unrecognized on the road, joins the conversation and steers it toward a specific goal: teaching his downtrodden disciples, then as now, how to read the Bible.