January 19, 2025

One of my new year’s resolutions for 2025 is to get more exercise. In support of this goal, I spent some time yesterday exercising my right to free speech and assembly. This is a kind of exercise I recommend everyone partake in if you live in a country that permits it (and fight for if you don’t). On a chilly Saturday, I joined a small but strong group of people in Washington, DC on a march to the Lincoln Memorial.... Read more

January 10, 2025

As I, from my warm home in snow-dusted Pittsburgh, take in images of the hellscape that Los Angeles has become, I feel inspired to share an essay that was published in the final issue of Geez, an ad-free Christian print magazine that sadly shut down last year. My prayer is that in this new year 2025, we may all find a refining fire of conviction amid the raging fire of destruction. May we extend our support to the people most in... Read more

July 14, 2024

We hear it from leaders of all stripes, any time violence breaks out: “This is not who we are.” My first response when I hear this is generally cynicism: clearly, the fact that “this” has happened means that we have shown it to be exactly who we are. But then, as I think about it, I see the underlyingly aspirational nature of such statements. In other words, what they’re really saying is, “This is not who we want to be.”... Read more

May 12, 2024

Note: This post is adapted from the notes of a sermon I was invited to give on Sunday, May 12 at Christ Church, a United Church of Christ in Latrobe, Pennsylvania. As a Catholic I was thrilled by this invitation, particularly the chance to preach publicly as part of a liturgy  – something my own tradition does not permit. It was an incredibly empowering experience for me, and I’d like to share with you the story I shared with the... Read more

April 7, 2024

Today, Catholics around the world celebrate the Feast of God’s Divine Mercy. I wish more people – regardless of creed – could be aware of this special day. During the 1930’s, at a time when the world seemed to be falling apart, when tyranny was on the rise in Europe and economic hardship was widespread, a Catholic sister named Faustina Kowalska had a series of mystical experiences centering around a deep experience of God’s mercy. Amid personal and political hardship... Read more

March 9, 2024

          Winners Unions Public teachers People with student loan debt People on prescription medications Medical researchers Weapons manufacturers Potato chip lovers Losers Large corporations Children conceived with disabilities Asylum seekers People living in war zones   It’s been said that the moral measure of society is how it treats its most vulnerable members. (Versions of this have been traced to Mohandas Gandhi, Hubert Humphrey and others, but the exact origin is contested.) By this measure, the... Read more

February 18, 2024

After reading my fellow blogger Julia Smucker’s piece about the implication of wearing our ashes on Ash Wednesday, I thought I would share a curious variant that I encountered in Lisbon.   I am here for business and since there was no English language alternative for Ash Wednesday, my wife and I went to the local parish church, Our Lady of the Rosary of Fatima, for the evening service.  As we were waiting to queue up to receive our ashes, I... Read more

February 14, 2024

There is a video of a PostSecret event – where audience members can choose to share a secret publicly – in which a Muslim woman wearing a hijab says: “My secret is that because I wear the headscarf, because I’m so clearly Muslim, I go out of my way to be nice to everybody, to donate to everybody that ever asks me for money in public, just because I don’t want them to think that Muslims are bad people, even... Read more

February 4, 2024

The publication of Fiducia Supplicans by the Vatican almost two months ago prompted quite a tumult in the Catholic world (at least on social media), with all manner of reactions, both positive and negative.  I don’t want to dive into the controversy over this document, at least not directly.  Suffice it to say that from my perspective, much of the hostility towards this document in the United States is driven by the faction of Catholics who are overtly hostile to... Read more

January 7, 2024

Visiting family for Christmas affords the opportunity to keep the feast among both Mennonites and Catholics, the two branches of the Christian tradition that I consider home. Even though they don’t currently live in or near any of the multiple communities in which my faith was formed, being among Mennonites invariably feels like a homecoming of sorts, a return to a native country from which I may have in some sense expatriated, but which can never not be home. Why do... Read more


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