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The path to Jesus the Divine Lord is not that difficult. St. Augustine shows us the way…..

The act of faith requires that the human intellect and human will direct their attention and be in communion with the Son of God Jesus Christ. Hence, faith I argue can be seen as a gift that allows the person to worship the one true God. The Catechism defines faith as a gift from God, a supernatural virtue infused by him.[1] Faith is a virtue whose identity is predicated on the love of the Father toward his children, and the child’s willingness to assent to the Father’s love in obedience. The entire process of developing and exercising faith begins with God providing the gift of grace and for us to have an interior movement of the heart through the power of the Holy Spirit to believe. Faith as a gift from God reveals an active relationship between man’s intellect and will cooperating with ...

Why Pope Francis is sending a Venezuelan cardinal to the International Eucharistic Congress in Ecuador…

Why Pope Francis sent a Venezuelan cardinal to a Eucharistic congress Skip to content Pope Francis appointed this weekend Cardinal Baltazar Porras, emeritus archbishop of Caracas, as the pontifical legate for the International Eucharistic Congress to be celebrated in Quito, Ecuador, between September 8 and 15 of this year. Cardinal Baltazar Porras, right, with Pope Francis. Credit: ACN via Flickr. Those kinds of appointments are often perfunctory. But this one came at an unusual time: Venezuela is in turmoil, as citizens claim President Nicolás Maduro committed election fraud — thousands of Venezuelans have been arrested, and more than two dozen have been killed. Porras, for his part, is well-known in Venezuela as a staunch opponent of Maduro’s regime, and has been particularly outspoken i...

Holy C-Suite? The Rise of the Diocesan COO…

Holy C-suite? The rise of the diocesan COO Skip to content If you walk into most corporate boardrooms today, you’ll probably run into a chief operating officer — an executive responsible for daily operations, overseeing staff and various departments, who is typically second in command to the CEO. You might not expect to find people with the same title if you walk into a diocesan chancery. But even while the role of COO seems to be declining in the corporate world, as businesses embrace a more collaborative approach to leadership, it’s a role that’s gaining traction in American dioceses.  But as the COO role becomes more commonplace in diocesan chanceries, canon lawyers say the role — usually filled by lay people with business backgrounds — raises questions about leadership, and priori...

In Significant Step Forward, China Recognizes Vatican’s 95-Year-Old Non-CCPA Bishop of Tianjin …

Why China’s recognition of an 95-year-old bishop could be a very big deal Skip to content The Holy See announced Tuesday that the Chinese government has recognized an underground mainland bishop as the legitimate leader of his diocese. Bishop Melchior Shi Hongzhen, 95, has led the Diocese of Tianjin since 2019 — having previously been coadjutor of the diocese since 1982. He is believed to be the first Catholic bishop government authorities have recognized who has not formally joined the state-sponsored Chinese Patriotic Catholic Association. Bishop Melchior Shi Hongzhen. Image via ChinaCatholic.cn With the Vatican’s agreement with Beijing on episcopal appointments set for renewal in October, Shi’s recognition by the state has been hailed by some China-watchers as a sign of real progress fo...

Pure Religion: A Reflection on the Upcoming 22nd Sunday in Ordinary Time…

Readings:Deuteronomy 4:1–2,6–8Psalm 15:2–5James 1:17–18, 21–22, 27Mark 7:1–8, 14–15, 21–23 Today’s Gospel casts Jesus in a prophetic light as one having authority to interpret God’s law. Jesus’ quotation from Isaiah today is ironic (see Isaiah 29:13). In observing the law, the Pharisees honor God by ensuring that nothing unclean passes their lips. In this, however, they’ve turned the law inside out, making it a matter of simply performing certain external actions. The gift of the law, which we hear God giving to Israel in today’s First Reading, is fulfilled in Jesus’ Gospel, which shows us the law’s true meaning and purpose (see Matthew 5:17). The law, fulfilled in the Gospel, is meant to form our hearts, to make us pure, able to live in the Lord’s presence. The law was given that we might...

Do you have loved ones who have fallen away from the faith? Divine love, not human genius, will save them…..

COMMENTARY: Take a lesson from St. Augustine and St. Monica: Prayer is the single most effective answer to this problem, as it is to all problems. There is a problem with geniuses. The problem is that most people aren’t geniuses. So, when we do discover a genius every so often, we have to do our best with our ordinary minds to understand the insights of a brilliant mind. Such is the case with the genius of St. Augustine.  Augustine was not only a prolific writer, writing more than almost anyone will read in a lifetime, but his work has a tremendous depth. His training in rhetoric gave him an uncanny ability to convey profound truths in a distinctly winsome way. But then there are times when his genius seems to get in the way.  For instance, perhaps his most famous work, Confessio...

These Florida teens have collected 12,000 pairs of shoes for the poor this year — now they’re expanding, and recruiting their younger siblings…

By Jim Davis – Florida Catholic MIAMI | “How beautiful are the feet of those who preach the gospel of peace,” St. Paul wrote. He might well say the same about the hands of those who provide the shoes. In South Florida, those hands belong to Loving Soles, a group of teens who collect thousands of shoes, then donate them to the Camillus House shelter for the homeless – more than 60,000 since they began in 2011. “It shows how people want to help (those in need), even if they don’t know them,” said Susanna Inguanzo, 19, one of three siblings who spearhead the annual effort, along with twin sister Sophia and younger brother Christopher. Photographer: JIM DAVIS | FC Ramiro Inguanzo, second from right, poses with his children, from left, Christopher, Sophia and Susanna May 6, 2024, wi...

The Problem With Faith and the Enemy Within…

In his second letter to St. Timothy, St. Paul with great urgency reminds him to follow the pattern of the sound words he received in the faith and love which are in Christ Jesus; and, guard the truth that has been entrusted to him by the Holy Spirit who dwells within us.[1] This exhortation serves as a helpful backdrop to describe the nature, premise, and content of all forms of religious instruction associated with the Catholic faith. Specifically, the theme of St. Paul’s message to St. Timothy stresses the importance of adhering to a Trinitarian Christocentric methodology rooted in the Word of God and articulated in creed form.    Sacred Scripture and Catholic doctrine serve as two inseparable anchors of faith that both build and strengthen one another in providing a clear arti...

The Church can’t compete with the world for peoples’ attention. When we try, we turn people into consumers. Here’s what we should do instead… …

Earlier this year, I participated in my first-ever triathlon. My weakest event was the swim, so I spent a lot of time in the pool leading up to the race. Like many, I learned enough as a child to get by without drowning, but my technique more or less stayed where it was. Now, as a mid-thirties, reasonably active man, I have discovered that swimming is not very intuitive. You see, it is easy to look busy in the pool. In fact, anyone watching from the edge would (correctly) believe me to be working hard. And yet, despite all my efforts, they would be surprised at how little progress I made. As it turns out, good swimmers rely less on strenuous effort, and more on good technique, to cut through the water. They make it look easy, drawing little attention to themselves, whereas I make a big sce...

Pope Francis Makes Surprise Visit to St. Monica’s Tomb at Basilica of St. Augustine in Rome…

By Courtney Mares Vatican City, Aug 27, 2024 / 12:15 pm Pope Francis made a surprise visit to the Basilica of St. Augustine on Tuesday to pray at the tomb of St. Monica. During his visit to the basilica near Piazza Navona in Rome’s historic center, the pope prayed in the side chapel containing the tomb of St. Monica on her feast day, Aug. 27. St. Monica is honored in the Church for her holy example and dedicated prayerful intercession for her son, St. Augustine, before his conversion. Today Catholics turn to St. Monica as an intercessor for family members who are distant from the Church. She is the patron saint of mothers, wives, widows, difficult marriages, and victims of abuse. Pope Francis visits the Basilica of St. Augustine in Rome on Tuesday, Aug. 27, 2024. Credit: Vatican Media Born...

David Deavel on Solzhenitsyn and American Culture: The Russian Soul in the West…

16 hours ago 16 hours ago “If you don’t know what you’re talking about, you won’t be able to convince anyone to take you seriously, no matter how pious you seem or how good your works are. If people can see that you lack understanding, they won’t listen,” asserts David Paul Deavel, an Associate Professor of Theology at the University of St. Thomas-Houston. Prof. Deavel is a prolific and widely published writer. In addition to his book Solzhenitsyn and American Culture: The Russian Soul in the West, his academic work has appeared in journals such as Chesterton Review, Chicago Studies, and Faith and Reason. In his new article, which he discusses with Deacon Geoff, “Theology is Not Trivial Pursuit,” Deavel argues that “Simply knowing doctr...

6 Card Games Everyone Should Know…

Card games have been around for a long time. They’ve existed in various forms for a millennium, having been invented in the Far East. From there, they came West with trading, and in the 1400s the French solidified the 52-card deck and the four suits — spades, clubs, hearts, and diamonds — that we use today. While different cultures and nations use different sets of cards, that system is the most widely used around the world. For literally centuries now, friends, families, and strangers have convened around bar tops, campfires, and dining room tables to play friendly and perhaps not-so-friendly games of cards. The Appeal (and Manliness) of Card Games What is it that makes card games so appealing, and why have they found such a particularly prominent place in the culture of men? Portabi...

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