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‘Wildcat’ lacks O’Connor’s oddness, but brims with passion…

Ethan Hawke’s Wildcat opens, very nearly, with a familiar scenario: a dispiriting encounter between a young artist with an exacting creative vision and a conventional corporate gatekeeper with a checklist approach to what sells. The scene depicts a real-life exchange between 24-year-old Mary Flannery O’Connor (played by Maya Hawke, the director’s daughter) and her editor at Holt Rinehart regarding her unfinished novel Wise Blood, which the editor wants to conform to typical literary norms. “Sometimes I feel like you’re trying to stick pins in your readers,” he remarks and proceeds to make the same point twice more in different words. Like a similar framing device in Greta Gerwig’s Little Women, which has Jo March trying to sell a story to a hardnosed newspaper editor, this scene in Wildcat...

No, the Resurrection is not a wonderful symbol of hope…

Last Epiphany, my wife and I had our annual debate over whether to take down the Christmas tree. She has a weird dislike of finding pine needles on the floor. I don’t understand it. She invokes the tradition of Christmas lasting through Epiphany. I argue that grace overflows the traditional rules, and that keeping up the Christmas tree beautifully symbolizes that truth, and that even as it loses its needles the lights still shine, which is a beautiful symbol of Christ living in us and shining through us even in our wretchedness. You will be shocked and saddened to hear that she did not accept either argument. I thought about this when I came across some reflections and sermons on Easter that spoke of the events reported in the Gospels as symbols of hope and happiness. These symbols seem to...

Nagasaki’s Continuous Martyrdom: From the Hidden Church to the Atomic Bomb…

NAGASAKI, Japan — High above the city of Nagasaki, I walk a Way of the Cross in the steps of St. Maximilian Kolbe, who founded a monastery here in 1931. The lush mountainous area is marked by a grotto reminiscent of Lourdes, built by the Polish Franciscan saint to honor the Blessed Mother and sanctify the place where he lived for five years, until called back to Poland.   Americans associate Nagasaki with the atomic bomb, dropped by a U.S. B-29 on Aug. 9, 1945. In Japan, however, the region is also synonymous with Catholicism. Missionaries brought the faith to Japan’s southern ports in the mid-1600s. Nagasaki’s Christian community grew so quickly it was known as “Little Rome” among traders at the time.    A visit to Nagasaki is an immersion in Japan’s Catholic story — at onc...

Meet Mother Marla Marie, who left the Washington Post (where she worked for Herblock) for the Maronite convent…..

Just a few weeks after she accepted the position, Mother Marla again crossed paths with Bishop Mansour while the prelate was visiting the parish.  Mansour was happy to hear that Mother Marla was heading the program. But the next thing he said to her would change the course of her life forever. “He said to me, ‘Sister Marla Marie, would you help me found a Maronite congregation of sisters for our Church?” “And it was just like that. He just said, ‘Hello, it’s nice to see you. How are you?’ And then the next thing was, ‘Would you found a religious community?’” Mother Marla was “startled.” But at the same time, she felt “a deep abiding peace.”   “It was the same peace I had 25 years prior, when I realized my call to be a religious,” she said. Mother Marla told Mansour...

On the Paradoxical Connection Between Love, Law and Joy…

In the Sunday Gospel, Jesus cuts right through the modern Western tendency to place love in opposition with law, and law in opposition with joy. Jesus joins all three concepts and summons us to a new attitude. I. Announcement of the Principle – Jesus says, As the Father loves me, so I also love you. Remain in my love. If you keep my commandments, you will remain in my love, just as I have kept my Father’s commandments and remain in his love. I have told you this so that my joy may be in you and your joy might be complete. Note how the Lord joins the three concepts of love, law, and joy. This is precisely the opposite of what Western culture does. The best that Western culture will admit of law is that it is a necessary evil; more routinely it is viewed as an unloving imposition b...

Opinion: Catholics Should Not Be Organ Donors When ‘Brain Death’ Is the Standard…

COMMENTARY: The April 11 statement by The National Catholic Bioethics Center affirms that ‘a partial brain death standard can never be acceptable to Catholics.’ Tremendous controversy surrounds the discussions surrounding brain death, which is the notion that when the brain is dead, the person is dead. In 1997 one of the world’s foremost brain death scholars published “Recovery from ‘Brain Death’: A Neurologist’s Apologia” (republished with updated endnotes in April 2024). In it, pediatric neurologist D. Alan Shewmon, a convert to Catholicism, documents his professional conversion from believing that brain-dead patients are dead to the firm conviction that nearly all of them are alive. (He allows for the possibility that some patients who have died from widespread bodily injury incidentall...

This Sunday, On the Way to the Cross, Jesus Shared ‘God’s Innermost Secret’…

On the night before he died, Jesus was thinking about our joy, not his pain — and he shared a secret that we only now may be ready to understand. The Church has been looking back on that night for weeks now, because what Jesus said in his Farewell Discourse on Holy Thursday reveals the deepest meaning of what he wants us to do now, on the Sixth Sunday of Easter, Year B. In the Gospel this Sunday Jesus spells out his philosophy of love. He says, “This is my commandment: Love one another as I love you,” and he repeats it: “This I command you: Love one another.” By making love a commandment, Jesus reveals a lot about what love is and what it isn’t. It isn’t an emotion that strikes almost at random, like Cupid’s arrow. It isn’t dependent on the feelings we have. Love is an act of the will. It ...

The AP offers an outsider’s view of the Catholic Church…

Sometimes when you are part of a subculture, it is really important to step out of it or to be shown what it looks like from the outside. In the United States, to be a Mass-attending Catholic is to be part of a religious subculture (please, spare me the discussion of whether Catholicism is the ‘real’ culture and thus America is the subculture). American Catholics were given the chance to see themselves from another point of view — a secular one — this week with an article in the Associated Press by Tim Sullivan. There has been no shortage of quibbling over some of the language in the piece, particularly the terms liberal, conservative, traditionalist, right and left, and how they are applied in specific circumstances or to specific groups in the Church. Overall, I think that Sullivan has d...

Have you ever heard of this Navy tradition? Babies are baptized in the ship’s bell…..

Today I learned that the US Navy traditionally allows the infant children of crew members to be baptized in the upturned ship’s bell. A 2021 Navy press release about such a baptism onboard the USS Kearsarge says that this tradition was borrowed from the Royal Navy which permitted the such rites in foreign ports either in or under the bell. A webpage created the National Bell Festival, a non-profit organization that supports the restoration of historic bells, says that the practice is also followed by the US Coast Guard, the Royal Australian Navy, and the Royal Canadian Navy. [embedded content] This video from 2017 shows a baptism performed in the bell of the USS Gerald R. Ford. Photo: US Naval Institute Services Marketplace – Listings, Bookings & Reviews Entertainment blogs...

Thank You, Bill Maher, But Your Critique of Hollywood’s Depravity Didn’t Go Far Enough…

Editor’s Note: Read with care as comments made by TV host Bill Maher are graphic and offensive to some. If you haven’t seen talk show host Bill Maher’s recent monologue calling out the pedophilia problem in Hollywood, you really should take the eight and a half minutes to do so. I’m glad someone finally said the sexual exploitation of children is wrong, and that Hollywood’s complicity and hypocrisy are appalling. However, the problem is deeper than Maher thinks. In my opinion, pedophilia is baked into the core principles of the sexual revolution. The potential for full-on acceptance of pedophilia has been latent from the very beginning of this ideology. Here is what I mean. Sexual revolutionaries basically tell people they can do whatever they want sexually, without any negative resu...

What changed when parents gave their 10-year-old her first iPad?

I continue to work my way through the much-discussed book “The Anxious Generation: How the Great Rewiring of Childhood Is Causing an Epidemic of Mental Illness” by Jonathan Haidt. It’s slow work, in part because I am taking lots of notes. I don’t know about you folks, but I am a slow, careful reader when dealing with subjects that I believe are unusually important. A night or two ago, I hit a passage that — in my page annotations for the interview I hope to do with Haidt — I have nominated as a crucial chunk of summary material linked to the book’s Big Idea. Here it is: Once we had a new generation hooked on smartphones (and other screens) BEFORE the start of puberty, there was little space left in the stream of information entering their eyes and ears for guidance from mentors in their re...

Hungry Priests Are Not Needy Priests…

The position of a priest can be the loneliest position in the world. All humans have a fundamental hunger to be appreciated, yet very few of our Spiritual Fathers fully receive or seek this out. Affirming what you know is good and true about another person is not only necessary, but essential, for the nourishment of any relationship. This can begin with you.Find out where you can listen to our podcast: https://upstreampodcast.com/Check out the Amazing Parish Summit: https://amazingparish.org/summitsanantoniocoaching/ Services Marketplace – Listings, Bookings & Reviews Entertainment blogs & Forums