Wednesday, November 6, 2024

Prayer, Politics, and God’s Love

 


Richard Rohr's Daily Meditations

 

From the Center for Action and Contemplation

 
A closeup photo of a water droplet at the end of a blade of grass.
 

Week Forty-Five: Divine Love in Uncertain Times

 

Prayer, Politics, and God’s Love

 
 
 

To pray is to practice that posture of radical trust in God’s grace—and to participate in perhaps the most radical movement of all, which is the movement of God’s Love. 
—Richard Rohr  

Father Richard’s faithful trust in God’s love leads him to both prayer and action. 

I’ve often said that we founded the Center for Action and Contemplation in 1987 to be a place of integration between action and contemplation. I envisioned a place where we could teach activists in social movements to pray—and encourage people who pray to live lives of solidarity and justice. As we explained in our Center’s Radical Grace publication in 1999: 

Action and contemplation were once thought of as mutually exclusive, but we believed that they must be brought together or neither one would make sense. We felt that we were trying to be radical in both senses of the word, simultaneously rooted in tradition and boldly experimental.... We believed ... that the power to be truly radical comes from trusting entirely in God’s grace and that such trust is the most radical action possible. [1] 

Why History Matters Now

Why History Matters Now

A Commonweal Catholic on the mess made by Supreme Court Catholics

Illustration by David Sankey
Commonweal

Commonweal celebrated its fiftieth anniversary in 1974. Across the country, but perhaps especially in the San Francisco Bay Area, the anger, exuberance, and idealism of the sixties were souring into disillusionment and disaffiliation. That year, I began graduate studies in history and humanities at Stanford. As a student of American intellectual history rummaging around in little magazines such as the Nation, the New Republic, and Dissent, I stumbled across Commonweal. Since then it has been a lifeline for me, at first because it confirmed my anxious hope that the phrase “Left Catholic intellectual” was no oxymoron, and then because the magazine has provided a forum for diverse yet distinctively Catholic perspectives on political and social issues. I write as our nation holds its breath, waiting to see whether we will confirm our commitment to democracy or swerve toward some unknown alternative. Having been invited to reflect, as a historian, for this centennial issue, I will briefly recount my own odyssey toward becoming a Commonweal Catholic before explaining why history is particularly important now, both for understanding the wrong turns taken recently in American politics and law and for envisioning a just democracy.

Catholic voters favoured Trump over Harris, according to polls

 

Catholic voters favoured Trump over Harris, according to polls

Tyler Arnold, CNA
06 November 2024, The Tablet

Associated Press / Alamy

Republican vice presidential nominee Sen. JD Vance and his wife Usha Vance pictured last night.

The Catholic vote broke for former President Donald Trump by a large margin nationwide and within swing states in the 2024 presidential election, according to exit polls.

According to the Washington Post’s exit poll, Trump won the national Catholic vote by a 15-point margin: 56 per cent to 41 per cent. This shows a much larger victory for Trump among Catholic voters than the Post’s 2020 exit polls, which showed Trump with only a five-point lead above President Joe Biden, 52 per cent to 47 per cent. 

Risking the Questions Podcast: The old and new meet

 

Katie Gordon, left, and Benedictine Sisters Jacqueline Sanchez-Small and Val Luckey, are pictured during now-Sister Sanchez-Small's first profession ceremony with the Benedictine community of Erie, Pennsylvania, on Nov. 13, 2021. (CNS/Courtesy of Global Sisters Report/Katie Gordon)

Risking the Questions Podcast: The old and new meet

Missouri Catholic diocese issues blacklist of hymns

 

Tuesday, November 5, 2024

Listen to the saints and mystics: Let nothing disturb you—not even the election.

 

Relearning the language of the heart

 

Relearning the language of the heart

02 November 2024, The Tablet

photo: Alamy/Godong

There are certain words which, despite today’s overwhelmingly materialistic, scientifically reductionist and technological mindset, still carry an immense weight in everyday conversation. Foremost among them is the word “heart”. We speak of having a “heavy heart”, of a “broken heart”, and of undergoing a “change of heart”. We say we are “young at heart”, that someone’s “heart is in the right place”, and we advise people to “follow their heart”. We say our “heart goes out” to those who are suffering – and if others’ don’t, we call them “hard of heart”, and we plead, “Have a heart”.

Pope Francis’ fourth encyclical, Dilexit nos, published last week, is “on the human and divine love of the heart of Jesus Christ”. Devotion to the Sacred Heart of Jesus conjures memories of images that seem saccharine to some, morbid to others; so ubiquitous for older Catholics that it’s never warranted much reflection; so strange to their children and grandchildren that it seems to belong to a slightly weird, lost devotional world.

Archbishop installation revives conversation of clergy sexual abuse scandal

 

November 4, 2024

Archbishop Richard Henning talking with protesters gathered outside the Cathedral of the Holy Cross on Oct. 31, 2024 (Yogev Toby / Beacon Staff).

Archbishop installation revives conversation of clergy sexual abuse scandal

BOSTON (MA)
Berkeley Beacon [Boston MA]

November 3, 2024

By Yogev Toby

Read original article

[Photo above: Archbishop Richard Henning talking with Stephen Sheehan and other protesters gathered outside the Cathedral of the Holy Cross on Oct. 31, 2024 (Yogev Toby / Beacon Staff).]

More than 1,400 people, including clergy, religious figures, and prominent Boston community members, gathered at the Cathedral of the Holy Cross to celebrate what some called a surprising appointment. 

Henning obtained the role after serving only a little over a year as Providence bishop, to a significantly smaller laity. 

The event started with Henning’s ceremonial three knocks on the cathedral door and the greeting of the exiting archbishop, Cardinal Seán O’Malley. The two embraced each other in a hug and entered the building. 

O’Malley’s 21-year tenure as archbishop was riddled with challenges following the clergy sexual abuse scandal in which hundreds of children were sexually abused by priests in the Boston archdiocese. These assaults occurred under O’Malley’s predecessor, Cardinal Bernard Law, in…