Lin Wilder's Blog, page 47

April 15, 2017

The Anguish of an Absence

The anguish of an absence




 by Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger




The Crucifixion

 

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Published on April 15, 2017 07:21

CS Lewis’s The Great Divorce: Easter Reflections

John Chillingworth/Picture Post/Hulton Archive via Getty imagesCS Lewis’s The Great Divorce

 

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Published on April 15, 2017 01:09

April 9, 2017

Silence: Apostacy, Jesuit Priests, 17th Century Japan

Rodrigues about to become Jesuit Apostate priest and Ichizo preparing for Ichizo's martryrdom


Last December, the movie Silence opened to a conflicting maze of reviews. Some greatly praising the film and others exceedingly critical of the tale of the ‘apostate Jesuit priests’ of seventeenth century Japan. I watched it three days ago and am still pondering its meaning.

 

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Published on April 09, 2017 00:57

April 2, 2017

Death, Hope, Heaven- What Are We Here for Anyway?

Cross icon - vector illustration. Simple Christian cross sign. White cross on black background with rays of light. Concept of the life after death.


In my pre-Catholic ‘pagan’ years, I worried about death. Mostly because I feared standing before a God I did not think I believed in and explaining why I had wasted knowledge, understanding, and time. After twenty years as a Catholic, I would like to think that anxiety gone. Unfortunately, I think it’s merely changed its shape. Which is why a book called, Surprised By Hope: Rethinking Heaven, the Resurrection, and the Mission of the Church, has excited me so much that I am compelled to write about it.

 

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Published on April 02, 2017 15:25

March 26, 2017

March 19, 2017

March 12, 2017

Consequences of Tepid Christianity: The Boston Marathon Bomber’s Widow


AP File Photo of Katherine Russell

 

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Published on March 12, 2017 08:54

March 5, 2017

Newman Centers- Lighthouses of Grace in Secular Education

http://slonewman.org/Lighthouse on the island against night sky

 

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Published on March 05, 2017 00:51

February 26, 2017

People to Meet in Heaven

 Save Download Preview Group of tiny people walking into a gate shaped like a keyhole


I think there was a book by this name- or close to it- published a few years back… or maybe it was a movie. Actually, it was both: The Five People You Meet in Heaven, remember that book or movie? Regardless, I think about that question now and then, perhaps we all do.

 

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Published on February 26, 2017 01:00

February 19, 2017

Thinking About Forgiveness- Again



“So be perfect, just as your heavenly Father is perfect.” Not the words of a wimp or a phrase from one who has no experience with hatred, intolerance, misogyny, racism or any of the long list of human weakness, sin and flaws, the meaning of Christ’s words cannot be misinterpreted.

In his book Mere Christianity, CS Lewis, long-term atheist and scholar, writes about forgiveness the way he does of all of the Christian virtues: Baldly, practically and wisely. Without the sentiment and superficiality we so often read and hear.

“Everyone says that forgiveness is a lovely idea, until they have something to forgive, as we had during the war. And then, to mention the subject at all is to to be greeted with howls of anger. It is not that people think this too high and difficult a virtue: it is that they think it hateful and contemptible. ‘That sort of talk makes them sick’, they say. And half of you already want to ask me, ‘I wonder how you’d feel about forgiving the Gestapo if you were a Pole or a Jew?’



In thinking about what to write about today, forgiveness comes to mind for a few reasons. Lent will be here is just a few weeks, Christ’s words about forgiveness are strident, even impossible, and the animus of each side of the political divide begs for grace and amnesty.





I’ll start with the last, the political divide because it’s personal and unpleasant as is any time we admit that we are part of the problem. I have a presence on social media because of my writing-the Twitter and Facebook pages are a vehicle for book sales. I became aware that my thoughts and opinions about those on the ‘other side’ were every bit as judgmental and intolerant as the vitriol I see when I go to the news feed page. The only difference? Mine was unexpressed. I’m Catholic so I went to confession, aware quite suddenly that I was part of the problem, significantly so, in fact. Either we follow Christ-his words, or we don’t. There isn’t any way to do it half-way or sort of, there are no excuses.
Christ’s words today and in the previous Sunday Gospels as we approach Lent “raise the bar” as the Priest declared in his homily last night. “Be perfect as your Father in heaven is perfect.” There is no way to mitigate, explain. There are no ‘buts. ‘ Here is the entire passage of that entire paragraph which ends with that shocking command:

 

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Published on February 19, 2017 14:43