The Narthex
No Jab, No Job
Does a Catholic who challenges official advice regarding vaccines really lack charity?
By Richard DellOrfano | August 16th 2021 3:21 PMEmployer mandates appear to be the next big thing in the pandemic-response saga. My 62-year-old sister, a registered nurse, had to have the jab to keep her job. She had no underlying illnesses, but within two months after getting vaxed she contracted near-death pericarditis (inflammation of the heart muscle). The…
READ FULL BLOG POSTSingular Devotion
Why did Jesus encourage chaste celibacy even for His married Apostles?
By Richard DellOrfano | August 9th 2021 8:00 PMIn Matthew 19:12 Christ suggests His male disciples may want to make themselves (figurative) eunuchs for the sake of the kingdom of heaven. In Orthodox Jewish culture, men are expected to obey God’s directive to reproduce and sire offspring; Jewish women still judge barrenness a stigma. Why would Christ incur…
READ FULL BLOG POSTThe Way Out
An advanced AI computer predicts a global catastrophe in the 2030s
By Richard DellOrfano | July 29th 2021 7:02 PMSelf-anointed prophets have often attempted to pinpoint doomsday. They were obviously wrong. But now, the prophets of scientism are speculating that Earth is due for its Seventh Mass Extinction. A controversial MIT study from 1972 claims we are right on track for a global collapse of civilization by 2040. Historical…
READ FULL BLOG POSTNanny State
Secular authorities aim for paradise on earth via micromanagement of citizens
By Richard DellOrfano | July 20th 2021 3:43 PMCalifornia bureaucrats are aiming for more and more control over our lives—with no end in sight. A San Diego county government agency is proposing various options for a mileage tax, anticipating that more electric vehicles will reduce overall gas tax revenues -- currently 51 cents per gallon— by far the…
READ FULL BLOG POSTPursuing Illusions
We are tempted to spend much time and treasure following spiritual dead-ends
By Richard DellOrfano | July 13th 2021 2:08 PMThe summer of 1969, an itinerant Hatha Yoga instructor gave me a ride to Guadalajara, Mexico. Fred was in his seventies but amazingly agile at performing difficult yoga postures for awestruck audiences of retired seniors. We were traveling south on I-25 through New Mexico, a few miles west of the…
READ FULL BLOG POSTThe Kennedy Curse
Were the premature deaths, accidents, and tragedies caused by their patriarch's sins?
By Richard DellOrfano | July 2nd 2021 4:05 PMIn Nathaniel Hawthorne’s House of the Seven Gables, Colonel Pyncheon, a Puritan, covets a piece of land that a poor farmer owns. He has him hanged as a wizard so he can seize the old man’s property and build his seven-gabled mansion. At the gallows, Matthew Maule casts a generational…
READ FULL BLOG POSTThe Last Shakers
A visit to a Shaker village farm in Maine -- the last of 21 communities in their 200-year history
By Richard DellOrfano | June 24th 2021 8:21 PMIn the late sixties, I stayed a weekend at a Bruderhof and then hoped to experience the Shaker version of Heaven on Earth that Nathaniel Hawthorne, Charles Dickens, and Ralph Waldo Emerson had much admired. But I was late by about 100 years, for in 1968 their numbers had dwindled…
READ FULL BLOG POSTMy Father's Business
In appreciative wonder of God's handiwork we become like little children again
By Richard DellOrfano | June 7th 2021 2:11 PMIn 1944, my father worked as an apprentice electrician at Bethlehem Steel’s East Boston facility, one of eighteen American shipyards that built 2,710 Liberty Ships as supply transports for WWII. Between 1941 and 1945 the facility cranked out three ships every two days. By the next year my father was…
READ FULL BLOG POSTOf Hell and Heaven
Bernard Madoff was fortunate that he had a chance to repent
By Richard DellOrfano | May 27th 2021 6:04 PMChristians don’t believe in Hell as much as they did 50 years ago. The number of Americans who believe in it has dropped, whereas Heaven has fared much better. People can’t accept that God would be so cruel as to condemn souls to eternal punishment just for behaving badly. They…
READ FULL BLOG POSTSuffering with Christ
The crucified Jesus refused to dull His excruciating pain or to shorten His misery
By Richard DellOrfano | May 17th 2021 12:41 PMIn the late 1940s, when I was a kid living in predominantly Irish and Italian East Boston, people practiced silence on Good Friday from noon to 3pm, respecting the three hours that Christ hung dying on the Cross. Business traffic slowed way down and cobblestone streets were silent of auto…
READ FULL BLOG POSTDay to Day Diversity
In my California neighborhood, I do not see intense racial or gender prejudice
By Richard DellOrfano | May 4th 2021 2:08 PMAccording to the meaning of the term woke, I better wake up to my ingrained pride and prejudice. Maybe I’m unaware of my racism and misogyny because I’m a senior and an Italian Catholic. As a thoroughbred descendent of the Roman Empire, I believe there are only two kinds of…
READ FULL BLOG POSTFake Flowers
The Church lost, and now needs, holy men who converted thousands in a single day
By Richard DellOrfano | April 27th 2021 2:02 PMOn a warm, sunny spring morning, I passed a rose bush blooming in its full glory. Remembering to take time to stop for the roses, I leaned over to smell its sweet, delicious bouquet. I often do this on my walks and have found that only one in ten rose…
READ FULL BLOG POSTCrossing the Generation Gap
A brief encounter between strangers reveals the generation gap
By Richard DellOrfano | April 20th 2021 6:48 PMOn my usual walk around the neighborhood park I saw two young guys sitting and chatting on the grass. It was mid-day, sun shining, the first warm day we’ve had in a while. At night I would have shied away, but I headed straight for them. As I passed by,…
READ FULL BLOG POSTRampant Loneliness
The pandemic has left many people lonelier and even more isolated than before
By Richard DellOrfano | April 13th 2021 2:48 PMOn the first warm day of spring, some vagrants came out of their nooks and hideaways to congregate in the local park for fellowship. Several men, old and young, sat together at a stone picnic table, chatting, eating, and drinking beer or cheap wine early in the day. During the…
READ FULL BLOG POSTDeadly Gluttony
The lukewarm Christian daily satiates his sensual appetites and avoids restraint
By Richard DellOrfano | April 7th 2021 12:59 PMSeveral of my neighbors are overweight. One young woman can hardly squeeze into her shiny sports-car, which she pays others to keep spotlessly clean and mirror-waxed. Another family's grown kids are each well over 250 pounds. Though the parents seem in decent shape, their eldest son, in his forties and…
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