The Narthex
'The Vision Splendid'
Wordsworth's poem reflects on the progress of human life from infancy to maturity
By David Daintree | June 3rd 2022 1:46 PMOne of William Wordsworth's best poems is an ode with the somewhat daunting title Intimations of Immortality from Recollections of Early Childhood. It's a reflection on the progress of human life from infancy to maturity. He thinks of children as natural believers, born with an inherent sense of awe at…
READ FULL BLOG POSTThe Mystery of Sacrifice
So many give their lives for justice, love, and truth
By Richard DellOrfano | May 31st 2022 1:29 PMThe need for sacrifice exists in every theater of nature. Life cannot exist and persist without some sacrifice of its components. Stars explode in supernovas to provide gaseous dust and minerals for newborn stars and their offspring in planetary systems. A forest's fallen timbers donate their substance to newly sprouting…
READ FULL BLOG POSTWar and True Peace
War does not bring true peace, especially not to those who sell their souls for power and glory
By Richard DellOrfano | May 13th 2022 8:00 PMA new military weapon is now revolutionizing warfare as did the machine gun and the atomic bomb. Miniature killer drones are inexpensive, more efficient, and silently effective compared to guided missiles that cost 20 times as much. This is not futuristic fiction. The Army is now in Phase III development…
READ FULL BLOG POSTBelief in the Afterlife
Jesus' promise of eternal life was anticipated by most of mankind
By Richard DellOrfano | April 25th 2022 3:00 PMThe archeological record of ritual burial practices indicates widespread belief in the afterlife, around the world and across time. The oldest evidence of prehistoric belief in the afterlife was discovered in the 1960s near Sungir, Russia, at a 34,000-year-old burial site of a middle-aged man. He was laid to rest…
READ FULL BLOG POSTSeeing Islam in a New Light
Christians & Muslims agree on the greatness of God & the centrality of the family
By David Daintree | April 4th 2022 11:57 AMIt is a remarkable thing that the keys to the Church of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem are held in trust by a Muslim, Adeeb Joudeh al-Husseini, who is a member of a family that has honorably maintained the holy places there for centuries. Christians and Muslims have had a…
READ FULL BLOG POSTScruples over Snagging a Gopher
Guilt wafted over me, but Scripture came to the rescue
By Richard DellOrfano | April 1st 2022 3:30 PMOne morning this spring, I noticed my backyard lawn had an esker, a row of fresh dirt mounds. Each pile had a horseshoe shape, and I soon learned how they came to be. A gopher was tunneling underground. This rascal was pushing dirt to the surface from its nesting constructs.…
READ FULL BLOG POSTDanse Macabre
Catholic cultures have elaborate rituals for remembering their dead
By Richard DellOrfano | March 18th 2022 3:20 PMOur neighborhood still has mail -- mostly ads -- hand-delivered by a robust man in his sixties with whom I occasionally chat. He’s an intelligent man whose astute and informative perspective makes for lively conversations. For three weeks, someone had replaced him. Yesterday, I was glad to see Joe was…
READ FULL BLOG POSTPerichoresis
An interesting depiction of the relationship of the triune God
By Richard DellOrfano | March 14th 2022 2:30 PMDuring its early history, the Christian church safeguarded the doctrine of the Holy Trinity by deeming deviant beliefs such as Montanism, Arianism, and Pelagianism as heresies. Even today, certain denominations such as Mormons, Jehovah’s Witnesses, and Pentecostals reject the Holy Trinity. Jews and Muslims consider any belief beyond monotheism as…
READ FULL BLOG POSTAuditing God’s Design
Do we know enough about creation to judge it?
By James Hanink | February 8th 2022 3:22 PMMy ongoing dialogue with Karl Meyer, once a mentor and always an independent radical, has hit a rough patch. In a recent note he tells me that all is not well. “I wonder how it is possible,” he asks, “to have an intelligent dialogue with a philosopher who posits a…
READ FULL BLOG POSTLong Lost Treasure
Those who say prayer accomplishes nothing haven’t dived deeply enough
By Richard DellOrfano | January 6th 2022 8:55 PMThe kingdom of heaven is like diving for sunken treasure and risking your life to find it. A coworker catalogued and filed "As Built" plans for us engineers after we’d finished our construction projects. I was intrigued by Sandy’s hobby of deep-sea diving, often done at great risk to life…
READ FULL BLOG POSTA Frank Dialogue
Exchange with a former convert who 'put aside his faith'
By James Hanink | December 14th 2021 3:13 PMIn my last post, gentle readers, I introduced my former mentor, Karl Meyer. Long associated with the Catholic Worker and now an octogenarian, Meyer was and is both a peace activist of renown and a prescient environmentalist. Yet some time ago, this convert put aside his faith. Karl has now…
READ FULL BLOG POSTForever Rest
Whole-hearted love of God requires discipline and spiritual exercise
By Richard DellOrfano | December 9th 2021 9:25 PMMt. Everest is the highest mountain in the Himalayan system, located near the common border of Afghanistan, Pakistan, and China. Everest, at 29,032 feet, has drawn climbers from every nation. Even the blind have risked their lives to climb it. Sir Edmund Hillary famously did so on May 23, 1953.…
READ FULL BLOG POSTSpiritual Myopia
A malformed conscience in adulthood distorts all reality
By Richard DellOrfano | December 2nd 2021 9:35 PMInadequate nutrition afflicted many children in the WWII years, due to food rationing. At an early age I developed myopia, and I suspect poor nutrition partly caused it. Evidence is mounting that this vision problem is growing around the world, with recent estimates at 30% and forecasts that by 2050…
READ FULL BLOG POSTThe Sand Palace
Self-discipline and sacrifice far in excess of society’s moral code will keep us strong
By Richard DellOrfano | November 29th 2021 5:24 PMIn the late 1980s, a friend and I rode a trolley south from San Diego to the Imperial Beach sandcastle contest. After a short walk from the station, we stood before a packed crowd assembled around various castle projects. Some were 10-feet square and upwards of seven feet high, with…
READ FULL BLOG POSTUnder Watchful Eyes
Even a mere photograph of a pair of eyes influences our decisions
By Richard DellOrfano | November 18th 2021 7:09 PMQuantum physicists have learned that subatomic particles change their conduct when being observed. That proven fact raises the question whether the particles respond to being watched, as we do. Psychologists call that response, in humans, the Hawthorne Effect. For who can resist presenting the best version of himself under the…
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