A crushing weight and never-ending love
I was trying to decide if I wanted ice cream when I got a text from my sister: “Call mom or I when you can.” It was one of those moments where time stops and the sinking feeling in the pit of my stomach knows that my world will never be the same. Someone I love lost their life to suicide. I had the honour of presiding at the Celebration of Life. It was one of the hardest things I have ever done. And we need to talk more about this crushing weight – and a never-ending love.
New mace marks going forward together
Take in your hand this staff, with which you shall perform the signs.
Exodus: 14: 17
There is nothing quite so spectacular as a well-executed ceremony, replete with fanfare and ritual. This is arguably why we marvel at coronations even if we aren’t royalists and watch starry-eyed at award ceremonies even if we secretly feel they are testaments to vanity. Ceremonial rituals, however, sometimes point to moments of deep historical importance, and at such times we do well to pause and pay homage. A flag at half-mast, an award of valour, the sign of the Cross. So it is with symbolic objects that capture not just the splendour of the moment, but a long-term history that gives meaning to what they represents. The mace is one such object.
Maternal identity now a side hustle
How big a role do women’s fears about losing their identity play in low fertility rates?
Louise Perry, author of The Case Against the Sexual Revolution and host of the excellent Maiden, Mother, Matriarch podcast, raised the question on a recent episode. Hearing women on TikTok and other social media talk about the issue of identity as a barrier to motherhood, she said, “I don’t get it. I can’t interpret what it means.”
What makes you Catholic?
What does it mean to be a Catholic? The realities of the Church in the world today make it unfortunately quite complicated to answer this question.
‘Christ is king’
The Kansas City Chiefs’ Super Bowl winning field goal kicker has been perma-labelled “him with his foot in his mouth” for his recent commencement address to a Catholic college.
Verbatim: A message from Pope Francis on the inaugural World Children’s Day in Rome
A message from Pope Francis on the inaugural World Children’s Day in Rome, May 25 2024.
Hand it out, they will come
Regarding The Catholic Register’s May 25 news story and editorial on drug decriminalization, a key concept in the field of substance-related public policy is availability, which refers to the overall ease with which a given substance can be obtained.
Lara’s spirit walks on
Throughout the month of May, we have been responding to the call from Palestinian Christians to pray and walk in solidarity with them by making a “Ceasefire Pilgrimage” for peace. The idea is that people walk 42 km, either on their own or in combination with others, the distance it takes to traverse the entire length of Gaza. It is an ecumenical effort coordinated in Canada by KAIROS.
Sanity prevails with ‘no’ to drugs
When even the Trudeau government just says ‘no’ to drug decriminalization, it’s clear the push to flood addicts’ bodies and urban life with stupefying toxins has gone too far.
Christ’s face defeats anti-God Communists
Do you feel helpless in the face of spreading global Communism? Fear not, Our Lord has already given us a spiritual gift to defeat Communism’s anti-God and therefore anti-human evils. This gift is His own Sacred Face.
Message from Pope Francis to the International Conference on Sport and Spirituality
The message “Putting life into play” from Pope Francis to the International Conference on Sport and Spirituality held in Rome May 16-18.