2015

This morning’s broadcast from Sandro Magister lists the names of our twenty-one new Coptic saints. The essay “Saint Milad Saber and His Twenty Companions” can be read in full here. But let me list their names for you. They died whispering prayers, some calling upon the name of Jesus at the moment of decapitation.buy cialis professional online https://blackmenheal.org/wp-content/themes/twentytwentytwo/inc/patterns/en/cialis-professional.html no prescription By knife. We honor them by name: Milad Saber Mounir Adly Saad, bachelor Sameh Salah Farouq, married, one child Ezzat Boshra Nassif, married, with one son of four years Kyrillos Boschra Fawzy, bachelor Tawadraus Youssef Tawadraus, married, three children Magued Soliman Shehata, married, three children Mina Fayez Aziz, bachelor Samouil Alham Wilson, married, three children Bishoi Stephanos Kamel, bachelor Samouil Stephanos Kamel, brother of the latter, bachelor Malek Abram Sanyut, married, three children Milad Makin Zaky, married, one daughter Abanub Ayyad Ateyya Shehata, bachelor Guerges Samir Megally Zakher, bachelor Youssef Shukry Younan, bachelor Malek Farag Ibrahim, married, baby daughter Mina Shehata Awad Louqa Nagati Anis Abdou, 27 years, married with infant Essam Baddar Samir Ishaq, bachelor Hany Abdal-Massih Salib, married, four children Guerges Milad Sanyut, bachelor Continue Reading

What made Christianity so dangerous [to imperial Rome] was its uncompromising, radical de-divinization of the world. —Eric Voegelin, The New Science of Politics
Early Christian thinking, like the biblical thinking of the Jewish culture which informed it, was a sedition against the entire pagan world of the sacred. It abolished nature gods: the moon goddess, the gods of thunder, of the hunt, of fertility, the harvest, the waters, all the deities of pagan cosmology. It denied Flora and Faunus sacred status. Continue Reading
Where Did Ash Wednesday Go?

What has happened to Ash Wednesday? Is the wearing of ashes in decline everywhere? Or only in New York City, a sanctuary city for people of every faith or unfaith? Or was I just in the wrong part of town at the wrong hour?   I took an early commuter train into the city this morning, and was on the subway to Columbus Circle between 8:30 and 9:00 am. Coming up out of the station, I passed a young woman with ashes—the first I had seen since I left the house. Continue Reading
Beauty Bits & Pieces

A theologian who does not love art, poetry, music and nature can be dangerous. Blindness and deafness toward the beautiful are not incidental; they necessarily are reflected in his theology. Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger
Of all the modern substitutes for religion, it is the aesthetic sense which is the most esteemed. Edward Norman, Entering the Darkness
That quote above by then-Cardinal Ratzinger leaves me fidgety. I would rather hear about the potential effect on theology of his pilot’s license—he does have one—than appeals to art, music, nature, the expected perfumes. Continue Reading
Sistine & Porsche - A Marriage of Brands

Your friends are not religious; they are only pew-renters. They are not moral; they are only conventional. Don Juan to the Devil in Shaw’s Man and Superman
A sense of the holy brings with it a sense of taboo. We tread cautiously in the tenting place of the ineffable. A Presence abides. We dare not profane. The Vatican’s recently announced Art for Charity initiative directed toward high profile corporations raises a question: Is the Sistine Chapel still the sacred space it was built to be? Continue Reading