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One Family, Many Faces

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  If the world is one family, then it is a family with many faces — each carrying its own story, rhythm, and way of loving. We are not meant to look alike or think alike. We are meant to learn how to live together. 🌍 Difference Is the Texture of Family Every household has its contrasts — the quiet one and the talker, the dreamer and the realist, the one who wants order and the one who thrives in chaos. Humanity is no different. Our diversity is not a flaw in the design; it is the design. When we try to erase difference, we lose the music of the world. When we learn to listen across difference, we find harmony. 💫 Seeing the Face Behind the Label It’s easy to reduce people to categories — race, religion, politics, nationality. But every label hides a face, and every face hides a story. To live as one family means to look past the shorthand and see the person: the mother, the child, the neighbor, the stranger who is not so strange after all. 🕊 Unity Without Uniformity True unity d...

God's Grace and God's Forgiveness: A Living Cycle of Mercy

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  God’s grace and God’s forgiveness are inseparable in Catholic theology because they are two movements of the same divine action: God restoring a broken relationship. Grace is God giving Himself; forgiveness is God removing what blocks that gift. You cannot have one without the other. God’s Forgiveness as the Opening of the Relationship Catholic teaching begins with a simple but profound truth: sin ruptures communion with God , and only God can repair that rupture. Forgiveness is God’s act of clearing away the barrier so that divine life can flow again. Two core teachings shape this: Forgiveness removes sin, which the Church calls the “obstacle” to grace. Grace is the very life of God shared with the soul, so forgiveness is what makes room for that life to enter. This is why the Church insists that forgiveness is not merely a legal pardon. It is a relational restoration. God forgives so that He can give Himself. Grace as God’s Self‑Gift Catholic theology defines grace a...

Top 10 Blog Posts of March 2026. #5. A Publisher's Conversation with Authors: The Long Tail Has a Pulse

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  How a Decades‑Old Book Keeps Whispering Back Every author knows the thrill of a new release: the launch, the buzz, the early reviews, the first royalty statement. What we talk about less is the quiet, stubborn afterlife of a book — the way it keeps moving through the world long after we’ve stopped expecting anything from it. Sometimes that afterlife arrives as a tiny, almost comical royalty deposit. A few dollars. A few cents. A reminder that somewhere, someone found your book. Maybe they searched for it. Maybe they stumbled across it. Maybe they were handed a used copy by a friend. But they read it — and that matters. The long tail of publishing isn’t glamorous, but it’s real. Books don’t disappear when the marketing stops. They drift. They linger. They get discovered in unexpected places. They find new readers in new decades. And every once in a while, they send up a little flare:  I’m still here. For authors, that pulse is worth noticing. It’s proof that our work has a li...