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This week's editor's choice: A Theology for the rest of Us (Yavelberg)

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    This week's editor's choice is  A Theology for the Rest of Us  by Arthur Yavelberg. This book is a highly respected book, well reviewed, and recipient of some excellent awards. For seekers, skeptics, and spiritually curious readers who want depth—not doctrine—this book offers a path worth exploring. Book description: Why does evil exist? Does God? Do we have free will—or are we shaped by forces we barely understand? In an age of disillusionment with organized religion and frustration with shallow “spirituality,” more and more thoughtful people are searching for a path that is honest, coherent, and intellectually alive. A Theology for the Rest of Us offers a clear, rational exploration of the deepest questions humans ask, drawing on wisdom from both Eastern and Western traditions—including Buddhism, Taoism, Hindu philosophy, Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. Instead of defending dogma, the book invites readers into a cross‑cultural conversation about meanin...

Rage Without Bitterness: Reclaiming the Fire in Later Life

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  “Do not go gentle into that good night. Rage, rage against the dying of the light.” — Dylan Thomas These lines are often mistaken for Bob Dylan’s, perhaps because both men wrote about defiance and endurance. But Thomas’s poem isn’t about fury for its own sake. It’s about refusal — the refusal to drift quietly into diminishment. It’s a call to stay awake, to stay luminous, even as the body and world change. The Deeper Meaning Behind the Rage Thomas’s “rage” isn’t anger at mortality; it’s passion for life. It’s the insistence that consciousness, creativity, and love still matter, even when time shortens. The poem reminds us that the light — our vitality, curiosity, and spirit — doesn’t die naturally. It fades only when we stop feeding it. For those in their later years, this isn’t a command to fight aging. It’s an invitation to engage it — to live with intensity, not hostility. How This Thought Enriches the Latter Years It reframes aging as participation, not retreat. “Rage” b...

Top 10 Blog Posts of April 2026: #8. Holy Saturday: The Day of God's Silence

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  Holy Saturday is the most easily overlooked day of the Triduum. It has no liturgy until nightfall, no sacraments, no proclamations. The tabernacle is empty. Christ is in the tomb. The Church keeps vigil in stillness. It is the one day in the Christian year when the Church  feels  what it is like to live without visible signs of God’s activity. This is not an accident. It is pedagogy. Holy Saturday teaches that  God’s silence is not God’s absence . In Catholic tradition, Christ is not idle; He is descending to the dead, breaking open the realm of death from within. The world sees stillness; heaven sees movement. Waiting becomes the place where God is at work in ways we cannot yet perceive. Why Waiting Matters in Catholic Spirituality 1. Waiting trains the heart in hope Hope is not optimism. It is the decision to trust God when the outcome is not visible. Catholic theology insists that hope is forged precisely in the gap between promise and fulfillment. Waiting is wh...