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Where Do Interfaith Pastors Come From?

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People often assume pastors emerge from a single pipeline: seminary, denomination, ordination, pulpit. But interfaith pastors don’t come from one pipeline at all. They come from many — and that’s the point. Their work is shaped not by a single tradition, but by the conviction that spiritual care belongs to everyone, not just those who fit inside one theological box. Interfaith pastors are, in a sense, spiritual immigrants. They cross borders. They learn new languages. They build bridges. And their origin stories are as varied as the communities they serve. 1. Some come from traditional seminaries — and then expand outward. Many interfaith pastors begin in a single faith tradition. They earn degrees from Christian seminaries, Jewish rabbinical schools, Buddhist institutes, or Islamic universities. They learn the depth of one tradition first — its theology, its rituals, its pastoral care practices. But somewhere along the way, they discover that the people who come to them for help don’...

How Is It Possible to Love Your Kids but Not Always Like Them?

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The first time a parent admits—even silently, even only to themselves—that they don’t like their child in a particular moment, it can feel like a moral failure. We’re told that love should smooth everything out, that affection should override irritation, that “good parents” don’t have negative feelings toward their kids. But here’s the truth most parents discover eventually: liking your child is a feeling . Loving your child is a commitment . And those two things don’t always show up at the same time. Love is the deep structure; liking is the weather. Love is the tectonic plate under your feet—steady, unmoving, the thing that holds the whole landscape together. Liking is the day’s forecast. Some days are sunny. Some days are fogged in. Some days are a full‑blown storm where you’re pretty sure the barometric pressure is dropping because your kid is stomping down the hallway. You can love someone fiercely and still not enjoy who they are in a particular developmental stage, or in a pa...

How My Cat Made Me a Better Ninja

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  My cat didn’t teach me stealth. I already had that — decades of tiptoeing through sleeping households and slipping out of church pews without bumping a kneeler. What my cat taught me was precision . Cats don’t waste motion. They don’t lumber, they calculate . Every leap, every twist, every landing is a master class in economy. Watching mine stalk a moth across the living room, I realized: this is the real ninja training. Not the dramatic kicks, but the quiet calibration — the way she moves only when it matters. She taught me balance, too. When she perches on the narrow arm of a chair, tail flicking, I see the art of equilibrium. It’s not about muscle; it’s about awareness. A ninja doesn’t fight gravity — she negotiates with it. And patience. A cat can wait for hours, motionless, until the moment is right. I used to think that was laziness. Now I know it’s strategy. A ninja doesn’t rush. She waits for the opening. Finally, recovery. When my cat misjudges a jump and lands awkwardly...