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Years ago, when I became a Catholic in my early twenties, I took the words of Jesus literally. I wept for my sins and gave away much of what I owned, to the point of taking my $200 Italian leather hiking boots off on the streets of Philadelphia when I saw a barefoot homeless man who could use them more than I. I moved to the inner city after graduation from college to help run a Catholic Worker house of hospitality, ate in a soup kitchen every day, and spent my days ministering to those in prison, refugees, neighborhood children trapped in cycles of violence, and those in the throes of addiction. I had a bumper sticker on my car that read, “If you want peace, work for justice.”
How do young adult Chinese Christians navigate their faith in contemporary China?. In college, my father took me back to the People's Republic of...
Continue ReadingThe first hospitals were designed to care for these sick strangers. . Though the tradition of hospitality predates the written word, the first...
Continue ReadingChrist is the root and the vine, and we are grafted into him through faith.. God draws near to those whose hearts are fearful, who are sorry for...
Continue ReadingIt’s my fault. If I had told my audience what would happen next, which was after all my job, I might have averted the 2008 financial collapse. . I...
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