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The Good Word
John W. Martens
How do you receive the word of God when you do not read This is a strange question to ask in an age of unprecedented literacy at a time when access to data texts and knowledge is constant No longer need one rely on books taken from the library you can carry Kindle and have over a thousand book
The Good Word
John W. Martens
The second reading for the Sixteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time continues with the reflections of Paul or a superb facsimile of Paul on human unity in and through Christ The reading for this Sunday is Ephesians 2 13-18 but I think it is worth drawing in the two verses just prior to this passage S
The Good Word
Richard Leonard
I know very few people these days who work from 9 00am to 5 00pm The eight-hour day seems to be a thing of the past Where priests regularly encounter these new work patterns is when we see young people who are preparing for marriage in the Church Sometimes to arrange a meeting we have to resort t
The Good Word
Barbara Green
Two related points about this week s readings First it is difficult for me as a woman religious to hear Ezekiel rsquo s description of nbsp ldquo bad shepherds rdquo behavior without thinking of recent acts of power by authorities in the Catholic Church Whether pondering the abuse of childre
The Good Word
John W. Martens
In the criticism of George Weigel s intemperate and churlish source criticism of Pope Benedict XVI s new encyclical criticism which is warranted it has not been much noted that biblical scholars engage in source criticism on a regular basis The same criticisms raised of Weigel s gold pen and r
The Good Word
John W. Martens
Many scholars evaluate Ephesians as a pseudonymous letter of Paul s attributing it to a period some twenty years approximately after Paul s martyrdom and composed by disciples of Paul sometimes styled as a Pauline school Others note that the earliest manuscript traditions lack to the Ephesi