Have you ever apologized before asking a question in class? Keith Maczkiewicz, SJ wonders who taught you to do that…and then encourages you not to.
Posts in Blogs
Autumn Is Ours, But for a While
Joe Simmons, SJ explores a few pages of the ‘Book of Nature’ and finds himself falling for autumn.
Blood and Water: Sin, Suffering, and ‘Top of the Lake’
Jane Campion’s ‘Top of the Lake’ explores the consequences of crime more than its solutions. Brendan Busse, SJ wonders if we’re “not merely interested in who deserves to die for pain, who did it, but how to keep living when we don’t know how to bear it.”
Being a Human Being, or “I Don’t Know Anything”
“As I walked home I began to recognize that the invitation to be so often rides in tandem with my desire to do, and would overtake it, if I’d only let it.”
How God Looks at Us
In those tearful moments, at the end of a long day, I was sure of something: like a new parent at the window of a hospital nursery, God marvels at us. And lingers.
What Lies Beneath (Unearthing Desire, Unearthing Ourselves)
“Severe”, “unfriendly” – the words hit too close to home. So I went back to dig around: what’s the desire underneath my reluctance? What do I want?
What Dreams May Come, or A Study in Silence
“I know no psychology of sleep, but I do trust my experience. I’ve grown accustomed to rushing through days long enough that I rarely let all the stuff that comes my way sink in…”
Holding Out for What’s Special
This can’t be what extraordinary looks like, I think. But it can. And it’s the holding out for something so perfectly special that keeps me from missing what’s right before me.
This Old House
“Living in an old house, like listening to old music, reminds me that I’m part of something greater than I am, something broader.”
Greg Boyle: On Hero Worship
Finding one of his heroes at a quiet, Saturday morning mass spurs Joe Simmons’ thoughts on friendship, imagination and spiritual equality.









