No Results Found
The page you requested could not be found. Try refining your search, or use the navigation above to locate the post.
Grief at the death of animals reveals a moral obligation we too often ignore. Daniel Mascarenhas, SJ argues that if we dare to feel this grief, it becomes a call to love them as fellow creatures of God.
Reflecting on his current studies in theology, Josh reflects on how a hundreds-year-old debate on the sacraments touched his own life and brought him healing.
In his forthcoming memoir Atomic Pilgrim, James Patrick Thomas recounts his cross-continental pilgrimage from Washington State to the Holy Land and his later activism back home. Writing for The Jesuit Post, Luke Lapean, SJ reflects on how the memoir provocatively asks whether true success in the struggle for change lies in measurable outcomes or in the quiet, interior transformation of the one who walks the road.
The page you requested could not be found. Try refining your search, or use the navigation above to locate the post.
Having checked the box for both Democrats and Republicans (and felt the pinch of not living up to John 17:21), Sam Sawyer throws down the gauntlet.
So your political career has been defined by anti-Semitism, then you find out you’re Jewish. Now what? Quang Tran takes a closer look.
“Whether it’s four artsy NYU grads or a bunch of vowed religious living together, the “otherliness” of it all strikes most people – to put it in Midwestern politesse – as… different…”
It is indeed possible for the not-insane to find joy in the ruins of a Nazi death camp. Or so says Michael Rozier.
A new soda claims it’s “not for women,” but TJP man’s man Vinny Marchionni thinks that’s all wrong.
Culture wars? Relativism? The word “chalice”? TJP’s resident rhetorician Jayme Stayer gives us 13 examples of how the answers we give depend up on the (rhetorical) perspectives we take.