July 30th, 2019
[Editors’ note: Maryclare O’Brien-Wilson is a 2018 awardee of the Lucile Murray Durkin Scholarship for Women Discerning Priestly Ordination. This is the second of three in a series of reflections from our 2018 awardees on how the scholarship impacted their journey over the academic year. Read the first reflection, from Allison Connelly, here.] “I found…
Read more
July 27th, 2019
Clinical Pastoral Education (CPE) is a common summer undertaking for seminarians. Many large hospitals offer the intensive summer program, which challenges us to put all those lofty ideals into action. At Bellevue Hospital in New York, I spend three days a week offering pastoral care to some of the most underprivileged patients in the city.…
Read more
July 23rd, 2019
[Editors’ note: Allison Connelly is a 2018 awardee of the Lucile Murray Durkin Scholarship for Women Discerning Priestly Ordination. This is the first of three in a series of reflections from our 2018 awardees on how the scholarship impacted their journey over the academic year.] “While he was in Bethany, reclining at the table in…
Read more
July 20th, 2019
Since I’m writing this blog early this week, I am hoping that there are no news flashes that I wish I had covered. Instead, I am going back to two articles I have saved on women deacons. They came to mind because of articles in NCR about a talk by Ally Kateusz that looked for…
Read more
July 16th, 2019
I’m still in “commencement speech” mode. Please bear with me. It’s just that at this time of the year so many extraordinary people are giving us – or, in the case below, have given us – so much extraordinary inspiration and encouragement, I cannot resist passing it on. Paul Hawken, author and “visionary environmental activist”…
Read more
July 13th, 2019
Would you believe that Nine to Five is almost forty years old? NPR’s Morning Edition on Thursday featured the song as one of its American Anthems. It’s fun to wake up to, and interesting to hear the examination of the lyrics by Lynn Neary, Karen Nussbaum, Rebecca Traister, and Merrill Garbus. It’s not as simple…
Read more
July 9th, 2019
Commencement speech time has just ended, and those of us who attended graduations, from eighth grade through college and beyond, may have heard one or two or too many! Still, wherever we are in life, I think we need these pep talks yearly – maybe even daily. And we need them especially to inspire us…
Read more
July 6th, 2019
Hum this to “America the Beautiful.” It’s my favorite line from Miriam Therese Winter’s version of this classic: “Indigenous and immigrant, our daughters and our sons, O may we never rest content till all are truly one.” I am inspired to write about “indigenous” by the July page in the calendar of the National Museum…
Read more
July 2nd, 2019
“We Used To Think Photos Like This Could Change The World. What Needs To Change Is Who We Are” is the provocative title of a commentary by Philip Kennicott in the June 26 online edition of the Washington Post. (Content warning: The link contains a graphic photograph of people who drowned.) The photograph is the one…
Read more