Flashes

  • Honest talk can change the world

    Habermas’s “ideal speech situation” required that all relevant voices be heard, that the best available argument prevail, and that no coercion — other than the force of a better reason — determine the outcome. It is a vision that many church reformers would recognize immediately.

    Honest talk can change the world
  • Doctrine embedded in code

    Church doctrine is not a monolith delivered whole from a divine height. It is the product of human minds, shaped by culture, era, and a narrowly drawn group of ordained men. Understanding this is the first step toward doctrine that is life-giving rather than life-destructive.

    Doctrine embedded in code
  • The graced life of trees

    Trees do far more than grow — they warn, communicate, and heal. Drawing on ecological science and spiritual tradition, God’s graced presence in trees spills outward, cooling cities, filtering air, and offering the kind of quiet healing that many people instinctively seek in nature.

    The graced life of trees
  • Interpreting Pope Leo on the Middle East

    Pope Leo has returned regularly to the Israel-US-Iran War in the Middle East in his public statements. He commented almost immediately after both Israel and the USA began their strikes on Iran and has maintained his focus on the topic. The Pope clearly prefers peace and diplomacy to war and aggression — his language about…

    Interpreting Pope Leo on the Middle East
  • Suitcases of gratitude

    Amid a fractured and noisy world, hope shows up in the ordinary — in a handwritten card, a shared meal, a friendship forged over coffee. This Lent was different; letting go of the old is an act of grief and gratitude in equal measure.

    Suitcases of gratitude
  • Juxtapositions: Lent, liturgy and life

    From Ash Wednesday dispensations to Ramadan night bazaars and Iranian strike headlines, this Lent in Singapore refused to stay tidy. Fifteen days of overlapping seasons, obligations, and emotions came to the liturgy — and were held together without any of them being erased.

    Juxtapositions: Lent, liturgy and life
  • Christians — loving, caring, forgiving, friendly and good-natured believers

    Jorge Mario Bergoglio attracted people by being ordinary — and in doing so, exposed just how extraordinary ordinary goodness has become among those who hold public influence and trust.

    Christians — loving, caring, forgiving, friendly and good-natured believers
  • Five small parishes model the future of the Church

    Perhaps the wider Church does not need to invent new models of synodality. In some places, the model is already there — faithfully lived, week after week, in ordinary parish life. Mizoram is one of those places.

    Five small parishes model the future of the Church
  • Peace starts here

    Genuine peace is not always comfortable. Some people try our patience repeatedly. Yet that is precisely where world peace must begin — not in diplomatic summits, but in the ordinary, difficult relationships of everyday life.

    Peace starts here
  • A ‘rupture in the world order’

    If today’s moral disorder is embedded in political, economic, and religious structures, then individual repentance alone is insufficient. The response must be equally structural — public, organized, and sustained.

    A ‘rupture in the world order’

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