Flashes
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Plurality — the West’s greatest and most forgotten achievement
US Secretary of State Marco Rubio praised Mozart and Beethoven as pillars of Western culture, and rightly so. But the thinkers who may matter more today are Locke, Jefferson, and Madison — the architects of a West defined not by sameness but by the right to differ.
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The forbidden tree and a troubling picture of God
Placing a forbidden tree in a garden created out of love raises hard questions about the nature of God. Read literally, the Genesis story portrays the Divine as setting a trap, then punishing all humanity when the trap is sprung.
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From TikTok to the baptism font
Faith communities are engaging digital culture rather than retreating from it. Conversion stories on YouTube and TikTok, alongside a growing Vatican online presence, are sparking real curiosity that leads people from screens to parishes and into sacramental preparation.
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Synodal crossroads – from vision to action
Talk is no longer enough to sustain the faithful. To remain credible, the Church must implement short-term, tangible changes. Without a shift toward inclusive decision-making and transparency, the synodal process risks becoming a hollow exercise rather than a true spiritual renewal.
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Rethinking peace while facing modern signs of war
Global military spending reached record highs as autonomous weaponry and AI changed the face of combat. These technologies erase moral responsibility. This is why modern advancements demand a re-evaluation of peace and a move away from tools that experts describe as small, cheap, and abundant.
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Surprise! Vatican shelved another report on women deacons, again.
Regressive induction begins with the answer Church leadership wants and works backwards to find arguments that support it, while persistently ignoring inconvenient historical and theological evidence.
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From the Upper Room to the rule book
When “rubrical correctness” becomes the ultimate measure of faith, the celebrating Body of Christ is left behind. We examine the rise of self-appointed observers and their impact on the local parish experience.
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Cafeteria bishops
Once a term of conservative scorn aimed at progressive Catholics, “Cafeteria Catholic” has taken on new meaning — now it arguably describes bishops who selectively apply official church teaching and ignore synodal reforms they find personally inconvenient.
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Grace not an intermittent signal but a constant broadcast
Grace crashes into ordinary life uninvited — the dull commute, the 3am spiral, the grey Tuesday afternoon. Karl Rahner called this the heart of Jesuit theology: God’s presence as an unrelenting lifeline, available everywhere and always.
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