Deep Down Things
Nicodemus, Doug Weaver
Pentecost 2012 issue.
Whatever You Do for the Least of My Brethren: Social Justice Starts at Home, and at Church
Neediness is a social sin in our society, treated as if it was leprosy. But Christians are supposed to give sacrificially to those in need.
Taxpayer-funded programs to help the needy would be much less needed if we all gave Christian love and care to the ones God has given us to love in our daily lives.
And shouldn't we be doing whatever we can to make sure nobody feels left out? Perhaps we should give sacrificially of our time and concern and friendship too?
Sacred Art’s Mysterious Call to the Heart
Beauty creates a longing for transcendent realities. As poet Dana Gioia wrote in the essay quoted in this post of mine at Dappled Things Deep Down things blog, "art is mysterious. It reaches us in ways we don’t fully understand.”
This ability of sacred art to call our hearts and prepare our minds to receive truth is something we need to bring into the discussion as the Church ponders how to help the appallingly large number of Catholics who either were never taught or never believed or lost belief—for whatever reason—in the presence of Christ in the Eucharist.
Friday Links, November 13, 2020
Chant, a good new book, and matters of race