Researchers claim that an average person needs less than 30 seconds to appraise someone at a first encounter. Even before the individual speaks, there is non-verbal communication. Body language such as crossed arms, dilated pupils, and forced smiles send a message. So does one’s clothing. In a day that places a high premium on communication and where even one’s appearance is crafted to evoke a certain response, clothes have become extremely meaningful.
At the very beginning of America’s fight for independence, Thomas Paine published his historic pamphlet Common Sense. In this highly incendiary work, he marshalled arguments to convince the members of the Thirteen Colonies to sever their union with England. He astutely noted that “Europe, and not England, is the parent country of America.” England, therefore, had no claim over the lives of all those in the colonies. Just common sense.
In almost every town in Italy, there is a street named “
Via XX Settembre” (September 20th Street). It celebrates the capture of Rome on Sept. 20, 1870. This event brought an end to the Papal States and unified Italy as one country. Prior to that date, the Pope was not merely the spiritual leader of the Catholic Church, but the temporal ruler of several states within Italy.
Alfred E. Smith, a devout Catholic, was elected four times as governor of New York. However, the announcement of his candidacy for president immediately unleashed a storm of anti-Catholicism in 1928. A Protestant minister in Oklahoma City warned his large congregation, “If you vote for Al Smith, you’re voting against Christ and you’ll all be damned.” The Daytona Beach, Florida school board predicted that, if Smith were elected, students would not be allowed to have or read a Bible. Around the country, pamphlets appeared attacking the Catholic Smith. More than 100 anti-Catholic newspapers poisoned the well with their propaganda against Smith for his religion. The anti-Catholic hate was so strong that, within just eight weeks, Smith’s campaign for the presidency ended.
Basic to the American dream is the search for freedom. In the 17th century, Europeans facing persecution for their beliefs fled to America. Since World War II, millions of people have come to the shores of this country. Wars, persecutions, economic distress and political unrest have driven them from their homes to seek a better life. Recent statistics show that there are more than 43.7 million immigrants residing in the United States. They make up 13.5 percent of the total population.
At every military funeral in the United States, the U.S. government dispatches a bugler. As the mourners hush into silence, he solemnly lifts his bugle and sounds Taps. This well-known, 24-note bugle call is actually a revision of a French bugle signal telling soldiers to stop their evening drinking and return to their barracks. Today, it is sounded at dusk at our military posts. The bugle’s plaintive voice announces lights out at the end of the day. How appropriate, therefore, that it is now used at funerals when the light of this life is extinguished by the darkness of death.
Since 2010, world leaders, movie stars, CEOs, artists, and political activists have been meeting annually in New York for the
Women in the World Summit. This gathering has become one of America’s most famous forums to foster women’s rights. In 2015, on the eve of launching her presidential campaign, Hillary Clinton gave the keynote address. Her remarks sparked an immediate firestorm of comments and controversy over the endangered right of religious freedom.
The town of Sulmona, Italy has a very unique tradition celebrated on Easter Sunday. It is a dramatic and joy-filled procession celebrating the Resurrection of Jesus. It is called La Madonna Che Scappa (The Madonna who runs). A procession of men bears the statues of the apostles Peter and John. They bring them to Mary. Peter first announces to Mary the good news of the Resurrection. But, she does not believe him. After all, he was known to have lied about even knowing Jesus. John, the Beloved Disciple, who saw the empty tomb and the burial linens neatly folded and immediately believed, then gives the same good news to Mary and she believes.
In 2013, Hallmark sparked a controversy by changing a single word in a Christmas song. Ever since 1877, the traditional English lyrics of Deck the Halls, originally written by the Scottish musician Thomas Oliphant, included the words “Don we now our gay apparel.” Many within the LGBT community protested Hallmark’s new version, “Don we now our fun apparel.” Obviously, Hallmark had taken note that the word “gay” that at one time meant festive, joyful, or colorful had now taken on a different meaning. It had become the preferred designation of those who adopt a certain lifestyle.
Among the artwork adorning the walls of the Supreme Court are found the great lawmakers of history. Some, like Hammurabi, Solon and Confucius predate Christ. Others, like Charlemagne, Muhammad and Justinian, came after Christ. Prominent among them is Moses with the Ten Commandments. On each of the two oak doors leading into the Supreme Court, there can be seen a symbolic engraving of the Ten Commandments. Within the court itself, right above where the judges sit, there is another display of the Ten Commandments.
In a recent U.S. Catholic survey, eighty percent of those questioned said that music at Mass was very important to them. However, only thirteen percent were totally satisfied with the music that they have and actually sing. The music at Mass is important, very important! It is not simply a performance by a soloist or choir, a background to accompany our prayer, a means to create a mood, or an incentive to shout and clap our hands. Music is integral to our liturgical worship.
Magazines, movies, television soap operas, and commercial advertisements for phones, household items, sports equipment, and clothing project an unrealistic standard of what it means to be a man or a woman. They have created the stereotype of slim women and muscular men as the ideal.
In 1859, Darwin published On The Origin of Species. His book brought into the open a conflict between science and religion that had been simmering below the surface since the days of the Enlightenment. It is a blood feud that many still fight in the attempt to prove that science is the only avenue to truth with certitude. According to the mindset of those who see fact and faith as irreconcilable, only what can be proven by science is true.
T homas, one of the Twelve, was not with them when Jesus came.
Disbelieving the report of the women about the empty tomb, Thomas did not join the other apostles on Easter night. He did not see the Risen Lord. Apart from the community of faith, we close ourselves off from the Lord’s Presence.
Before Gutenberg invented the printing press, society depended mostly on the spoken word. When it came to communicating the news, teaching the faith, spreading propaganda or offering practical solutions to difficult dilemmas, people would often frame their message with the use of rhyme in songs and poems. Not infrequently these little songs held hidden messages about someone embroiled in scandal or a ruler out of favor. Thus, Mary, Mary Quite Contrary was a satirical commentary on the rule and personal life of “Bloody Mary,” Queen of Scots.
Almost every school of ancient philosophy claimed Socrates as their patron saint. In Greece and Rome, the Skeptics, the Stoics and the Cynics all looked to Socrates for inspiration. Living in 5th century Athens, he did not conform to the pressures of contemporary society. By his method of questioning, he tried to move others away from living in the futile search for fame and power. He challenged his fellow citizens to seek higher moral standards.
Two words are frequently found on the lips of Pope Francis in his addresses and homilies. One is the word “neo-Pelagian;” the other, “neo-Gnostic.” Both words have a long and complicated history. The first is much easier to explain.
In 2011, the World Health Organization issued a report on the adverse effects of environmental noise on health. We are constantly surrounded by noise. Airplanes overhead. Buses, cars and trucks on our highways. The roar of subways in our cities. Police and fire sirens. We are bombarded on every side by a cacophony of noise.
Young people fleeing in panic. Shots ringing out. Police swarming the building. Screams. Tears. Anxious parents huddled together. News media surrounding the carnage. This scene has become all too familiar in America. The recent mass shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla., has once again devastated families. This Valentine Day’s massacre has broken the heart of the nation.
In an hour-long operation at Texas Children’s Hospital in October 2017, Dr. Michael Belfort, chairman of obstetrics and gynecology at Baylor College of Medicine, and Dr. William Whitehead, a pediatric surgeon, performed a life-changing surgery on a tiny baby boy. He was 23 weeks in the womb since conception and diagnosed with spina bifida. Operating on the baby while still in the womb of his mother, the doctors corrected his congenital defect.