The Mystery of Parenthood
Fifteen years ago at St. Mary’s in College Station, I walked down the stairs with my then 3 year old son. What happened on those stairs opened my eyes and subsequently my wife’s eyes to the fact that parenthood does more for the parents than it ever does for the...
23
May
2013
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5 Secrets of a Happy Summer at Home
There is a time for everything, and a season for every activity under the heavens. Ecclesiastes 3:1 Central Texas is amazing place to live. I’ve been here for 10 years and never desire to live elsewhere… unless of course it’s summertime…..when (as a visiting friend once described to me)...
23
May
2013
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What Did the Pope Just Say?
Hold your horses, Huffington Post.The Pope did not just change the doctrine of the Catholic church. Protestants… take a deep breath before you point fingers and claim that Catholics believe you have to work your way into heaven and that Pope Francis just said so. Are we calmed down? Good....
22
May
2013
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Open Letter to Graduating High School Seniors
I’ve spent the last 4 years as a catechist to high school seniors. Before that I spent 4 years with confirmation classes and middle school students, but focusing on sending students out to college and beyond high school has been some of my most fruitful experiences. I would like to...
22
May
2013
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Mary’s “Lectio on Life”
In her Magnificat (Luke 1:46-55), Mary says, “He has filled the hungry with good things and sent the rich away empty.” That line used to bother me. It sounds mean. I have often asked Our Lady what she meant by it exactly. I love the way she answered. Some years...
22
May
2013
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Dominican Sisters and The American Bible Challenge
As you might be aware of the Dominican Sisters of Mary have been contestants on this season’s “The American Bible Challenge” and will be appearing in the final at 9 p.m. ET/8 p.m. CT Thursday, May 23 on The Game Show Network. We had the opportunity to ask Sr. Maria Suso some questions about...
20
May
2013
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Fighting for LIFE on Facebook
We’re touted as the pro-life generation. I have no doubt of that, but how are we still losing to a popular culture of death? Let me give you some background information. I attended a Christian university in Texas with deep roots to Baptist traditions. Last week, I was on Facebook...
20
May
2013
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Faith is Love in Action
Praise the Lord, I’ve survived yet another year of college! It wasn’t pretty. There was a lot of caffeine and a lot of hair pulling and a lot of wanting to drop out of school, but by the grace of God I survived. Unfortunately, this means that I am getting...
18
May
2013
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Two Guys a Girl and a Catholic Podcast Episode 95: Revolution in Austin
Episode 95 Feedback: From The Bartlett Here is a possible topic to discuss. Competition – is it a virtue or a vice? If Jesus lead a sports league, would all the kids get trophies? What about in the free market, many demonize the free market and a key catalyst in...
17
May
2013
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The Continued Misadventures of a Catholic Politcal Advocate
Today I got another lesson in political advocacy. You might recall- Wanted Concerned Catholic Voters Mr Henrichson Went to the Capitol About a month ago I was blessed with the opportunity to represent my fellow Catholics in front of the staff of Eddie Rodriguez. You may also recall that, that...
17
May
2013
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The Best Me
Last week marked the premature end of an all-too-short era in the Williston house when, after a remarkable temper tantrum by my son, Lincoln, we decided to sell the Wii and Xbox on Craigslist. It all started, as most family crises do, with a father/son matchup in Mario Super Sluggers,...
16
May
2013
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Confession and Pentecost; Grace and Power
Trust in the LORD with all your heart, and do not rely on your own insight. In all your ways acknowledge him, and he will make straight your paths. -Proverbs 3:5-6 This verse is not like Confession; this verse is Confession. Four things happen. I entrust myself to God...
15
May
2013
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I like reading. I’d be crazy to have written a book review column for a year and a half if I didn’t like reading. But, in addition to reading, I like getting to know people. I’m an interesting person to make friends with because I have a knack for focusing very intentionally on developing the friendship. I want to find out whether I click with someone, whether my potential friends are “after my own heart” (Acts 13:22). I was delighted to find that after spending intentional time with the mind of Mr. G. K. Chesterton. If you like British people, theology, deeply reflective reading, and wit, you will love Orthodoxy as much as I did.
Orthodoxy is among Chesterton’s best-known works. It is recommended as a good first book for the beginning Chesterton fan; I support that recommendation. Like any philosopher or theologian, he begins with a basic question: what should I believe in? If we can believe that some things are good and some are bad, then why do people do bad things—or, in his trademark style, why do men go mad? Along the way, Chesterton describes his journey toward a personal philosophy and the startling final discovery that he was not the first person to generate that philosophy. Christianity had it right all along.
Reading this book is a little like adoring this guy: you’re in for an intense ride, but it will also be awesome.
I would be a terrible reviewer if I didn’t warn you that Chesterton is not an easy read. It took me a very long time to finish reading this book. (Then again, it took me a very long time to get as close to my best friends as I am now.) I annotated the whole thing, so the pages are marked (pardon the pun) by my underlining, summaries, and even cross-references. I like to chew over books as I read them (also people, but not literally), especially books about God (sometimes literally—hooray for the Eucharist). Chesterton is very chewy. You will have a much easier time with this book if you know a little bit about theology or philosophy, but if you are open to following a complex line of thought (knowing that it ends at the Apostles’ Creed), you will be delighted with Chesterton’s wit and forthrightness. He doesn’t mince words, and he’s not trying to seem like a big shot, but he is very well educated. If you adopt a bit of this philosophy into your life, you will be, too.
Chesterton’s explanation of why Christianity is the only logical path of belief is also marked by his humility. In the very first paragraph of the very first chapter, he writes:
I have attempted, in a vague and personal way, in a set of mental pictures rather than in a series of deductions, to state the philosophy which I have come to believe. I will not call it my philosophy; for I did not make it. God and humanity made it; and it made me.
He spends a later chapter explaining that fairy tales help us understand life. A door that leads to a hidden castle is only exciting because we know that most doors don’t lead to magical castles. The idea that something so simple as learning a little man’s name can enslave him to you is only ridiculous when we give so little power to names. Complaining about monogamy only arises when the beauty of sexuality is taken for granted. Modesty, freedom, charity, sacrifice: they all slowly make sense. In trying to figure out what he believed for himself, he discovered that others already agreed completely. He had stumbled upon the Truth.
I did try to found a little heresy of my own; and when I had put the last touches to it, I discovered that it was orthodoxy.
Read this book, find orthodoxy for yourself, and discover the freedom and joy within.
—
Up next: Flight of the Earls, by Michael K. Reynolds (pending my receiving the book in time)










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