The noise of opinions and differences might make us feel as though we don’t belong in some situations. But finding God to be our and everyone’s true home unifies us and assures us of our safety. An ...
The great saint Therese of Lisieux once said, “The world is thy ship and not thy home.” A great heaviness seems to have filled the air in the wake of recent tragedies, violence and human frailty. It ...
One of the most difficult issues faithful people have to wrestle with is: If our supposedly loving God can create the universe, then why does he not prevent the most horrific of evil human acts? The ...
Eric Beres and his daughters Nikita, left, and Alesia, are excited to become officially Catholic this Easter Sunday. Beres, a single Millennial father from Monongahela, said his faith helps him in ...
It’s hard not to ponder the horrific irony in the timing of this year’s Epiphany feast celebrated on Jan. 6, and the killing of a Minneapolis woman by ICE agents a day later. The Christian observance ...
In John Paul the Great, author Peggy Noonan describes a friend who asked the question, "How do you find God?" Noonan replied with the following: Finding God is not hard, because he wants to be found.
CLEVELAND, Ohio – A few weeks ago, I wrote a column about Lake Superior and sunsets. It was about feeling God’s presence. I asked readers to send in their favorite places to sense The Almighty. There ...
The Jewish world lost a giant this week: A luminary and a visionary. We mourn the passing of Abner Goldstine, past president of Sinai Temple. The Talmud ponders the idea of how and where one can find ...