Laurie Brink, OP
While we may have leaders, whose congregational titles read “Superior” or “Superior General” or “President”...
That seems an unusual concern for a finally-professed Dominican Sister celebrating her Silver Jubilee, but...
Before the book, before the best sellers list (I wish!), before the publisher, before...
Did Jesus really mean for us to be this good this long? Or were his...
“Something there is that doesn’t love a wall,” Robert Frost wrote a century ago. The...
Matthew's Gospel begins with the genealogy of Joseph, the husband of Mary, and the reader knows, the foster father of Jesus. Why mention Joseph's lineage at all if Jesus is not his biological son? As the evangelist goes on to demonstrate, Joseph is very much a main character in his infancy narrative. In this day when hypenations bescribe family relationships, step-, foster-, and half-, often do more to seperate us than connect us. Perhaps by reflecting on Matthew's portrayal of Joseph, we can come to understand that what makes the family "Holy" has less to do with biology and much more to do with love.