A Spirituality for the Environment
Our environmental sins are catching up with us.
Our environmental sins are catching up with us.
Cynicism is despair’s twin. There is no good that it cannot destroy.
What do I mean when I use the word “God”?
‘Get up in the morning, go to work, come home, watch TV, go to bed, get up in the morning, go to work…’
Forgiveness is more difficult when the hurt comes from someone close.
People of many traditions use light as an image of God.
A team of preachers visiting Ireland said, ‘The Irish have faith; but it is anti-intellectual, formalistic, and passive.’ There is nothing as dead – or as deadly – as dead religion.
Seventy three men seeking this spirituality gathered at Slí an Chroí, in Kiltegan, Co. Wicklow, in June 2009, for a five-day Men’s Rites of Passage. They were young, old and in between, urban and rural, married and single, and from many walks of life.
Reflections in the lead up to the Ascension of the Lord.
A review of “Where Three Streams Meet: Celtic Spirituality”, by Seán Ó Dúinn OSB, The Columba Press, Dublin, 2000.