Wednesday, March 4, 2026

Winter's Dignified Beauty: A Sign of Peace?

Now that a March has begun full of shock and terror of war unleashed upon the world once again by reckless human hands, the "mostly-uncomfortable" month of February doesn't seem worth complaining about. After all, it was only relatively normal winter weather...

I didn't get out much, what with the snow in the beginning of the month and my developing a "stubborn chest cold" later (that I still haven't managed to shake). Ironically, my immune system has always been pretty strong — except for its blind spot for Lyme Disease bacteria and its associated co-infections.

When the kids were growing up, I "shook off" most seasonal-minor-illness stuff. But now I am not only officially "over-the-hill," but am also in the early stages of tumbling along the strange-descent-down-the-other-side of the hill (ha, ha!😵‍💫😜). Colds and flu-ish things and headaches hang around longer, and require "rest" — which I have never been good at. But clearly last month's weather was not the kind that makes venturing out on my "three-legged-adventures" a restful experience.

Still, I got out a little bit and took pictures. And I also took some time crafting them with a variety of tools at JJStudios (this is also not "restful"). But I have a few things for the "virtual gallery" that will allow us to begin moving toward the Spring Equinox, as life and color begin to emerge... at least in our part of the world.

There are many reasons why people caught up in war might forget about spring. But war zones are not only places where humans suffer. The environment also dies under all these "hammers," all this "epic fury." It will be a burnt, charred springtime (if not worse) in Iran and the Middle East, in Ukraine, and who knows where else. Not to mention the colossal waste of resources for all the armaments that continue to contribute to human and environmental misery, pillaging and poisoning the earth. We are all to blame for this: the poisons in the air — from self-indulgence, greed, and war — have their radical origin from the poison in our hearts.

What can we do when war rages in "faraway" places? For one thing, we can acknowledge our own contribution to the "global rage," and how our own negligence has contributed to the epidemic of hearts growing colder and darker and fruitless in the ways of love. But we need not despair: the Divine Physician has come to bring healing and to set our hearts on fire. If we repent of our sins and let his healing mercy work within us, we will be able to bring change to our barren, blistered, frozen world — to bring forth works of mercy and beauty that offer healing and hope.

Here are a few recent pictures for this season in my own Virginia:

Tuesday, March 3, 2026

Saint Katharine Drexel

March 3rd is the commemoration of Saint Katharine Drexel, the first born citizen of the United States of America to be canonized.

Heiress of a vast family fortune, Katharine Drexel did more than give alms to the poor. She dedicated her personal energies and all her wealth to building institutions that would change the shape of the society in which she lived. Born in Philadelphia two years before the outbreak of the Civil War, Katharine Drexel’s life spanned nearly a century; she lived to see the United States move from the brink of disintegration to become the most wealthy and powerful nation in the world. 

During this period, however, her work was to found a congregation of women religious — the Sisters of the Blessed Sacrament — specially dedicated to missionary activity among the poorest of America’s poor: the newly freed blacks and the increasingly oppressed indigenous peoples. 

Mother Drexel for many years traveled widely through the deep South and the Southwest, dedicating her administrative talents as well as her financial resources to furthering the work of her order. She was especially concerned with the founding of schools for Native Americans and African Americans (in 1917 she founded Xavier University in New Orleans, the first African American Catholic college). 

In the final twenty years of her long life, however, a heart condition forced the end of her journeying. Yet her labor during this time of suffering and what appeared to the rest of the world to be “retirement” was the greatest of all her works: Saint Katharine Drexel dedicated her remaining years to daily adoration of Jesus in the Eucharist, surrendering to him all of her missionary zeal and love for the poor.

Monday, March 2, 2026

Halting the Spiral of Violence

Words of Pope Leo XIV at the Angelus on Sunday, March 1:

“I am following with deep concern what is happening in the Middle East and in Iran during this tumultuous time. Stability and peace are not achieved through mutual threats, nor through the use of weapons, which sow destruction, suffering, and death, but only through reasonable, sincere, and responsible dialogue. Faced with the possibility of a tragedy of immense proportions, I make a heartfelt appeal to all the parties involved to assume the moral responsibility of halting the spiral of violence before it becomes an unbridgeable chasm. May diplomacy regain its proper role, and may the well-being of peoples, who yearn for peaceful existence founded on justice, be upheld. And let us continue to pray for peace.”

Sunday, March 1, 2026

Black Smoke and Bright Fire in the Middle East

I had just posted yesterday's 35-year-old memory about "Gulf War I" in the early morning hours when the news came in that the United States and Israel had commenced a sustained bombing campaign against Iran. The Iranians are retaliating by bombing Israel and various Arab Gulf States that have U.S. military bases.

I think we are past the point of no return on this latest war. What a preposterous thing to do!! Unfortunately, it's not surprising, but it's a great sorrow, and we can barely imagine the disasters that may yet unfold. God help us!

Black smoke and bright fire all over the Middle East.

Saturday, February 28, 2026

“Desert Storm” in My Journal from 1991

I remember when "old wars" were new. This is the 35th anniversary of the conclusion of the the First Gulf War in Iraq on February 28, 1991.

I was 28 years old that year, and — of course — I imagined that I understood much more than I really did about... well... everything. So I kept a journal for a couple of years, and it was somewhat like a blog. Although, of course, not in my wildest dreams did I ever imagine that there would be such things as the Internet, or blogs, or audiovisual interactive media.

In the long run, the brief "Gulf War I" lead to the much longer and more convoluted "Gulf War II" (2003-2011) and the ISIS reign of terror that moved in after United States troops withdrew.

It seems that "Gulf War III" may be imminent, and no one knows what it might bring to the region and the world. God have mercy on us!

But these handwritten notes come from more than half a lifetime ago, when so much had not yet happened in my own life or in world events. 35 years from today it will be 2061. If I live that long, I will be 98 years old. I'm not counting on it. But my question for today is similar to my question in 1991: What kind of world are we building? How will the dignity of the human person survive? Material power continues to grow exponentially, but wisdom — if anything — has declined (at least in my part of the world). But the grace of Christ is at work also. 

He remains our hope: Yesterday, Today, Tomorrow, Forever.


Friday, February 27, 2026

"The Gift of Grace is Greater than All Other Miracles"

Below is a excerpt from prayer 49 of the Lamentations of Saint Gregory of Narek (950-1011) of the church in Armenia, recognized as a Catholic saint (commemorated February 27) and proclaimed Doctor of the Church by Pope Francis in 2015. His famous prayer book is the great "classic" of Armenian language and literature. More importantly, it has accompanied Armenian Christians in the midst of their many trials for over a thousand years. 

This wonderful treasury of prayers is now recognized as part of the heritage of the Universal Church, and we are all invited to benefit from it. The English translation of the entire book is still quite expensive (more expensive than when I purchased my copy in 2003). Translations of some of the prayers can be found on the Internet.

Gregory dwells especially on the omnipotence, mercy, and compassion of the God who comes to save us from our sins and transform us by the unfathomable gift of His grace:

"No king rules my soul except you, Christ,
who without force submits me to your easy yoke,
who lifts away my sinful passions with your
all-powerful word,
who redeems me with your blood and nourishes me
with your body,
who sets forth and establishes the unchanging
covenant of life,
who by setting the stamp of your spirit on
me as your cohort,
presents me to your Father as a co-heir,
and in the name of your sacrifice and memory
of your torment,
emboldened me to pray to the same benevolent God.


"Creator of all life,
you are the God of all souls
who made this gift of grace greater than
all your other miracles.
Neither the heavens with all their raiment, 
nor the angels in their brilliance,
nor the earth and humanity and their wonders,
nor the expanse of the seas and all in them,
nor the abyss in its infiniteness and all in it,
exalted you as sublimely as your sympathy toward me,
when you said through the prophet, our hope
of sweet goodness,
“Who is a God like me, always pardoning sin
and canceling the debts of iniquity?” [Micah 7:18]


"Behold your words are honored with incense,
merciful God,
and your good works proclaimed,
glorified, deep mystery and worshiped,
overflowing grace.
Indeed, no one is able to convey with human speech,
even a small part of the acts of compassion which you have shown me, creator.
For the power to restore what is worn-out
to its former grandeur is greater than creating anew.
And since weakness is not yours, mighty in all things,
you who with but a word can carry out all deeds,
arise, doer of good, and be glorified,
and reclaim those whose salvation was beyond hope,
so that by the exercise of the covenant,
the voice of your blessed good news might be
more exalted,
and known for the grace of your forgiveness,
more for the light of your mercy dispensed,
than for the process of creation.
For in one we recognize the creator,
whereas in the other, creatorship is recalled
as well as grace.

"We recognize
not only the one who fashioned us, but also the one
who atoned for our sins,
not only the one who invented us, but also the one
who did good for us,
not only the one who established us, but also the one
who took pity on us,
not only the one who formed us, but also the one
who gave us possibilities,
not only the one who authored, but also the one
who humbled himself for us,
not only the one who designed us, but also the one
who performed miracles,
not only the one who started us, but also the one
who gave us light,
not only the anointed, but also the shepherd,
not only the healer, but also the caretaker,
not only the protector, but also the physician,
not only a supporter, but also a commander,
not only a victor, but also a king,
not only a creator, but also sweetness,
not only the giver of all gifts, but also a
generous sponsor,
not only always patient, but also forgiving,
not only not angered, but also unvengeful,
not only sharing our sorrows, but also
reading our hearts,
not only providing comfort, but also refuge,
not only supremely compassionate, but also God,
not only endless goodness, but also blessed in all things."

Tuesday, February 24, 2026

Four Years of Russian Aggression against Ukraine

Today is the fourth anniversary of Russia's full-scale invasion of the nation of Ukraine. On February 24, 2022, forces of the Russian dictatorship of Vladimir Putin commenced their massive attack on Ukrainian sovereignty, showing total disrespect for the integrity of Ukrainian borders as guaranteed not only by international law, but specifically by Russia itself in the Budapest Memorandum, in which Russia committed to respect and guarantee the borders of Ukraine, along with the United States and Great Britain. Russia made this commitment in 1994 in exchange for the new nation of Ukraine turning over the vast nuclear arsenal that it possessed by virtue of having been a part of the former Soviet Union. There are abundant reasons why these borders between these two countries deserve the respect and recognition and restoration that the Ukrainian people are asking for.

What Russia has done is, and continues to do — "Russia," by which I mean the dictatorial regime of Vladimir Putin and his cronies — what they have done is more than blatantly illegal, it violates the trust upon which Ukraine became the only nation in the nuclear age to demilitarize — that is, to destroy its nuclear capacity, to actually divest itself of nuclear weapons.

No other nation has done that. No nation that has obtained possession of nuclear weapons has ever divested itself of nuclear weapons.

The United States has not done anything so radical with its nuclear arsenal.

Neither has Russia with all its weapons from the former Soviet Union.

The Ukrainians handed over their weapons to the Russians in exchange for these guarantees regarding their borders and territorial integrity. The newly independent nation of Ukraine disarmed itself of what was then the third largest nuclear arsenal in the world, and agreed to live peacefully next to neighboring Russia — a heavily armed nuclear power that had a long history of aggression (and even attempted genocide in the Stalinist era) against the Ukrainian people. Ukraine obviously regarded the Budapest Memorandum as a serious and permanent commitment by Russia, underscored by meaningful guarantees of protection by the United States and Great Britain.

Not surprisingly, in the time following Ukrainian independence, Russia attempted to control the Ukrainian political leadership and hold Ukraine back from any movement toward integration with the European community. And then 12 years ago, when Ukrainians rose up — in what they called so beautifully the "Revolution of Dignity" — against manipulative pro-Kremlin, pro-Moscow politicians in order to choose their own free government, Putin took this as a pretext to seize Crimea, even though Crimea was within Ukrainian borders that had been previously guaranteed. Then Putin and his cronies saw fit to "stir up" (or perhaps even fabricate) supposedly anti-Ukrainian "separatist groups" in the eastern regions of Ukraine: Donetsk and Luhansk. And, of course, the Russian military then went in to help "liberate" these areas.

Thus, the present war actually began 12 years ago in February 2014.

This situation was met in a totally inadequate fashion by the Budapest Memorandum's other "guarantors" of Ukraine's borders, the United States and Great Britain. Once again, I stress that "Budapest" was an agreement of such consequence in the nuclear age that it should have been regarded as inviolable. As it turns out, however, it has set a bad precedent for pursuing nuclear disarmament by diplomatic means, which may have dangerous ramifications for the future.

In any case, this agreement was fractured in February of 2014, and we watched this happen. Then-Senator Marco Rubio eloquently reminded his colleagues of the precise details of the issue in a speech from the U.S. Senate floor. (We have seen, however, that "political memory" is awfully vulnerable in the current circumstances of the U.S. regime.)

The effective effort of the Putinist Russians to steal Ukrainian territory contrary to modern international law and their own agreements began in February 2014 with the seizure of Crimea. And this continued as a "de-facto war" of Russian aggression from February 2014 until February 2022, when the Russians invaded Ukraine completely and sought to overthrow the Ukrainian government, replacing it with a Russian puppet, or else simply absorbing it into Moscow's re-emerging empire.

This new imperial aspiration was something Vladimir Putin had made clear in his vision of Novorussia, or "Greater Russia," which was, of course, a Muscovite vision, a vision from the perspective of Moscow. In an immediate sense, it is a desire to restore the coherence of the "great power" stature and "security" that had been the proud boast of the Soviet Union.

But the Soviet Union, in spite of its communist elements, never escaped the the deep desire of Muscovy that was born in the divisive circumstances of the 15th century and the emergence of Muscovite rulers who assumed the ancient title of "Caesar" (Czar) and declared Moscow to be "the Third Rome" (replacing Constantinople which fell to the Turks in 1453). This was to be the basis of a sacred "manifest destiny" that grew into a vast empire that for hundreds of years absorbed many nations that have only recently become independent (indeed, many other non-Russian peoples are still incorporated within the current "Russian Federation").

Ukraine, the more ancient and foundational land of the "Rus" which flourished prior to the 13th century Mongol invasion, has always been coveted by its more recent northern Russian neighbors, and it was incorporated into the Muscovite Russian Empire for some 300 years leading up to the twentieth century. But Ukraine maintained its own identity, language, and culture through all this time and in the Soviet era that followed.

The neo-Soviet imperialism of Vladimir Putin rejects Ukraine's independent national identity, and refuses to be bound by previous agreements to Ukrainian independence by the Russian Federation (including, apparently, the unprecedented terms of the agreement spelled out in the Budapest Memorandum, and long ago fulfilled by the nuclear disarmament of Ukraine). Putin made all of this clear in a speech he gave in 2022 a few days before the full scale invasion began. Putin made it clear that his ideological goal was to eliminate the existence of Ukraine (and there is no evidence that this goal has changed).

He began his war to conquer the whole of Ukraine on February 24, 2022. It was supposed to be a quick and easy "special military operation" by overwhelmingly larger Russian forces. 

But Ukrainians bravely fought back in these days four years ago. They surprised everyone. They fought for their cities.

Kyiv drove back the Soviet — I'm sorry, the Russian — invaders. (As an old man, I continually make the mistake of calling the Putinists "Soviets" — I remember too vividly the "flavor" of that old regime. It's a slip of the tongue and/or the typescript that takes me back to an all-too-familiar geopolitical behavior that I recognize from a time that does not need to return in any way.)

In spite of its initial failure, this invasion by the Putinists has continued, unabated, without apology, wreaking havoc, devouring the lives of human beings on a front line in Eastern Ukraine, and systematically bombing the civilian infrastructure — the support system of ordinary life in Ukrainian cities — as well as directly killing innocent civilians.

In some instances, when the Russian forces invaded, they committed horrible atrocities and war crimes, which are being documented and are quite clear in certain cases.

Four years later, here we are.

There is nothing complicated, really, about this. What Putinist Russia has done is wrong, and what they are still doing is wrong. The Ukrainian people are fighting in self-defense. War is horrible, and there is no way at this time to evaluate everything they have done in the course of their efforts to defend themselves, but I can only say that the need for self-defense remains the only cause in today's world that can (at least in principle) justify the enormous risk of using the means of physical force that we have at our disposal today through our immense technological power.

Insofar as the Ukrainians are defending themselves against a brutal invasion, they are involved in a war. But they are not the instigators or perpetuators of the violence of this war. They are its primary victims. That is why I can never accept, no matter how long this goes on, I will never be able to classify this as a war "between Russia and Ukraine," a conflict that "broke out" between two equally irresponsible participants, both of which have their desires, their wants, and their unwillingness to compromise.

That is not a realistic perception of what is happening. What is happening is that the Putinist regime is trying to impose its power upon an independent people, the Ukrainian people who have only further solidified their national  identity through the past four years.

And the nations of Eastern Europe and Northern Europe are deeply aware of the behavior of today's Putin-Russia, as following a pattern that they saw during Czarist times, that they saw with vengeance in the Stalinist era, and that constituted the Soviet Union and its dominance over Eastern Europe until 1989. Poland is concerned. Lithuania, Latvia, and Estonia are concerned, and they are rightly concerned. The Scandinavian countries are concerned. Finland and Russia have had their share of conflict in the past. None of the nations that are near the present borders of Russia are sanguine or comfortable with that proximity.

They fear that they may be next in line for a Russian invasion. The result of the invasion of Ukraine was several nations joining the NATO alliance. The NATO alliance is something complicated in itself. Its aims in the post-Soviet era are sometimes difficult to parse out, but certainly it is an alliance of nations committed to defend one another against threats of attack.

Yet now, the most powerful member of the NATO alliance — the United States — has abdicated its role entirely. The United States, under its current regime, has suddenly decided to become an agent of chaos within the context of an allegedly "diplomatic" approach to the "Russian-Ukrainian" conflict.

It is precisely the leadership of the United States which is attempting to cast this as a conflict between two nations equally at fault, which can be solved by some sort of compromise, some sort of deal, some sort of transaction, in which Russia will receive as a reward for Putin's invasion, a certain amount of the territory that they wanted.

I cannot see how this will result in a just and lasting peace.

Dialogue is important. The dialogues that are taking place certainly have potential, but there are too many games being played by the most powerful member of the NATO alliance, independently of the rest of NATO, and in direct engagements with Russia that until recently did not even include Ukraine. 

The U.S. and the Russians have had all kinds of obscure "talks," — of course I am referring to the current regime in the United States which seems to have "complex intentions" in its relationship with Putin's regime. Often, the leader of our current regime seems friendly to Putin and antagonistic to the Ukrainians. And then "the switch" takes place in which he seems to turn against Putin. There is no reasonable pattern to these changes; indeed, they often seem grounded on the whims of the chief executive, on tangential personal expectations or grudges he entertains, or on his sense that a "peace deal" is near at hand that he can use to embellish his own self-image.

This is, of course, chaotic. No one knows where the loyalty of the United States to the NATO alliance is going, nor whether the U.S. has the needs of Ukraine — as the victim of Putinist aggression — at heart. The idea of having a specific frame of reference with which to view this conflict is thrown up in the air. And we are left with real estate agents and multinational corporation leaders negotiating on the ground. One cannot help suspecting that they have a great interest in financial gain, that rather than a just peace, a financially lucrative situation for themselves is what they're seeking.

And unfortunately, the leader of the American regime is very much connected to these financial interests. He has given no evidence of being honest or dependable in such matters.

I'm being as "generous" as I can with these statements. But it is still difficult to avoid the sarcastic tone that creeps in. Trying to take the current U.S. regime seriously as a constructive political force in any respect only ends up underscoring further what an unprecedented mess it is. Led by a former casino owner, the present U.S. regime has turned current events into a crap shoot. Does the world feel lucky?

But I digress...

The war in Ukraine is an abomination. It is a violence against a free people. We must pray for peace. We must pray for dialogue. Dialogue does not necessarily need to be limited to those who are in power right now. Are there other forces anywhere in the Russian Federation today? Are there others who think differently, who might think differently? Other "places" where certain constructive dialogues and certain proposals might be initiated? Any such dialogue would have to be extraordinarily discreet. Perhaps it is already going on, carefully, unbeknownst to us.

I only know that in Russia it is very difficult to have an opinion other than President Putin's.

I also know that there have been other visions of Russia's future.

A great man named Alexei Navalny dared to think differently and envisioned a democratic, personalistic society — what he called "the Beautiful Russia" of tomorrow. He was deeply patriotic, but at the same time, with an intelligence and fairness that recognized when the war in Ukraine broke out, that it was immoral and wrong for his own country.

By then, of course, Navalny was in the prison system from which he would never be released, ultimately to die mysteriously in February of 2024. There is some evidence that he was poisoned (again, after surviving a prior effort by the FSB).

Alexei Navalny is a light for the future of Russia, and this matters greatly because we also care about the future of Russia. Russia has a great historical mission. Muscovite Russia — in spite of its schismatic origins and its devolution into an atheist, materialistic totalitarian society for most of the 20th century — still has a great distinctive civilization that has expressed profound truths in its history. The nation has vast, as-yet-unimagined possibilities that may yet blossom and bear fruit in the "Beautiful Russia" of the future. It has vast regions of territory and opportunities to develop in ways that will be constructive for a more profoundly united Europe and a “sign” for all the world.

Has it not been promised that "Russia will be converted..."?

If it puts aside its passion to be a superpower; if it puts aside its sense of condescending hegemony; if it takes upon itself responsibility for the violence of the 20th century, which it inflicted, especially through the reign of Stalin, and if it formally apologizes and renounces forever the violence of Stalinist imperialism... Russia could grow into something new and great for the whole world.

In the early 1970s, the unforgettable anti-Soviet dissident and Nobel Prize winner Alexander Solzhenitsyn, while still living within the Soviet Union, called for the immediate future of Russia to be one of penance, one of inwardness and the acceptance of limitation. He made this courageous declaration with great love for Russia, but also because he knew that Russia had to detach itself from its hunger for power and come to grips with its past in order to grow more deeply in its own national identity. This recommendation from his 1973 open letter to the Soviet Politburo still seems to me to ring with a certain truth and express a certain prophetic vision that perhaps Solzhenitsyn in his later years lost sight of (which was understandable given the multitude of new problems that arose for Russia after the fall of the Soviet Union, problems that became the preoccupation of his final years).

The Russian Federation faced serious social and economic difficulties in the 1990s, but these difficulties do not absolve the Russians from adhering to the international agreements that they made in those years. And it is incontestable that in 1994, they agreed to respect the integrity of Ukraine's borders in exchange for Ukraine divesting itself of nuclear weapons. I cannot think in the modern world, in the world we live in today, I cannot think of an agreement that would be more absolutely binding than an agreement that involves divestment of nuclear weapons in the international sphere. Such an agreement creates obligations above and beyond the basic requirements of international law.

Needless to say, Ukraine’s rights as a nation would still stand firmly even without the Memorandum, but its violation by Putin’s Russia adds the note of “betrayal” to an already unjustifiable and ruthless invasion. It is an example of the many broken promises that Russia has made to Ukraine as pretenses for “peace agreements.”

So on the fourth anniversary of Russia's full scale invasion, many Ukrainians are suffering and dying for something very concrete.

We pray for them. We pray also for the conversion of the Russian invaders, and especially the miserable helpless conscripts, who are being the thrown mercilessly, in a dehumanizing fashion, into these brutal military situations, this desperate and reckless continuation of the war by the Putinist regime.

All Vladimir Putin needs to do is stop. All the Russians need to do to bring peace is to withdraw their troops. I realize we're probably not going to get that. And that is a shame to Russia. If a "negotiated settlement" brings them any gain at the expense of Ukraine, it will only be a temporary gain. And they will have to face the shame of having stolen land and territory from an independent people. They will not grow from this gain. They will not grow in the human realization of their national identity. Rather, they will continue to live the errors of their predecessors. They will continue to embody the Stalin approach, which they have not yet sufficiently renounced and condemned.

Russia needs to condemn the errors of Stalin, to repent of them, and to make some sort of historic reparation for them. This is as necessary for Russia as it was for Germany after the violence and genocidal murder perpetrated by Adolf Hitler. The Germans succeeded in the tasks of repudiation, renunciation, and reparation during the years of the buildup of West Germany in a remarkable way. Not perfect, no doubt, but in a remarkable way.

Nothing even remotely comparable has been seen in post-Soviet Russia. Yet it is necessary, not for revenge but for healing. Healing will not come if there is not the giving and receiving of forgiveness. It is not sufficiently effective for forgiveness to be proffered if it is not also received. And the Muscovite Russian nation cannot be healed until it acknowledges its errors and takes responsibility for them.

It is especially important for the international community to hold accountable the criminals in the Russian regime; they should be tried and given some sort of punishment. Without these things, there will not be true peace. There will only be temporarily discontinued friction. Further resentment will brew and new wars of aggression will follow in a continued cycle of violence. Russia will learn nothing, and it will continue to expand its violent activity. The nations of Eastern Europe are rightly afraid of this. And a country like Poland is not going to sit by and watch. Nor, it seems, are the other countries of NATO.

The United States, of course, has introduced a dizzying and dangerous ambivalence into the current problem due to the unprecedented instability of its current chief executive and the incompetence of its diplomatic group. If there are any financial or other forms of corruption motivating the U.S. regime's strange foreign policy decisions, they will not help to bring true peace or any other genuine benefit to the Ukrainian people.

Let us pray for peace.

Let us pray for the people of Ukraine. From their sufferings, we pray something else might begin to emerge, something beautiful and exemplary for the whole world. May God bless and help the Ukrainian people on this terrible fourth anniversary of the full-scale invasion of their nation.

May God have mercy on Ukraine, and console the sorrows of its people. May God have mercy on Russia and free them from a suffocating autocracy and its systematically violent ways. May God have mercy on the perpetrators of violence and on those who sow confusion in places where the focus of other nations must be solidarity and the search for a genuine peace.

May God have mercy on me, an old fool who writes these inadequate words and searches for some light to lead us forward.

May God have mercy on us all.

Saturday, February 21, 2026

Saint Peter Damian: The Joy that will Follow Sadness

Today the Church commemorates Saint Peter Damian, Benedictine monk, reformer, and eventually Cardinal, papal envoy, and diplomat during a particularly scandalous and corrupt period in ecclesiastical history: the middle of the 11th century.

So we're talking about a thousand years ago. It was an age of vast changes in the political landscape of Western Europe and extreme laxity among the clergy in the Western Church. Simony was rife, antipopes rose and fell alongside holy popes like Pope Saint Leo IX. It was also the age of the monastic renaissance that had begun the previous century with the Cluniac reform movement. At one point, Western Emperor (and Saint) Henry III was a lay Benedictine Oblate. His successor Henry IV, on the other hand, caused lots of trouble for the Church.

Saint Peter Damian loved the solitude of a hermitage, but he was often called upon to intervene in the ecclesiastical crises of the day, or to contribute from his great faith and intellectual acumen to theological controversies. He paved the way for the renewal of theology with his many writings, and is one of the saints who bears the title "Doctor of the Church." No doubt, active ministry in the midst of so many complex and conflicting circumstances was a source of much suffering for Peter, and he knew that of which he wrote in a letter — from which we cite an excerpt below — about the brevity of our afflictions in this life compared to the eternal glory that God promises us after this time of patience and endurance:

“This momentary light affliction is producing for us an eternal weight of glory beyond all comparison (2 Corinthians 4:17). Carefully examine these words of the apostle and diligently meditate on them…and be confident that whatever is short-lived will quickly pass away.

“Nor should you fail to notice, moreover, how aptly and exactly God’s words agree with one another so that after speaking of afflictions that are temporary and light to bear, he at once adds that they will yield an eternal weight of glory. And so, you should think about and compare these correlatives with each other: suffering and glory, temporary and eternal, light and weighty. Rejoice, therefore, and be glad that the suffering you endure is short-lived, and the glory that awaits you is eternal. Everything that you bear is light, all that you look for is weighty. Rejoice, I say, since in exchange for affliction you will receive glory; for what is light, something weighty; and for the temporary, an eternity will be yours.

“Consequently, amid hardships and trouble always lift up your eyes to him who after your afflictions is prepared to cherish you within the sweetness of his embrace, who after storms and tribulations will set you among the delights of heavenly peace, and will wipe away the tears from your eyes with the cloth of everlasting consolation…. With these and other texts of Holy Scripture, my dear friend, reinforce your spirit with patience, and happily look forward to the joy that will follow sadness. May hope encourage you in joyful expectations, and an ardent love inflame you.”

Friday, February 20, 2026

Words Worth Remembering…

May we be counted, in Jesus Christ, among those who persevere in His ways.

Wednesday, February 18, 2026

Lent 2026: The Narrow Path that Leads to Joy

We implore you on behalf of Christ, be reconciled to God. For our sake he made him to be sin who did not know sin, so that we might become the righteousness of God in him” (2 Cor 5:21). 

Today we begin the season of Lent 2026. Jesus calls us to seek conversion, to turn away from our sins, to practice self-denial and charity, to pay attention to God. This “conversion” might seem impossible to us, especially when we begin to perceive how far our sins have taken us away from God, and how “settled” we have become with living lives of sin and selfishness, mediocrity of soul, boredom and distraction, smallness of love. We may feel like we are “stuck” in sin, or walled off by the limits of our own selfishness and pain.

In fact, we do not have any inherent self-initiating “power” to “convert ourselves,” but this is precisely why we must place our hope in God. He does not abandon us to the prisons of our own making. Rather, He offers us the grace of salvation. For God has so loved the world — each of us and all of us — that He has revealed Himself and sent His Only Son Jesus to save us from our sins and transform us into His children, so that we might share forever in His life.

Who is God? God is our Father who loves us with an infinite Love. He wants to forgive us, to change us, no matter how terrible our sins have been even to this very moment. He gives His inexhaustible love to us through the life, death, and resurrection of His Son, who “bears our sins” — who draws close to us in the very “places” in our lives that seem furthest from His love. 

He is “already” with us, longing to forgive us and heal us. There is no sin that is so great that He will not forgive those who turn to Him. He has borne every sin in His Crucified Heart. The mystery of Jesus’s redemptive suffering accompanies us, surrounds us. Let us remember that He is here: and let us cry out to Him, beg that He will give us repentance for our sins (even if we can scarcely imagine what that means), implore Him to open our hearts, to let Him love us the way He so ardently wants to love us. 

Ask, seek, knock. Don’t be afraid… or even just give Him that fear and ask Him to overcome it. This is why Jesus came to dwell with us, to die on the cross and rise from the dead, to remain with us in His Church by the power of the Holy Spirit. He loves us: he loves me, and you, and you, and you, and you…

Lent is a beautiful time for new beginnings, renewals, and growth. We need the “school” of this season of penance and preparation — of “prayer, fasting, and almsgiving” — so that by His grace we might learn and grow in obedience to God. To listen, to open up, to follow God and to give Him space, to recognize our emptiness and offer it to Him so that He can fill us.

Obedience to God really is the easy yoke (even though it often doesn't seem that way). The reality of "God's will" is the love of our Father giving us our very existence in this present moment, stirring our hearts by the grace of His Spirit, guiding us toward Him and protecting us from harm.

What do we achieve by escaping from His hands? Where are we going to go? We spend so many of our days evading Him, or “negotiating” with Him, or trying to forget Him, or just running away from Him. But the Lord is merciful. He doesn't want us to run forever and get nowhere. He wants us to “return to Him,” to trust in Him, to remain on the narrow path that He is opening up for us with tender care.

It is a narrow path, because it is the particular love that He has for each one of us, that corresponds to the unique personality that each of us possesses.

Each one of us is a person. Unrepeatable. Unique. Loved.

We are so precious and so profound: we do not know how dear and how deep we are, because we do not really know ourselves.

God knows us. His “will” is His wisdom and love for each one of us. He knows what is good for us, what will bring us joy. And so, each of us prays: “Have mercy on me, O God, in your goodness; in the greatness of your compassion wipe out my offense… Give me back the joy of of your salvation, and a willing spirit sustain in me” (Psalm 51:3, 14).

Tuesday, February 17, 2026

"Spelunkers" for Mardi Gras

This is our idea of a "Carnevale" celebration: Bacon burgers, fries, and homemade ice cream from our local burger joint, Spelunkers.

I rarely eat like this, but once in a while, it's really good. Yummy yummy!


Monday, February 16, 2026

The Word of God is Always New

"The Word of God responds to our thirst for meaning, for the truth about our life. It is the only Word that is always new: revealing the mystery of God to us, it is inexhaustible, it never ceases to offer its riches" (Pope Leo XIV).

Saturday, February 14, 2026

The Hungry and Thirsty will be Satisfied

Lent will begin on February 18th this year. Hunger and thirst are spread all over the world. Our fasting, in its various forms, is a small gesture of solidarity with the poor, and we can offer it as such, in union with Jesus.

We also have an opportunity to remember the "hunger and thirst" of our hearts as we travel through the journey of this life. None of us are free of this tremendous need, which we try to repress, but which inevitably rises up and penetrates our awareness. Sometimes it strikes us as a deep sorrow, a sense of powerlessness, desperation, and failure. But if we turn to the Lord, our hunger and thirst are transformed into prayer, in hope that He will fill us. Indeed, He will pour out His mercy on us in greater abundance.

And we will learn to be merciful to one another.

Thursday, February 12, 2026

Hong Kong’s Jimmy Lai Sentenced to 20 Years in Prison

It is no surprise that Jimmy Lai’s show trial in Hong Kong ended with his receiving the maximum sentence of 20 years in prison.

But this doesn't make it any less heartbreaking. 

At age 78, and with his health worn down severely by the past six years he has already spent in jail for a previous “crime” against the Chinese Communist Party/State, Jimmy Lai is not likely to live long enough to see freedom again in his own beloved city.

I have few words to add to what I have written before about Jimmy Lai (see HERE and HERE), and about the Hong Kong Democracy Movement’s long, brave, persistent, but finally smothered public protest campaign (2014-2020) against the tightening grip of the CCP. 

Instead, I worked for some time crafting this digital image (above) that attempts to visualize (and in some way evoke the “tangible” dimension of) the suffering of the Catholic convert and former-opposition-newspaper-publisher in his prison cell.

This is what happens to human persons under regimes that grasp power for its own sake, or seek to justify the abuse of power for the sake of its alleged “efficiency.”

I don’t believe that this is the “end” of Hong Kong’s (or for that matter China’s) struggle for freedom and human dignity. The events of the past decade — like those at Tiananmen Square in 1989 — may be "erased" from the CCP's official story of modern China. But the Chinese people have long memories. We can only hope that these events are seeds of the new directions that China will discover and take up in the future.

Remember Jimmy Lai and pray for him.




Wednesday, February 11, 2026

Lourdes, Illness, and Joy

Today is the Feast of Our Lady of Lourdes, and the "World Day of Prayer for the Sick." Thanks to everyone who has prayed for me in my struggles with illness and disability over the past twenty+ YEARS(!)... 

It is often hard and frustrating, but I have also been drawn closer to the mysterious yet apparently "ordinary" joy of daily life, and the hope for life's true and ultimate fulfillment that renews and humbles my heart again and again, far beyond anything I "deserve" or could generate from within my self or from my own ideas. It is the gift and promise of a fulfillment that, even now, begins and grows and proves itself greater than my afflictions and sorrows, my forgetfulness and my sins. I am deeply grateful. Please keep praying for me.

Today "is a beautiful day that reminds us of the closeness of Mary, our mother, who always accompanies us and teaches us so much: the meaning of suffering, love, and the surrender of our lives into the hands of the Lord" (Pope Leo XIV).

Tuesday, February 10, 2026

Christina Grimmie: Love is a Risk Worth Taking

Remembering Christina Grimmie: Nine years and eight months since she was taken from this world. Yet now — more than ever — we need to be inspired by her great life, her amazing music, and her openness, kindness, and respect for every human person she encountered. 

Christina generated an atmosphere of welcome and encouragement around herself that touched millions of people all over the world through her pioneering YouTube videos and her live performances, after which she greeted everyone who wanted to meet her with an open heart and open arms. 

Today, in a world dominated more and more by fear and danger, we remember how Christina lived "with love." She knew that love is a risk, that it inevitably renders us vulnerable in front of the "other," but she believed it was a risk worth taking because she lived within the embrace of a Love who had given everything for her. Within that embrace, she found the strength to love her family, her friends, her "frands," and those she was meeting for the first time. She welcomed strangers with open arms right up until the last moment of her life. 

We need to seek some measure of Christina's courage — her attention to the beauty and inherent dignity of every human person created in the image of God — as the deep clouds of obscurity, darkness, and violence grow more ominous all around us. When we remember Christina, hope is stirred within us that even the most terrible violence cannot be the "last word" in human existence. Love is stronger. Love will not be swallowed by forgetfulness. Love endures forever.

Sunday, February 8, 2026

"Shelter the Oppressed and the Homeless..."

The first reading from the Liturgy for February 8th, the Fifth Sunday in Ordinary Time:

"Thus says the Lord:
Share your bread with the hungry,
shelter the oppressed and the homeless;
clothe the naked when you see them,
and do not turn your back on your own.
Then your light shall break forth like the dawn,
and your wound shall quickly be healed;
your vindication shall go before you,
and the glory of the Lord shall be your rear guard.
Then you shall call, and the Lord will answer,
you shall cry for help, and he will say: Here I am!
If you remove from your midst
oppression, false accusation and malicious speech;
if you bestow your bread on the hungry
and satisfy the afflicted;
then light shall rise for you in the darkness,
and the gloom shall become for you like midday."

~Isaiah 58:7-10

Friday, February 6, 2026

The Martyrs of Nagasaki

Today we honor the TWENTY SIX MARTYRS OF NAGASAKI, JAPAN. They too obeyed Christ rather than the rulers of this world. Young Paul Miki died praying for his persecutors.

"My religion teaches me to pardon my enemies and all who have offended me. I do gladly pardon the Emperor and all who have sought my death. I beg them to seek baptism and be Christians themselves" (Saint Paul Miki, as he was crucified along with 25 others in Nagasaki, Japan, February 5, 1597).

Thursday, February 5, 2026

Saint Agatha, Virgin and Martyr

February 5 is observed on the liturgical calendars of Eastern and Western churches as the feast of Saint Agatha of Catania (who was tortured and martyred c. 250). She was another courageous young woman who gave her life for Jesus Christ.

Her heroic sacrifice and her total gift of herself to Jesus have been celebrated since ancient times. She is one of the patron saints of Sicily. Since Sicily was at that time a Greek island, Agatha is an important figure in the Eastern tradition. On this day, the Byzantine liturgy honors her with many beautiful prayers such as this one:

You were a fragrant flower of virginity and an undefiled bride of the Lifegiver; you desired the Source of all good and excelled in martyrdom. O glorious Agatha, intercede by your holy prayers for those who lovingly honor your contest.

Agatha and countless others who followed her example of courage down through the ages bring to mind the words of Saint Paul: "I even consider everything as a loss because of the supreme good of knowing Christ Jesus my Lord. For his sake I have the loss of all things and I consider them so much rubbish, that I may gain Christ,...to know him and the power of his resurrection and the sharing of his sufferings by being conformed to his death" (Philippians 3:8,10).

Even today, Catania celebrates Saint Agatha with a three day festival, including a procession of her remains through the city streets accompanied by crowds of hundreds of thousands of people. It is one of the largest "religious festivals" in the world.

What ancient personage has such a vital connection to real people today? This is not a celebration for Julius Caesar or some great philosopher or politician or king or movie star from the past. This is the celebration of a teenage girl who gave her life for Jesus Christ nearly 1,800 years ago!

Today, Saint Agatha is still remembered and honored with love by countless people, and she is a friend to their hearts. Real people have had real relationships with this person through the ages. They have looked to her example, confided in her, asked for her help. This is not superstition. This is the reality of the Church, the communion of saintsThis communion of persons with God and with one another in Jesus Christ cannot be broken by the power and the violence of this world. They couldn't destroy it in the year 250. Long after the powers that raged against her have been forgotten, Agatha still lives! They can't destroy it in 2026. They will never destroy it.

Violence is only for a time. Love never ends.

Wednesday, February 4, 2026

“Winter Olympics in Virginia?” and Other Stories

The Winter Olympics begin this weekend. 

I was starting to think we could have the Olympics here in the neo-arctic region of Virginia. 

I can’t remember when I last saw so much frost and snow staying on the ground for so long — not melting at all, but just heaped on the roadsides by plows and just sitting around in lumps that get frozen solid from day after day of temperatures nowhere near the freezing point.

But… we are now enjoying “warmer” temperatures the past few days. A very slow thaw has begun. The snow rocks are receding and getting slushy during the day, which means they absorb more of oil-and-gas wastage left by passing cars. I remember this from my days growing up in Pittsburgh (which gets its winter weather off Lake Erie, and therefore has a lot more snow).

So we can’t have Winter Olympics here. The is one “sport” that (we hope) is starting up again: old-man-JJ’s-“three-legged”-walks around the neighborhood. It’s not really a spectator sport, however.

Anyway, it’s warmer here than Ukraine, where civilian infrastructure continues to get bombed by the Russians even as the Putin regime and the U.S. regime pretend to be working on a “peace deal.” Millions of Ukrainians have no heat, and it’s not getting warmer for them.

It’s also cold in Minnesota, and the snow has been mixed with blood. The regime and its undocumented-immigrant-hunting National Police fail to convince or inspire respect (to say the least). It’s sorrowful and deplorable. The United States and the whole world are changing. Instability is becoming a habit. Hearts are growing colder.

On the other hand, things may suddenly get very hot in the Persian Gulf, where U.S. warships are part of a “gunboat diplomacy” ploy that was supposed to be about the victims of recent Iranian protests but now seems to be about Iran’s nuclear program (the one that we were told was “liquidated” by last June’s bombing raids). Ever since we said “Happy New Year” the U.S. military has been active from Venezuela to Greenland (at least as leverage in verbal jostling, though we don’t know how close to execution any plans may have been) and now to Iran. So far it’s just incompetent and dangerous political actors with their threats, bluffs, and grandiose posturing. And, perhaps, lots of tech and construction contracts and money-making wheeling and dealing going on? Someone must be cashing in on the chaos. It’s all reckless and pathetic, which only makes it more dangerous.

I would prefer not to write about these things, but they weigh upon me, my compatriots, and people all the over the world. We have no idea what terrors, what madness might be unleashed by the war our foolish leaders are rushing toward, the war we are all calling down on our heads by our sins. 

Lord, have mercy on us, spare us from the horrors of war, convert our hearts to you. Have mercy on us!

Monday, February 2, 2026

The Presentation: Forty Days Already

HAPPY FEAST OF THE PRESENTATION OF JESUS IN THE TEMPLE. 

It has now been 40 days since Christmas, when we celebrated the birth of Jesus, the Word made flesh who has come to dwell with us, to reveal the glory of God and the immeasurable depths of His love for us. 

Today Jesus is brought to the Temple in Jerusalem by Mary and Joseph in accordance with the Mosaic Law. Here He is revealed to the faithful of the Old Covenant who have ardently awaited His coming. By the grace of the Holy Spirit, there are a few who recognize the baby Jesus as the Messiah in this joyful “epiphany,” as Simeon testifies: “My eyes have seen the salvation which You have prepared in the sight of all nations. A light of revelation to the Gentiles and the glory of Your people Israel” (Luke 2:30-32).

Then “Simeon blessed them and said to Mary his mother,
‘Behold, this child is destined
for the fall and rise of many in Israel,
and to be a sign that will be contradicted
—and you yourself a sword will pierce—
so that the thoughts of many hearts may be revealed’

(Luke 2:34-35).

[Detail from Giotto, 14th. century.]