God Wants Us to be Happy — Missio Dei Article

A common complaint against the Catholic Church is that it has too many rules. Some say that it seeks to restrict human freedom by presenting a list of dos and don’ts that ultimately “ruin our fun” and destroy happiness. Such a claim stems from a misunderstanding of freedom, happiness, and their relation to God’s laws. Freedom is the ability to choose one thing or another. This definition hearkens to the concept of free will,  which is defined by the Church as “the power, rooted in reason and will, to act or not to act, to do this or that, and so to perform deliberate actions on one’s own responsibility.” Yet, freedom and free will are not the same; to be free is not to merely exercise one’s will in whatever way one pleases. If that were the case, then any sort of law, whether associated with… Continue reading on...

A Resurrection Worldview – Missio Dei Article

Before Easter, the first-grade catechist I assisted asked our class if they knew what the Resurrection meant. One boy answered that it meant Jesus rose from the dead—and he had heard the story so many times by now that he was beginning to be bored of it. The answer brought a laugh and a deeper explanation from the catechist, but in reality, any of us can feel as that little boy did. We celebrated Christ’s Resurrection for forty days. It is good to question how that changed us, if at all… Continue reading on Missio Dei....

In My Weakness I Am Strong – Missio Dei Article

“For the sake of Christ, then, I am content with weaknesses… For when I am weak, then I am strong.” (2 Cor 12:10) We do not want to be weak. To be weak is to be vulnerable, to be open to rejection, suffering, or defeat. It is natural for us to recoil from weakness, to shield or strengthen our emotional, physical, and spiritual weak points… Continue Reading on Missio Dei....

Aquinas, Charity, and the Cause of Our Joy — Missio Dei Article

As Christians we long for joy in a special way. We know that one of the distinguishing features of the saints was their contagious joy, present even amid suffering. Yet, while we are members of the same Church as those joyful saints, joy often escapes us. This may result from a misunderstanding of the nature of joy and how it grows in our lives as Christians. Scripture itself contains… continue reading on Missio Dei.  ...