
The Tao of Fierce Wisdom by Thomas Aquinas, Part II
In the season of Aquinas’s feast day, I am sharing a poem I gathered from Aquinas’s sentences that form the chapter titles of my recent
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In the season of Aquinas’s feast day, I am sharing a poem I gathered from Aquinas’s sentences that form the chapter titles of my recent
There is something feminine and maternal about Advent and winter. One reader of our daily meditations wrote in the Comments section a few days ago about
E.F. Schumacher wrote iconic books on what constitutes good work or “right livelihood” or wise work. He warned us that as a species “we are now
In light of the Webb Telescope and the potential for humanity awakening anew to a new and shared cosmology, we continue our meditations on the
Wisdom might be defined as the bringing together of the rational (knowledge) and the irrational or more-than-rational (awe and love and values). Or the bringing together
Recently I was gifted with a wonderful recording of Hildegard of Bingen’s song, “O Fire of Comforting Spirit.” The singer is Jess Dandy and she had
A saint is a kind of flesh and blood archetype who is said to have lived a life of greatness or originality, a non-banal life
The Tao Te Ching underscores the importance of the inner work as non-action when it says: “Practice not-doing, and everything will fall into place.”
We are meditating on the sacred masculine and the divine feminine. We have called upon Nicolas Cusa who gives ample evidence of having married the
As part of his consciousness of deep ecumenism, 15th century scientist, humanist and Rhineland mystic Nicolas of Cusa laments wars between religions. He offers a
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