Authority, Obedience, and Raising an Eight-Year-Old: A Catholic Reflection on Romans 13
When St. Paul writes in Romans 13 that “all authority comes from God,” it’s easy to misunderstand. Some read it as God endorsing every ruler, parent, or leader automatically. But the Catholic understanding is deeper, wiser, and—if you’re raising a child like I am—essential to daily life.
MEN NEED MIRRORS, NOT MODELS
The world keeps feeding men impossible models: heroes who never fall, leaders who never doubt, warriors who never break.
But Scripture doesn’t give us models. It gives us mirrors — men with tempers, flaws, lust, cowardice, pride, fear… and a God who still calls them, forms them, and refuses to leave them behind
Becoming Small Again: What St. Faustina and the Child Jesus Teach Parents, Co-Parents, and the Lonely of Heart
When I first learned how St. Faustina wrote about the Child Jesus in her Diary, something in me softened. I’m a parent, a co-parent, a man trying to walk in faith, trying to stay steady in a world that doesn’t always feel steady back. And the more I read Faustina, the more I understood that God wasn’t inviting me to become stronger, louder, or more “in control.”
He was inviting me to become smaller.
When Someone You Care About Can’t Break Free: A Catholic Reflection on Love, Cycles, and God’s Healing
My ex-wife has struggled with a relationship that has ended and restarted more times than I can count. Her friends see the red flags. Her family does. I do. She even sees them herself—she has shared the pain, the drama, the disappointment.
But then something pulls her back.
Acts, Apostolic Succession, and the Living Church: Why Tradition Matters
When we read the Book of Acts, it’s impossible to miss the clear picture of a church in action: apostles teaching, councils forming, leaders appointed, and communities organized. For Catholics, this is not just history — it is the blueprint for how Christ intended His Church to operate.
When “Holy Experiences” Start to Replace the Holy Spirit
Every so often within a Catholic group, a new tone begins to creep in — not loudly, not maliciously, but softly, like a shift in the wind. Someone begins sharing “holy experiences,” dramatic moments of the Spirit supposedly moving at retreats, conferences, or in prayer. At first it sounds harmless. Sometimes it even sounds inspiring.
But then something begins to feel off.
When Charity Hurts: CO-Parenting, Criticism, and the Quiet Cross We Carry
There are moments in co-parenting that don’t just sting — they cut deep. Moments where you’re doing your best, holding the house together, protecting routines, planning time for your child, and then everything shatters in a single sentence:
“Why is he acting this way? I don’t do that so it must be You”