St. Paul: Grace Behind the Veil, Purification in Time
St. Paul’s conversion shows that grace can strike a soul at once while purification unfolds over time. Christ revealed Himself suddenly on the road to Damascus, but the man seized by heaven still had to pass through blindness, baptism, hidden years, and deep interior reordering before carrying that wisdom fully into mission.
Vocation Is Order, Not a Platform
The Church recognizes certain stable states in life: Marriage (CCC 1601–1605), Holy Orders (CCC 1536), Consecrated Life (CCC 914), and the celibate single life dedicated to God. These are not personal talents, but rather structures of responsibility and authority where sanctification takes place. A vocation isn’t about what you’re good at—it’s about who you are responsible for, whose authority you live under, and how your life is directed toward love.
We Beat Heresies by Listening to the Church
There was a season of my life where “growth” meant intensity.
I repented loudly.
I studied aggressively.
I listened to sermons like they were emergency broadcasts.
I chased insight.
Every week felt like a breakthrough. Every new church felt like a layer unlocked. Every doctrinal debate felt like a spiritual battle.
And I genuinely believed I was growing.
But what I was really doing was building theology on momentum.
From “Codebreaking” to Communion
A Catholic reflection on moving from KJV concordance “codebreaking” Bible study to the Church’s deeper approach: Scripture understood through liturgy, tradition, and context.
Formed, Not Reactive: Authority, Discernment, and the Making of Catholic Men
There’s a temptation in every generation of men:
To become the rebuker.
We see confusion.
We see bad theology.
We see emotionalism masquerading as revival.
We see social media prophets and group chats spiraling into speculation.
And something in us rises up:
“Someone needs to say something.”
Sometimes that instinct is righteous.
But sometimes it’s ego dressed as zeal.
Formation is learning the difference. God Forms Men Through Authority; Catholic masculinity is not freelance.
From “They Are Blind” to “Lord, Have Mercy”
New clarity often produces defensive energy.
We read the Fathers.
We study the Reformation.
We examine heresies.
And we think in categories:
Right / Wrong
Fullness / Deficiency
Truth / Error
Those distinctions are real. The Church does not pretend otherwise.
The Catechism states clearly:
“Basing itself on Scripture and Tradition, the Council teaches that the Church… is necessary for salvation.” (CCC 846)
Fullness matters. Apostolic continuity matters. Sacraments matter.
But then comes the deeper layer.
The Discipline of the Word: From Eden to the Desert
Lent is not only about fasting from food.
It is about fasting from distortion.
This week’s liturgy brings us through three movements:
Genesis – The distortion of God’s word
St. Paul – The superabundance of Christ’s redemption
The Gospel – Christ answering the tempter with precision
At the center of all three is a single battlefield:
The Word.