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”
When Your Child Is Embarrassed by Faith: A Parenting Moment That Stings
After sitting with the feeling for a minute, I realized this was actually an opportunity. Not to lecture. Not to shame him. But to teach him something he’ll need for the rest of his life: how to handle embarrassment, respect others, and understand faith without fear.
So tonight, after religious ed, I plan to talk with him gently.
When Signs Become Substitutes: A Catholic Battle Plan Against Spiritual Deception
Today, people talk about “finding feathers,” “seeing signs,” “receiving messages,” or “the universe sending signals.” But Catholic teaching — and the saints who fought real spiritual battles — warn us that these curiosities can become traps.
When Zeal Isn’t Holiness: Discerning True Catholic Renewal in a Noisy Culture
Over the past few years, American culture has shifted in a strange way. I keep noticing people — especially far-right voices, influencers, and commentators — suddenly talking about Catholic devotions like the Holy Face, Fatima, the Rosary, or “end times.” Some of it feels sincere… but some of it feels off.
The Devil Targets the Family First: Lessons From the Saints, My Own Story, and the Crisis of Confusion Today
We are living in a time where the family is not merely neglected—it is under direct assault.
And if you look closely, the same three weapons show up again and again:
violence, nudity/shame, and lies.
This is not abstract.
It played out in my own family story.
And the saints warned us it would.
The Noonday Devil: An Old Battle With a New Face, Fighting the Midday Heaviness: A Father’s Prayer
There are moments in the middle of the day when a heaviness comes over you without warning. You’re working, parenting, trying to be faithful, trying to hold your life together with maturity and trust in God—and suddenly a sadness or anxiety slips in. It doesn’t always have a name. It doesn’t always make sense. But it’s real.
If you’ve felt this, you’re not alone. And you’re not weak. In the Catholic spiritual tradition, this has been recognized for centuries. The early desert fathers called it acedia, the “noonday devil” from Psalm 91:6—a kind of spiritual fatigue that tries to discourage the soul when it’s striving to walk with God.