Why Modern Stoicism Falls Short — and Why Faith Cannot Be Replaced
Formation Living on Faith Formation Living on Faith

Why Modern Stoicism Falls Short — and Why Faith Cannot Be Replaced

In recent years, Stoicism has enjoyed a cultural revival. Popular authors and thinkers present it as a complete “way of life”: disciplined, rational, emotionally controlled, and free from fear — even fear of death. Figures like Ryan Holiday have helped bring Stoic texts and ideas into the mainstream, often framing them as a sufficient replacement for religious belief.

This formation is offered as a response — not as an attack on discipline, productivity, or philosophy — but as a clarification. Stoicism is not false because it is immoral or shallow. It falls short because it stops where the religious life begins.

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The Hidden Poverty of a Faithful Father
Fatherhood & the Interior Life Living on Faith Fatherhood & the Interior Life Living on Faith

The Hidden Poverty of a Faithful Father

There is a kind of poverty no one prepares a man for.

Not the poverty of hunger or homelessness — but the poverty of being faithful and still appearing to have failed.

To be 44, divorced, owning little, dependent on circumstances you did not choose, misunderstood by your own child, and quietly mocked by the one who once promised partnership — this is not weakness.


This is hidden suffering, and it is one of the hardest forms of fatherhood.

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Memorial of St. Thomas Aquinas
Liturgy Living on Faith Liturgy Living on Faith

Memorial of St. Thomas Aquinas

St. Thomas Aquinas is often presented to us as a finished system—clean proofs, tight arguments, elegant conclusions. But Thomas himself did not begin with answers. He began with silence, prayer, and patience.

Before he ever wrote, he knelt.
Before he reasoned, he asked.
Before he spoke, he waited.

Thomas did not rush toward clarity. He received it.

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How the Angels Behold the Trinity
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How the Angels Behold the Trinity

When Catholics speak about the Trinity, we often say, “It is a mystery.”
That is true—but the Church never means confusing or unknowable.

The Church Fathers consistently turn to the angels to clarify how the Trinity can be

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