Read more of Bob Abernethy’s September 16, 2008 interview with Kathleen Norris.
Mind, Body, Spirit
March 13, 2009: Kathleen Norris Interview
March 6, 2009: Lourdes 150th Anniversary
In most of the world, the poor and sick are ignored. In Lourdes, they are number one, and people say they are drawn there because they believe it is a place of great faith.
February 27, 2009: Forrest Church Profile
My lifelong belief is that love and death interwoven are the heartstrings of religion. The greatest of all truths is that love never dies. The opposite of love is not death. It is fear.
February 27, 2009: Forrest Church Interview
One of the beautiful things about a terminal illness is you are invited into the present, and your friendships become stronger. Your loved ones become more vital and more present. Each day becomes more beautiful. You walk through the valley of the shadow, and it’s riddled with light.
February 6, 2009: Joe Eszterhas
My life has been transformed. I don't know why God has blessed me and graced me the way God has. In my own mind, I don't deserve it.
January 9, 2009: Worshipping Walt
Walt Whitman believed himself a prophet and regarded Leaves of Grass as scripture. So did his many disciples.
November 28, 2008: HIV Ministry
Kathi Winter is a busy executive in the travel industry, but every three hours she stops to pop a pill. Winter takes a lot of pills everyday. She's HIV positive, and her "cocktail" of meds keeps AIDS at bay.
October 17, 2008: Camp Ray of Hope
This is a camp like no other, filled with laughter and beauty -- and pain. A camp named Ray of Hope for people grieving the death of a spouse, a child, or a friend, where they learn how to accept that death and go on.
November 30, 2007: Healing the Wounds of War
Benedicta Cipolla writes about the emotional, psychological, and spiritual battles soldiers in war must fight in addition to the physical dangers of combat.
November 30, 2007: How Should We Live?
What is the good life? Is it dinner with the family, a walk in the woods, a baseball game at the local park? More importantly, is there an ethic within the contemporary, technologically dominated culture of America that gets us to the good life? These are the questions philosopher Albert Borgmann wrestles with in his most recent book, REAL AMERICAN ETHICS: TAKING RESPONSIBILITY FOR OUR COUNTRY (University of Chicago Press, 2006).



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