Viewpoints

Spirit attunement

Troy Watson

In my last article, I explained that baptizo (the Greek word for “baptize”) means to merge or saturate something to the point of transforming its essence. One of the oldest documented uses of baptizo is found in an ancient pickling recipe.

The gene pool cards

“In your 50s, you find out what ‘cards’ you got in the gene pool,” I’ve heard it said. In the past year, this truism took on personal meaning. Unusual chest pains sent me to my doctor. The results of an EKG and a subsequent stress test—which I “failed”—revealed that my heart bears an unsurprising family resemblance to the hearts of both my father and my mother.

Everything we need

“Pay now . . . or really pay later.” This recent Winnipeg Free Press headline pointed to the close relationship between investing in education and healthcare for the very young, and the lifelong costs of healthcare, crime prevention and social support required by those who fall through the cracks.

How the Grinch saved Christmas

Next to biblical nativity stories, How the Grinch Stole Christmas by Dr. Seuss is one of my favourite seasonal tales. We read it as a family every Christmas Eve.

While we typically view this vintage Dr. Seuss yarn as a reminder that there is more to Christmas than its trappings, it offers something unexpected too. It shares an example of restorative justice at work.

Guadalupe: A story to heal a hemisphere

Image of Guadalupe.

The Basilica of Our Lady of Guadalupe rising above the outskirts of Mexico City.

Mexican indigenous people celebrate the Feast of Our Lady of Guadalupe outside the Basilica in Mexico City.

Gift shop at the Basilica of Our Lady of Guadalupe, Mexico City.

Prayer candles outside the Basilica of Our Lady of Guadalupe, Mexico City.

The chapel built for Guadalupe atop Tepeyac Hill as it looks today.

Every Advent I recall December 2003 when I found myself swept along in the tide of pilgrims advancing toward one of the world’s most visited holy sites. The crowds were drawn by the gravity of a story that dates back to 1531 and a little hill in Mexico. 

Longing to hear God's 'yes'

We gathered as a church community a few days after death had visited with a stunning blow. For many of us, our first reaction, upon receiving the news, was a cry of disbelief, "No! " Then we added words like "unreal" and, "This can't be, " as if we had the power to go back in time, to turn death's hand and to stop it from taking our loved one.

VIEWPOINT: Growing up Muslim in America, and dreaming of Halloween

Sara Yasin

Growing up, we didn’t celebrate Halloween. While many Americans might have fond memories of strategic trick-or-treating and silly costumes on Halloween, my own memories involve going to great lengths to avoid it.

My parents, devout Muslims, banned Halloween in our home, condemning it as a “celebration of the devil.”

Attunement

Troy Watson

I was twenty-two years old when I first realized the price of my happiness was too high. I had met some Christians in a small Russian village who, although struggling to obtain life’s most basic necessities, were happier and more content than I was.

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