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What is a sure bet? PDF Print E-mail

Written By Fr. Dennis Gallagher, A.A., Provincial Superior of the North American Province.

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In a piece for Assumption’s alumni magazine a few years back, I was musing on the fact that students rate getting a good job as the #1 reason for going to college. No surprise there, but there’s an irony lurking in that. The more apparently practical and pragmatic one approaches the purpose of education, the more one is at the mercy of forces outside of one’s control. What’s the job market going to be like when I graduate? As long as the economy is humming along, as it has been for some time now, that question does not rise to the level of urgency. But how susceptible we are to taking things for granted.

I was thinking along these lines on hearing that the coronavirus is causing stock prices to plunge and bringing to light how much dependence we have on China. Who knows what further disruption this epidemic/pandemic will cause, but it’s one of those moments, apparently, when we are brought face to face with a discomforting truth: that the ground under our feet is not as solid as we might have supposed. 

Last Updated on Wednesday, 04 March 2020 11:55
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ASH WEDNESDAY PDF Print E-mail

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You are merciful to all, O Lord, and despise nothing that you have made. You overlook people's sins, to bring them to repentance, and you spare them, for you are the Lord our God.

(Wisdom 11:24, 25, 27)

(Liturgy for Ash Wednesday-Entrance Antiphon)

Last Updated on Tuesday, 25 February 2020 21:02
 
PRIESTLY ORDINATION OF BROTHERS MARCIANO LOPEZ SOLIS, A.A. AND RODEL CERVANTES SAPALO, A.A. PDF Print E-mail

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Last Updated on Monday, 24 February 2020 17:33
 
PROVINCIAL POST PDF Print E-mail

Written By Fr. Dennis Gallagher, A.A.

A book in hand

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Undoubtedly, there are advantages to reading from a tablet or an iPad. Cost, convenience while traveling, storage capacity, font flexibility all favor the electronic device over the traditional book, to say nothing of environmental concerns and the elimination of all that paper. Clearly, electronic is the reasonable way to go.

But sometimes rationality is not all that it’s cracked up to be. Or, better, a rationality reduced to considerations of cost and convenience. Consider all the pleasures of the book, starting with the tactile ones: holding the book in hand, turning the pages, even tearing open the Amazon-delivered box. Then there’s the underlining, the highlighting and notes in the margins. Yes, those last three can be done on the tablet, but not with my peculiar script and idiosyncratic notations. Altogether, there is a presence to a book that makes it an extension of myself. I used to say when I was teaching a course that it felt like a companion for the duration of the semester. A book in hand can feel something the same.

Last Updated on Saturday, 22 February 2020 13:35
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LETTERS FROM THE DESERT NO.1 PDF Print E-mail

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By Fr. Peter Precourt, A.A.

I have now been here for two weeks and have begun to find my way around El Paso. Thank goodness for the app Waze which guides me through the maze of roads here in Southern Texas. This is no small city. It is very spread out. I would say that 95% of the buildings are only one story high and that includes most of the commercial property. The tall buildings are found in the city center and college campuses. The current population is estimated at around 682,669. The diocese of El Paso is estimated at 80% of the population. When it comes to weather, I would say “Toto this is not New England”. This a desert climate that is cool at night and warm during the day. The humidity is generally around 12%. The trees (which are few) have been planted and are watered daily by irrigation. It is quite dusty when the wind blows because there is not much vegetation to keep the soil down.

Last Updated on Saturday, 08 February 2020 18:40
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