More than a century ago the American psychologist William James set out to account for the universality of religious faith in “The Varieties of Religious Experience,” a book that maintains a lively presence on college reading lists.
Town and country
In the fall of 2003, I walked across southeastern England along the Prime Meridian, the line of zero longitude. I started at the English Channel, near Brighton, then trekked north until I hit the North Sea, about 185 miles as the crow flies.
The phenomenon of Teilhard de Chardin
In the beginning, there was not coldness and darkness: There was the fire,” wrote the Jesuit anthropologist Teilhard de Chardin in “The Mass on the World.”
Saving souls, saving lives
I have been reading Judith Flanders’s biography of the Macdonald sisters, four Victorian women best known for having married or mothered famous Victorian men.
Free as a bird
All afternoon I have been watching a pair of hummingbirds play about our porch. They live somewhere nearby, though I haven’t found their nest. They are attracted to our hummingbird feeder, which we keep full of sugar water.
The future of Catholicism?
So now we wait for a new Supreme Pontiff. John Paul II will be hard to top.
On the virtue of gray
There is no bright side to the story of Terri Schiavo, nor would it have been my place to suggest to her loved ones an appropriate course of action.
In praise of the Enlightenment
In an essay “Why Religion,” the poet Czesław Miłosz tells us that he lived at a time when human imagination was dramatically changing. Heaven and Hell disappeared, he says, belief in an afterlife was weakened, and the borderline between humans and animals was blurred by the theory of evolution.
Ezekiel’s vision
As I ease into retirement, I have taken to spending part of each year on a quiet little island in the Caribbean. I came here looking for winter warmth, of course, but also for dark skies. I am a stargazer by lifelong habit, and my primary home near a major American city is awash in artificial light.
A peephole to the gods?
Under truly dark skies our ancestors saw the middle “star” of Orion’s sword as a tiny smudge of light. The Englishman William Derham, who wrote on cosmology in the early 18th century, believed the glow in Orion was a opening in the celestial sphere through which we observe the radiance of God.