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Our culture often praises scrupulosity. We admire people who care deeply about right and wrong, who refuse to be careless with others. Scruples, in that sense, are a gift. But there is a point where fastidiousness turns on itself: conscience loses proportion, moral attentiveness turns inward and becomes relentless, the burden of responsibility swells until it crowds out trust.
Long before anyone had clinical language for this, monks were already warning about it.
In this excerpt from a classic post-war novel, a concentration camp survivor returns home searching for healing and redemption.. Then behind a wood...
Continue ReadingAt the Bruderhof, music is worship, fellowship, and fun.. In a time when the word “music” mostly brings to mind digitized, commercialized...
Continue ReadingFour newly translated poems shed light on the Holocaust martyr’s spiritual life.. Edith Stein wrote extensively across genres, penning philosophical...
Continue ReadingOver fifty years ago, two dozen theologians met in Hartford and identified thirteen heresies threatening the church. You may find them familiar.. One...
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