The Forgotten Man

March 17, 2009 by  
Filed under Patrick's Blog

Conservative social commentator Glenn Beck asks some interesting and timely questions about “the forgotten man.” Who is the forgotten man? According to Beck, he is you. I tend to agree with him, and I have a few questions of my own. But watch this video first and see what you think of his take on this:



Flight of the Conchords: "Think About It"

March 16, 2009 by  
Filed under Patrick's Blog

If you know who the Flight of the Conchords are, you’ll understand this. If you don’t, you probably won’t.
 
I love these guys. Dig it:




What's the Immigration Situation Where You Live?

March 16, 2009 by  
Filed under Patrick's Blog

Check out this interesting, interactive map of the U.S. which gives the immigration statistics for every county in the country. You can also search according to specific foreign-born groups to see the trends in where they settle across the 50 states.

Catholic Edition: A Great New Source for Breaking News

March 16, 2009 by  
Filed under Patrick's Blog






I have this page bookmarked. Check them out!

To Twitter or not to Twitter? That is the Question

March 16, 2009 by  
Filed under Patrick's Blog



In recent weeks, quite a few Catholics I have met at my parish seminars and at conferences around the country have asked me what I think about the social networking tool known as Twitter, what it is, and whether it’s worth using. In fact, a good number of you who follow this blog have started “following” me on Twitter. I tell those who ask that Twitter can be a very useful communications tool, when used properly, or it can be just another worthless form of self-broadcasting with no other purpose than to tell people what you’re doing at any given moment.

Since I have been using Twitter for the past 3 months or so, I can say that I definitely put myself in the former category.  

Like I did when I started using Twitter a little over 3 months ago, a lot of you have (or will) start off wondering what exactly Twitter is and what it does and why anyone would bother with it. This is normal, and it will pass.

To help you make more sense out of why Twitter is such a useful and potentially beneficial tool, especially for Catholics around the world who want to be in communication across time and space (which is actually the only kind of communication we humans can engage in, this side of eternity), here’s a link to a helpful article that does a good job of explaining the basics of Twitter, including answering the perenniel question, “What is Twitter, anyway?”

Well, check this out: http://www.clicknewz.com/1385/twitter

Now, please note that I don’t use Twitter to tell people on my network what I’m doing at any given moment (as some people do). That’s just a nuisance that normal, busy people, like you and I, don’t need. That’s why I don’t post the mundane details of my life.  Rather, I use Twitter to instantaneously communicate news, information, updates, happenings, prayer requests, etc., to my network.

If you follow me on Twitter, you’ll get the important things — 140 characters at a time — not riff-raff stuff. I promise.


Oh, and since I am steadily building an ever-expanding network of Catholics, once you’ve read up on the benefits of Twitter, please join my network. Set up your free Twitter account (it’s quick and easy, then add “patrickmadrid” to the “find people” search bar, and “follow” me. I’ll take it from there. 

Like the old Alka-Seltzer commercial used to say, “Try it. You’ll like it.” I certainly do.


Conclusions of a Guilty Bystander

March 12, 2009 by  
Filed under Patrick's Blog

In my mid 20s, I went through a kind of creeping spiritual crisis that led me into a reconversion to Christ that was neither sudden nor dramatic, although it shook me powerfully and reached the deepest recesses of my heart.

Like a painful, prolonged medical treatment that’s necessary to save a patient’s life, my reconversion entailed pain and uncertainty, but the result, thank God, was a cure — not an instant one, forever banishing the symptoms of the disease we call “sin,” but a cure nonetheless. As St. Paul explained, “Through one man sin entered the world, and through sin, death.” This malaria of sin, contracted in the Garden of Eden through the bite of an apple, courses through our veins with all its deadly effects. Only God’s grace can combat and overcome it. His love is the sole antidote.

At the height of my conversion of heart, I discovered, or more specifically, the Lord showed me, that through years of infrequent and minimal use, I had allowed the “muscles” of my interior life — prayer, mortification, and recollection — to atrophy and wither. My spiritual “arteries” — which carry the love of Christ as the lifeblood of the soul — had hardened and constricted as a result of the lukewarm, halfhearted complacency into which I had settled. . . . (continue reading Patrick Madrid’s “Conclusions of a Guilty Bystander”)

You Don't Mess Around With Jim

March 10, 2009 by  
Filed under Patrick's Blog

What’s in a name? Plenty. A word of caution to anybody who starts paying closer attention to the wisdom of his or her namesake saint: Get ready to feel woefully inadequate.
 
By Jim Moore
Envoy Magazine
 
Do you ever lose track of your name? I do. Hey, this is a legit, faith-based question here. The answer isn’t packed with doctrinal revelation, but anybody who reads this space on a regular basis ought to be used to that by now.

For those of you who may be stopping by for the first time: This column is basically about being a cradle Catholic who came late to the effort of truly understanding and appreciating the Faith. It’s about being somebody like me. I would have called the column “Rocking the Clueless Catholic,” but I thought that would be unfair to the rest of you.

Today’s question for the clueless: Do you ever lose track of your name, the way I do?
Everybody stop a second and say your name out loud. The whole thing. Confirmation names, too.
Any saints’ names in there? Do you know anything about those saints? How often do they even come to mind?

Personally, I don’t think along those lines very often at all. I’ve been “Jimmy” to my family and “Jim” to friends and colleagues for so long, that I rarely think of myself as “James.” Yet that’s a pedigree that shouldn’t be neglected. Though I imagine St. James wouldn’t lose any sleep over not being consciously connected with me.

Of course, if St. James ever is consciously connected with me – or with any of the other kajillion guys going around giving his name a bad name – it’s probably only when the other saints are giving him a hard time.

“Hey, James! Did you see what that clown with the cradle Catholic magazine column came up with this time?”

I’ve been “Jimmy” to my family and “Jim” to friends and colleagues for so long, that I rarely think of myself as “James.” Yet that’s a pedigree that shouldn’t be neglected. Though I imagine St. James wouldn’t lose any sleep over not being consciously connected with me.

“Yeah, James. I mean, come on. What a moron.”

Not very nice of them, I know. But I understand both John and Paul have been extremely pleased with themselves since 1978.

“All right, you two. I’ll tell you again. Linguistically speaking, James is only as close as English can come to my name. All those guys and I hardly have the same name at all. And if you two would quit wrapping yourselves in the papal flag every chance you get, I could show you a John or a Paul or two who aren’t all that much to write home about.”

In order to spare my namesake at least some ribbing, and in an attempt to learn better the worthy lessons associated with my name due to his writing, I decided to turn my biblically bereft cradle Catholic mind to St. James’ epistle.
Epistle.

Remember when we used to call them “epistles”? Made ’em sound as important as they are. I have a few dim memories of hearing the word at Mass when I was little, but it faded out of sight not long into my grade school years.

It had to happen. “Epistle” is a word doomed to failure in America. And it has nothing to do with liturgical preferences. It’s just not very singable. Try it yourself.

“I’m gonna sit right down and write myself an epistle.” No.

“My baby just wrote me an epistle.” Uh, uh.

“Mr. Postman, look and see/If there’s an epistle in your bag for me.” No chance.

Anyway, I got interested in the Letter of St. James because it was featured prominently at Mass during the month of October. I wasn’t named after St. James due to any special affection my parents had for him, but I do know that the tradition of saints’ names for children played at least some part in the choice. So I figured it couldn’t hurt to pay special attention to what the man had to say.

A word of caution to anybody who starts paying closer attention to the wisdom of his or her namesake saint: Get ready to feel woefully inadequate. I didn’t get through the first chapter of James without self-esteem problems. Here are just a few from among numerous examples:
James 1:19: “Let every man be quick to hear, slow to speak, slow to anger . . . .”

And my Irish ancestors became Catholic how?

James 1:26: “If a man who does not control his tongue imagines that he is devout, he is self-deceived . . . .”

No self-deception? And Americans became Catholic how?
Then, in 1:27, he talks about “keeping oneself unstained by the world . . . .” Personally, I can’t even keep myself unstained by lunch.

A word of caution 
to anybody who starts paying closer attention to the wisdom of his or her namesake saint: 
Get ready to feel woefully inadequate.


You could spend a lifetime just trying to live up to a single sentence in that first chapter. But there’s always chapter two. Right?

James 2:2-4: “Suppose there should come into your assembly a man fashionably dressed, with gold rings on his fingers, and at the same time a poor man in shabby clothes. Suppose further that you were to take notice of the well-dressed man and say, ‘Sit right here, please’ whereas you were to say to the poor man, ‘You can stand!’ . . . Have you not in a case like this discriminated in your hearts? Have you not set yourself up as judges?”

I think I may be okay her
e, simply by virtue of changing times. You see, just about nobody shows up for Mass wearing fine clothes these days. And if they’re wearing gold rings, they’re wearing them in places most traditional people would judge less than formal.

I just typed “judge,” didn’t I? Strike two. And forget about chapter three.
James 3:6: “The tongue . . . exists among our members as a whole universe of malice. The tongue defiles the entire body.”

Even I won’t look for a way around that one.

And just in case the message hasn’t hit home by the time he gets to chapter four, St. James, being the thorough kind of guy he is, states things even more plainly there.

James 4:14: “You are a vapor that appears briefly and vanishes.”

That says it even more succinctly than Ash Wednesday. As a matter of fact, I understand there was once a James-ist movement to institute Vapor Wednesday as a Lenten alternative for communities where ashes weren’t available. The local bishop would eat something with pungent spices, then breathe on people as they approached the altar.

Among the truly great things about the Letter of St. James is his ending. After raising the bar hopelessly higher and higher for five chapters, he ends with a word of encouragement to those of us who hope people will learn the truth of Catholicism, and that they’ll learn it somehow through us.

James 5:19-20: “My brothers, the case may arise among you of someone straying from the truth, and of others bringing him back. Remember this: The person who brings a sinner back from his way will save his soul from death and cancel a multitude of sins.”

I’ve learned a lot from St. James in those five brief chapters of his. And maybe he’s turned me around in a few respects. If only because I now feel a need to live up in at least some small way to his name. If my parents had named me after anyone other than a saint, the notion would never have occurred to me.

Maybe the tradition of saints’ names for children is one we ought to hold on to.


By Jim Moore, jimmoore [at] rocketmail.com
Source: Envoy Magazine
Copyright: Envoy Magazine, 1996-2009, all rights reserved. 

You Don’t Mess Around With Jim

March 10, 2009 by  
Filed under Patrick's Blog

What’s in a name? Plenty. A word of caution to anybody who starts paying closer attention to the wisdom of his or her namesake saint: Get ready to feel woefully inadequate.
 
By Jim Moore
Envoy Magazine
 
Do you ever lose track of your name? I do. Hey, this is a legit, faith-based question here. The answer isn’t packed with doctrinal revelation, but anybody who reads this space on a regular basis ought to be used to that by now.

For those of you who may be stopping by for the first time: This column is basically about being a cradle Catholic who came late to the effort of truly understanding and appreciating the Faith. It’s about being somebody like me. I would have called the column “Rocking the Clueless Catholic,” but I thought that would be unfair to the rest of you.

Today’s question for the clueless: Do you ever lose track of your name, the way I do?
Everybody stop a second and say your name out loud. The whole thing. Confirmation names, too.
Any saints’ names in there? Do you know anything about those saints? How often do they even come to mind?

Personally, I don’t think along those lines very often at all. I’ve been “Jimmy” to my family and “Jim” to friends and colleagues for so long, that I rarely think of myself as “James.” Yet that’s a pedigree that shouldn’t be neglected. Though I imagine St. James wouldn’t lose any sleep over not being consciously connected with me.

Of course, if St. James ever is consciously connected with me – or with any of the other kajillion guys going around giving his name a bad name – it’s probably only when the other saints are giving him a hard time.

“Hey, James! Did you see what that clown with the cradle Catholic magazine column came up with this time?”

I’ve been “Jimmy” to my family and “Jim” to friends and colleagues for so long, that I rarely think of myself as “James.” Yet that’s a pedigree that shouldn’t be neglected. Though I imagine St. James wouldn’t lose any sleep over not being consciously connected with me.

“Yeah, James. I mean, come on. What a moron.”

Not very nice of them, I know. But I understand both John and Paul have been extremely pleased with themselves since 1978.

“All right, you two. I’ll tell you again. Linguistically speaking, James is only as close as English can come to my name. All those guys and I hardly have the same name at all. And if you two would quit wrapping yourselves in the papal flag every chance you get, I could show you a John or a Paul or two who aren’t all that much to write home about.”

In order to spare my namesake at least some ribbing, and in an attempt to learn better the worthy lessons associated with my name due to his writing, I decided to turn my biblically bereft cradle Catholic mind to St. James’ epistle.
Epistle.

Remember when we used to call them “epistles”? Made ’em sound as important as they are. I have a few dim memories of hearing the word at Mass when I was little, but it faded out of sight not long into my grade school years.

It had to happen. “Epistle” is a word doomed to failure in America. And it has nothing to do with liturgical preferences. It’s just not very singable. Try it yourself.

“I’m gonna sit right down and write myself an epistle.” No.

“My baby just wrote me an epistle.” Uh, uh.

“Mr. Postman, look and see/If there’s an epistle in your bag for me.” No chance.

Anyway, I got interested in the Letter of St. James because it was featured prominently at Mass during the month of October. I wasn’t named after St. James due to any special affection my parents had for him, but I do know that the tradition of saints’ names for children played at least some part in the choice. So I figured it couldn’t hurt to pay special attention to what the man had to say.

A word of caution to anybody who starts paying closer attention to the wisdom of his or her namesake saint: Get ready to feel woefully inadequate. I didn’t get through the first chapter of James without self-esteem problems. Here are just a few from among numerous examples:
James 1:19: “Let every man be quick to hear, slow to speak, slow to anger . . . .”

And my Irish ancestors became Catholic how?

James 1:26: “If a man who does not control his tongue imagines that he is devout, he is self-deceived . . . .”

No self-deception? And Americans became Catholic how?
Then, in 1:27, he talks about “keeping oneself unstained by the world . . . .” Personally, I can’t even keep myself unstained by lunch.

A word of caution 
to anybody who starts paying closer attention to the wisdom of his or her namesake saint: 
Get ready to feel woefully inadequate.


You could spend a lifetime just trying to live up to a single sentence in that first chapter. But there’s always chapter two. Right?

James 2:2-4: “Suppose there should come into your assembly a man fashionably dressed, with gold rings on his fingers, and at the same time a poor man in shabby clothes. Suppose further that you were to take notice of the well-dressed man and say, ‘Sit right here, please’ whereas you were to say to the poor man, ‘You can stand!’ . . . Have you not in a case like this discriminated in your hearts? Have you not set yourself up as judges?”

I think I may be okay here, simply by virtue of changing times. You see, just about nobody shows up for Mass wearing fine clothes these days. And if they’re wearing gold rings, they’re wearing them in places most traditional people would judge less than formal.

I just typed “judge,” didn’t I? Strike two. And forget about chapter three.
James 3:6: “The tongue . . . exists among our members as a whole universe of malice. The tongue defiles the entire body.”

Even I won’t look for a way around that one.

And just in case the message hasn’t hit home by the time he gets to chapter four, St. James, being the thorough kind of guy he is, states things even more plainly there.

James 4:14: “You are a vapor that appears briefly and vanishes.”

That says it even more succinctly than Ash Wednesday. As a matter of fact, I understand there was once a James-ist movement to institute Vapor Wednesday as a Lenten alternative for communities where ashes weren’t available. The local bishop would eat something with pungent spices, then breathe on people as they approached the altar.

Among the truly great things about the Letter of St. James is his ending. After raising the bar hopelessly higher and higher for five chapters, he ends with a word of encouragement to those of us who hope people will learn the truth of Catholicism, and that they’ll learn it somehow through us.

James 5:19-20: “My brothers, the case may arise among you of someone straying from the truth, and of others bringing him back. Remember this: The person who brings a sinner back from his way will save his soul from death and cancel a multitude of sins.”

I’ve learned a lot from St. James in those five brief chapters of his. And maybe he’s turned me around in a few respects. If only because I now feel a need to live up in at least some small way to his name. If my parents had named me after anyone other than a saint, the notion would never have occurred to me.

Maybe the tradition of saints’ names for children is one we ought to hold on to.


By Jim Moore, jimmoore [at] rocketmail.com
Source: Envoy Magazine
Copyright: Envoy Magazine, 1996-2009, all rights reserved. 

Here in Miri

March 5, 2009 by  
Filed under Patrick's Blog

Well, after a long day in the air yesterday (Tokyo to Kuala Lumpur [layover], KL to Miri), I made it safely to my destination here in Miri, which is located on the west coast of the Island of Borneo. I got to my hotel room last night around midnight, and my first talk of the conference starts this morning at 8:30. So all Ihave time to do right now is say “Selamat pagi,” or “good morning” in Malay. I probably should also say “Malaysia Adalah Sebuah Negara Yang Menarik” (“I like Malaysia”), at least the little I have seen of it since getting here.


More soon. I’m off to get some strong coffee and then start my seminars. Selamat jalan.

Japan: the Land of the Rising Sun Is the Land of No Son

March 5, 2009 by  
Filed under Patrick's Blog

I arrived here in Tokyo yesterday afternoon around 3:00 (actually I’m in the city of Narita, where the main area airport is located). I stayed at the same western-style airport I always stay at when I’m spending time in this area. After 16 hours of flying yesterday, between Columbus and here, I wanted nothing more than to just take a hot shower, get a quick meal (Japanese gyoza, a small bowl of white rice, and a bottle of water), and then some much-needed sleeeep. And sleep I did. I closed my eyes at 6:00 p.m. and woke refreshed at 5:30 a.m. 

The view of Narita from my hotel-room window, today, 7:00 a.m.



Japan is one of the countries I most enjoy visiting. I love it here and wish I could speak the language better — much better — though I do my best to stumble around in my pigeon Japanese that elicits more good-naturedly embarrassed smiles from the locals than anything else (“well, at least he’s trying,” I imagine them saying to themselves). As soon as I utter a few phrases in Japanese, they perceive my lack of conversational skills and politely switch to English. Sometimes, to Engrish, which provides me with no end of divertment. (But that’s another story for another time. I could tell you some funny Engrish stories from my visits to Japan over the years!)

Its missionary possibilities are endless, although (or maybe because) it is a decidedly secularized society, and aside from a patina of Buddhist and Shinto cultural religious sensibilities, the Japanese are, sadly, generally atheistic. Not in the aggressively anti-God way that many atheists are in the West, but more out of a general apathy, a lack of any interest in the possibility that God may have a personal claim on their lives. I very much enjoy meeting and observing the Japanese. Even though it’s clear that I, as a Westerner, am not someone they’ll typically get beyond the merely superficial formalities of giving directions or answering questions about the local weather, etc., I do sense in these extremely polite and gracious people a deep reservoir of latent yearning for God. The hard part, as any missionary to this land will tell you, is getting past the hardened secularist/consumerist/complacency that so many Japanese are in the grip of. 

It surprises some to know that if the Japanese Shoguns had not brutally persecuted and wiped out the thriving Catholic communities that existed here in the 16th century, and had the Church not been hindered in its growth, it is quite likely that Japan would have been a thoroughly Catholic country — much like the Philippines are today. I think the same would have been true for China, had not the Communists stomped on the Catholic Church when they came to power in the late 1940s. 

When I arrived at my hotel, in addition to the Japanese-English edition of the Gideon Bible in the nightstand, I also found the obligatory copy of The Teachings of Buddha, also in a Japanese-English translation. 

Although I don’t know this for sure, I suspect that hotel guests are going to be much more affected by the teachings of Jesus Christ, as found in the New Testament, than they will be by the bland aphorisms of Buddhism. Not to mention the fact that in Buddhism, even with its Four Nobel Truths which are in themselves expressions of certain truths about this life, there is no real solution to the problem of evil and suffering beyond an identification of (some of) the causes of suffering in this world. The endless cycles of Karmic rebirth cannot explain nor resolve the problem of Evil. By contrast, Jesus Christ is the answer to this age-old conundrum that men have puzzled over since time immemorial. But then, that goes back to my thoughts about how successful Catholic missionaries could be here in Japan if there could be found a way to break through the shell of indifference and complacency that so many Japanese seem to be encased in. I don’t know. Perhaps it would take a national catastrophe of some sort to reawaken in these good people their hidden, dormant desire for the ultimate good, God Himself. Perhaps someday I will have the privilege of helping the local Catholic missionaries in their efforts to reach out to the Japanese people with the Good News of Jesus Christ. In the meantime, I can only just enjoy each visit I make to this wonderful country, enjoying the people and their society from the outside, but praying for them to discover Jesus Christ and the Catholic Church. Who knows? Perhaps in God’s inscrutable providence, Japan may yet become the Catholic country it might have been. Deo Volente.
My flight to Kuala Lumpur leaves soon. I’ll be back in touch when I get there. And thanks again to all of you who are praying for me. 

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