Give Your Coat Also
March 28, 2008 - 2:37pm by ThomasUPDATE (3/31/08): Here's the link to listen to the Story Corps story "A Victim Treats His Mugger Right."
There was an amazing story on National Public Radio's Story Corps this morning. Each week, a regular person tells a story about their life and it is broadcast on NPR and archived in the Library of Congress as a part of folk history. The story shared this week by a New Yorker commuting home from work on the subway was particular touching, and though he did not name drop Jesus or church, the gospel was alive in his actions.
Long story short, the man would get off a stop early on the subway each day to eat at his favorite diner. A couple of months ago the man got of the train and had a knife pointed at him by a young man, who promptly asked for his money. The man gave the boy his wallet, then as the boy was leaving called out to him, "Wait up!" The assailant turned around and the man offered him his coat as well. Shocked, the boy asked why and the man said, "if you need money so badly, I figured you might need my coat as well." The two struck up a conversation, and then the man offered to his assailant that he should join him at his favorite diner, so they walked out of the subway and went to grab a bite to eat. After the meal was over, the young man shared his astonishment at the whole ordeal, to which the man replied, "you have to pay for this meal, because you took my wallet---I'm broke!" The would-be robber paid for the meal and gave the wallet back. ... more
Mary the Teacher
February 28, 2008 - 2:38pm by ThomasTwo nights ago my wife and I were praying the evening prayer in the Glenstal prayerbook which incorporates the Magnificat into the litany. Then this morning, as I read from the Scriptures, I had made it to the Beatitudes as I read through Luke and the perverbial light bulb went off.
The Magnificat Mary sings before Christ's birth and the Beatitudes Christ later preaches are awfully similar. ... more
Jesus Against the Empire
February 12, 2008 - 10:35pm by ThomasIn my readings of The Twelve Caesars and Plutarch's Lives for my Topics in Literature: Autobiography, Biography, and Memoir class (English classes always have long titles...) I have come to the conclusion that Rome was dastardly immoral and decadent. In The Twelve Caesars Suetonius writes he is only mentioning "the tip of the iceberg," so to speak, about sexual immorality and pornographic violence, yet the things he alludes to are fearful---that a human could do that sort of thing.
... more





