NCR eBook: Best Catholic Spirituality Writing 2013

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Best Catholic Spirituality Writing 2013 $9.99

This eBook is a collection of 25 of the best spirituality essays published in the National Catholic Reporter during 2013. Since its founding in 1964, NCR has published many well-known authors of Catholic spiritual writing. From laughter to pain; dance and parenting to pets and selfies, NCR's Best Catholic Spirituality Writing 2013 takes you through the Catholic liturgical year with reflections from 21 authors.

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Contents: Introduction by NCR editor Dennis Coday 1. We hear God with the same ear God hears us (Michael Leach) 2. Beyond this time and this space, God has not abandoned us (Melissa Musick Nussbaum) 3. Cops, cons and grace (Brian Cahill) 4. Merton's letters a call for white atonement (Alex Mikulich) 5. The monastic ways of the 'wise little bee' (Angelo Stagnaro) 6. The truer sacrifices of Lenten fasting (Joseph R. Veneroso) 7. Aging and the paschal mystery (Edward Hays) 8. The mystery of the rolled-away stone (Joseph R. Veneroso) 9. Connection: a more environmental way (Donna Schaper) 10. No matter what Wills says, believers need priests (Brian Cahill) 11. The hands we hold are gifts (Ginny Kubitz Moyer) 12. Finding the mirth in the human condition as Jesus did (Michael Leach) 13. Dancers connect to faith in movement (Elosa Prez-Lozano) 14. Praying the news to avert despair (Heidi Schlumpf) 15. A foretaste of heaven in the love of a dog (Michael Sean Winters) 16. The journey from margin to center (Diane Pendola) 17. Questioning together: Young adults celebrate teaching liturgy on retreat (Loretta E. Johnson) 18. Becoming the person God wants us to be (Jeannine Gramick) 19. God is generous in blessing us with replacement parts (Patty McCarty) 20. @Pontifex and the #SabbathSelfies (John McCarthy) 21. Paying attention during the best part of your life (Peg Ekerdt) 22. The eternal pull of Assisi: A visitor takes on St. Francis' quest (Joshua J. McElwee) 23. Vocation is a day-to-day choice (Brian Harper) 24. Facing death and living life more fully (Eileen Reutzel Colianni) 25. The yearly Christmas letter demands a good editor (Melissa Musick Nussbaum)

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NCR eBook: Best Catholic Spirituality Writing 2013

Draw strength from spirituality, cardinal tells Indian bishops

Palai, India

The new president of the Catholic Bishops' Conference of India said the church should draw strength from spirituality to engage in works of charity.

"Energy for charitable works should come from our spiritual strength," Cardinal Baselios Thottunkal of Trivandrum told a news conference Wednesday at the end of the weeklong bishops' assembly.

Quoting an incident in the life of Blessed Teresa of Kolkata, the 54-year old major archbishop of the Syro-Malankara church said when a reporter asked Blessed Teresa "what is the source of your energy," she took the reporter to the chapel and pointed to the tabernacle.

"There is need for deep spiritual renewal in the church," reiterated Thottunkal, who made the remarks in response to questions from reporters on growing spiritual conventions and other activities in the church and recommendations from the conference to address the issue.

A statement from the Catholic Bishops' Conference of India urged the bishops to be "spirit-filled men of God, giving priority to prayer and the word of God, helping our clergy and lay faithful to become aware of God's presence and activity in their lives."

"Following the example of Pope Francis, we will live a genuinely simple, humble and welcoming and outgoing life, reaching out to the all people," the conference statement said.

"We will so orient the formation of future priests and religious that they enter the ministry with an attitude of humility, ready to serve the poor and marginalized sections," it said.

Cardinal Oswald Gracias of Mumbai, outgoing conference president, said the challenge for the church is to be "the church of the poor."

Amid corruption plaguing every sphere of the society, the bishops' assembly also urged the church institutions to be "examples of transparency."

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Draw strength from spirituality, cardinal tells Indian bishops

Our Better Angels: Spirituality and Addiction

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Newswise Spirituality is a central tenet of 12-step recovery programs like Alcoholics Anonymous. Its value, particularly regarding alcohol addiction, has been recognized by many health care practitioners as well. But what does research science say about the role spirituality plays in the prevention and treatment of and recovery from addictions? A special issue of the Journal of Addictions Nursing [December 2013], co-edited by associate professor and addictions expert Joan Kub, PhD, PHCNS, BC, is dedicated to that very topic. The issue seeks to clarify whether spirituality and religiosity are synonymous concepts; whether spirituality is as relevant to recovery from substance dependence as factors such as age, sex, environment, and genetics; and whether spirituality has a role to play in the prevention of addictions. As attested to by the articles, including several by Kub and Johns Hopkins colleagues Benita Walton-Moss, DNS, RN, CRNP; Ellen M. Ray, DNP, RN; and Kathleen Woodruff, MSN, CRNP, answers to those questions are not always readily available. Kubs lead editorial underlines the dearth of ongoing research at the intersection of addictions and spirituality and the absence of common, consistent definitions of spirituality and religiosity across research efforts. Says Kub, With more information, practitioners in the addictions field can gain a better understanding of spiritual resources and provide information about them to patients at risk for or trying to overcome an addiction.

New Blood Pressure Guidelines and a Caveat. In December 2013, JAMA published an article detailing guidelines for managing high blood pressure. The advice to clinicians about when patients should receive active treatment for hypertension was developed by a panel of 17 experts, among them associate professor Cheryl Dennison Himmelfarb, PhD, RN, ANP, FAAN. Based on a detailed review of the current evidence base, the panel made nine recommendations specifying blood pressure levels at which treatment is appropriate for individuals of different ages and health status. The first, and the lone recommendation on which the panel was divided, changes the target level for people 60 and older: The systolic target rate for individuals with no risk factors such as diabetes was modified upward to 150mm Hg from 140mm Hg.

Dennison Himmelfarb and several others expressed concern that the change could affect medication use, insurance coverage, and, above all, individual health and wellness. They shared their concern in an editorial in the January 2014 Annals of Internal Medicine that increasing the goal may cause harm by increasing the risk for [cardiovascular disease] and partially undoing the remarkable progress in reducing cardiovascular mortality in Americans older than 60 years. [2014 evidence-based guideline for the management of high blood pressure in adults: Report from the panel members appointed to the eighth joint national committee JAMA, Clinical Review and Education, published online December 18, 2013; Editorial, Annals of Internal Medicine, January 2014.]

More hypertension. High blood pressure and excessive weight place Ghanaians and Nigerians at significant risk for heart disease whether they live at home or abroad, according to a comprehensive literature review by PhD candidate Yvonne Commodore-Mensah, BSN, RN, and Laura J. Samuel, PhD, RN, CRNP, Dennison Himmelfarb, and a colleague from the Netherlands. (Hypertension and overweight/obesity in Ghanaians and Nigerians living in West Africa and industrialized countries: A systematic review." Journal of Hypertension, January 2014.)

TB Risks for People with HIV. In South Africa, tuberculosis has become the leading cause of death among those with HIV, whose compromised immune systems leave them at greater risk of co-infection. In the January 2014 Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes, assistant professor Jason Farley, PhD, MPH, CRNP, FAAN, and colleagues suggest steps to lower TB risks to both HIV patients and researchers. Some mirror those Farley has recommended in clinical treatment settings, such as opening windows, segregating patients, and using paper masks and respirators. Farley insists that while such protocols take time and attention, Implementing every possible means to prevent TB transmission in this particularly vulnerable population is both responsible and an essential part of safety for research subjects. [Optimizing the protection of research participants and personnel in HIV-related researcher where TB is prevalent: Practical solutions for improving infection control.]

In Other Nursing Research News. While depression is known to compromise physical health, the causes are less clear. Associate professor Sarah L. Szanton, PhD, CRNP, and colleagues have found that people with depression have reduced levels of antioxidants that help ward off problems like diabetes, cancer, and heart disease, implicating a specific type of antioxidant-linked stress in the depression-disease equation. [Depression and oxidative stress: Results from a meta-analysis of observational studies, Psychosomatic Medicine, January 2014.] Professor Laura Gitlin, PhD, and colleagues at the Ann Arbor (MI) Veterans Administration program suggest how an evidence-based approach called DICE--for describe, investigate, create, and evaluatecan help those involved in dementia care better manage behavioral problems like wandering and aggression in patients. [The role of the occupational therapist in the management of neuropsychiatric symptoms of dementia in clinical settings, Occupational Therapy in Health Care, January 2014.] Associate professor Kathleen M. White, PhD, RN, and colleagues describe the increased diversity of Federal Health Resources and Services Administration-trained nurses as the result of workforce development programs. [The Health Resources and Services Administration Diversity Data Collection, Public Health Reports, January/February 2014.] Doctoral program graduate Jeanine Frumenti, DNP, RN, and a colleague assess the effectiveness of a specialized leadership training program for medical-surgical nursing staff to help reduce the incidence of sores among patients in Addressing hospital-acquired pressure ulcers: Patient care managers enhancing outcomes at the point of service. [Journal of Nursing Administration, January 2014.]

Learn More About: The Johns Hopkins University School of Nursing Continuing education at JHUSON The Beat, a nursing blog

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Our Better Angels: Spirituality and Addiction

Moral March unites politics and spirituality

Last Saturday, a crowd of thousands rallied in downtown Raleigh for the seventh annual Historic Thousands on Jones Street. The protestors showed up for a panoply of reasonsto rebut Gov. Pat McCrory and the General Assembly's "Carolina Comeback," setbacks to women's rights, voting rights, gay rights, environmental protections and school and health care funding.

This "Moral March," organized by Rev. William Barber president of the state NAACP, was clearly intended to prepare for the upcoming legislative session, which starts in May. A coalition of state leaders and social activists were present: rabbis, Muslims for Social Justice, the Campaign for Southern Equality, North Carolina Educators Association, Planned Parenthood, Health Advocates, Health Access Coalition, NCHEAT and the AFL-CIO.

"A big tent movement," as organizers dubbed it at a policy briefing on Tuesday.

However, some have criticized the Rev. Barber and the Moral movement for mixing religion and politics. "Morality has no place in our politics which rely on adaptation and change," The News & Observer wrote in a recent editorial. "Democracy demands flexibility: it requires us to able to rethink cherished beliefs, to modify our positions and strike a compromise in response to evolving standards of right and wrong and the greater good."

But faith leaders will continue to play a central role in Moral Monday and the Moral March. Nancy Petty, the pastor of Raleigh's progressive Pullen Memorial Baptist Church, emceed Saturday's event. Petty, who refused to marry straight people until same-sex marriage is legal in North Carolina, explained to me why she views politics and spirituality as inextricably bound.

"My role is to inspire people to be a part of this movement. The soul of our state is at stake so as faith leaders it's our privilege and responsibility to frame this as a moral issue, regardless of what faith tradition we're coming out of. North Carolina is a state for all people, not just some people."

Petty also said that despite a widespread assumption that politics and religions should exist in separate realms, religious leaders should not shy away from political activism.

"We are the ones that should be carrying the message that all people are created equal, God loves all people and there needs to be justice for all," she said. "This is a call for all of us to stand up and say we have to be involved. What happens in our churches on Sunday morning needs to be carried out into the streets, in fighting for peoples' rights."

What Petty and other faith leaders are doing seems to be working.

"I think one of the biggest challenges we face in North Carolina is how we educate our communities around what's happening here at the Capital," Petty said. "But people have become more aware of what's going on and the decisions that are being made in the legislature, and they don't like them. This year's march is bringing a more diverse group of people together from across our state who say 'we're going to get involved in this.'"

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Moral March unites politics and spirituality

Extreme weather fosters 'eco-spirituality'

A study found that U.S. cities could warm an additional 3.6 degrees by 2100 unless they slow their expansion, paint roofs white or plant rooftop vegetation. Above, construction workers take a break on a Los Angeles rooftop. (Brian Vander Brug / Los Angeles Times / March 10, 2008)

Severe snow storms in the Northeast, Midwest and Atlanta. Summer that lasted into winter in Florida. Drought in California. Weather extremes this year are sparking more talk, and awareness, about climate change.

Concern over mankind's impact on the climate, environment and weather has sparked an increase in "eco-spirituality" with a growing number of religions incorporating climate change as part of their faith.

"They are also acting on those convictions, as communities or as individuals," writes the ReligionLink website. "For example, Christians, Jews, Buddhists, Muslims and others are installing solar panels, planting gardens and conducting services under the canopy of trees. Theyre also exploring less conventional expressions of eco-spirituality, from gratefulness ceremonies and Cosmic Masses to Earth Sabbaths and other rituals that inspire, renew and express oneness with the planet."

Read more here about what different faiths are expressing their eco-spirituality here: http://www.religionlink.com/source-guides/between-heaven-and-earth-eco-spirituality-comes-of-age/

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Extreme weather fosters 'eco-spirituality'

Styled by Spirituality (Ep. 5) – "Negative Association – Stop Pooing On The Present – Video


Styled by Spirituality (Ep. 5) - "Negative Association - Stop Pooing On The Present
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Styled by Spirituality (Ep. 5) - "Negative Association - Stop Pooing On The Present - Video

'Vatican Waltz': Illuminating novel of a plain young woman impelled by her spirituality

Crown. 304 pages. $24

In this increasingly skeptical and secularist age, he has dared to write a story of spiritual quest, set in a world that may seem not only archaic but frankly foreign to many of his readers.

First, there is the premise. A young woman leading a surpassingly innocuous life, Cynthia Piantedosi, comes to believe God is calling her to become ordained as the first female Roman Catholic priest.

There's nothing particularly revolutionary about such a premise. Women in the Roman Catholic Church have felt themselves called to ordained ministry for centuries, and in the last few decades, that sense of calling has become an issue within (and without) the church.

And indeed, Merullo often walks a fine line between advocacy and exploration as he details the soul-altering adventures of a woman who comes to believe over time (though her faith is laced with generous dollops of self-doubt) that she is on a God-sent mission.

Mining the rich veins of scriptural imagery and the Catholic mystical tradition, the writer poses, in the character of Cynthia, questions that would be familiar to Catholic writers of a previous age. What separates human experience and divine calling? When does faith become extremism, sanity veer into delusion? And who, in the end, is to judge?

But as Cynthia seeks to fulfill her calling, she is doing it in a church under siege from years of scandal, one in which the forces of liberalization and tradition are fighting a fierce if sometimes secretive battle.

At first glance, it appears that the life of this 22-year-old nursing student, who lives at home with her widowed father in the working-class Boston suburb of Revere, couldn't be more ordinary.

A solitary soul with few friends and almost no experience of romance, Cynthia has settled into a life of routines: nursing school classes, subway rides, the occasional walk on the beach, a hot meal made by her taciturn Italian immigrant father, long chats with the parish priest.

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'Vatican Waltz': Illuminating novel of a plain young woman impelled by her spirituality