From the category archives:

Gordon MacRae

The Gravity of Grace: When Bad Things Happen to Good People

by Fr. Gordon J. MacRae on March 7, 2012 · 16 comments

The Magnificent Seven, When bad things happen to good people, Pillars of the Earth, No Crueler Tyrannies, trust in divine providence, Fr. Gordon J. MacRae, These Stone Walls, Eli Wallach, Yul Brynner, Steve McQueen, Charles Bronson, Robert Vaughn, Horst Bucholtz , sacrifice, tyranny, frontier justice, bullies, Ken Follett, Kingsbridge England, Divine Providence, Angelic Observer, bigger picture, St. Maximilian Kolbe, Annunciation

. . . In the story, the bad things happening to good people become the catalyst for God’s plan not only for them, but for their children, for their wider community, and for their souls as the Bigger Picture unfolds. Much good that lasts for generations to come has its roots in the struggles of one person, one family, or one village. A sacrifice made one day may not manifest its blessings until two generations later. Then the entire story culminates in one place: the cathedral the story’s characters are struggling to build to praise and glorify God. The talents of many, the burdens of some, and even the sins of a few, are all interconnected and committed – willingly or not – toward that end. . . .

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Bitter Herbs Before the Exodus: Skooter Changes Course for Lent

by Fr. Gordon J. MacRae on February 29, 2012 · 18 comments

Catholic conversion stories, These Stone Walls, light of faith, end of the world, beginning of wisdom, The Dark Wood of Error, Dante's Inferno, Fr. Gordon J. MacRae, Rev. Gordon MacRae, These Stone Walls, Lent, Pornchai Moontri, Donald Spinner, Skooter, Liz Feuerborn, conversion, Ryan MacDonald, Pornchai's Story, Catholic prisoners

. . . I received some snail mail recently from Liz Feuerborn who frequently comments on my posts at These Stone Walls. At the very end of her letter was a scribbled P.S.: “You haven’t mentioned Skooter in awhile. Is he okay?” Several other readers have also asked about Skooter in their recent comments, and it’s odd that his name should come up right now. It’s odd because on the day I received Liz’s letter, I had just spent an hour outside in the freezing cold prison yard talking with Skooter. The short answer to Liz’s question is “No,” Skooter is not okay, but I’m pretty sure he will be. . . .

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In a City on a Hill: Lent, Sacrifice and the Passage of Time

by Fr. Gordon J. MacRae on February 22, 2012 · 27 comments

Catholic Priests Falsely Accused, a city on a hill, American ordinariate, Church and priesthood, married Episcopalian priests become Roman Catholic priests, Fr. Gordon J. MacRae, These Stone Walls, Lent, sacrifice, Ryan MacDonald, David F. Pierre, Sancte Pater Blog, Ash Wednesday, Pornchai, Adam Gopnik, Psalm 90, Catholic Christian, doing time, The Fermi Paradox, Mary Floeck, Pope John Paul II, Father Richard Cipolla, Episcopalian priest, Catholic ideals, Donald Steier, truth and justice, the duty of a priest, American Episcopal church, Anglican communion, American Catholic, Roger McGuinn, Ecclesiastes

. . . Seated in the prison chow hall one day, Joseph awaited his opponent for the big scene. Pornchai was sitting with me as usual as hundreds of prisoners poured in for dinner and a show. I decided I would have no choice but to try diplomacy. Then Pornchai suddenly stood up. In the presence of hundreds of anticipating prisoners, Pornchai walked to the door to meet up with Joseph’s enemy.

I groaned as I saw diplomacy fly right out the window. Then Pornchai gestured to the young man to follow him. . . . I don’t think the Geneva Convention entailed such drama and a sense of impending doom. Then suddenly – in the sight of all – the three of them stood up. . . .

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Motion for New Trial in the Case of Fr. Gordon J MacRae, Ryan A MacDonald

. . . [Click through to post for links] I am grateful for this invitation to bring to your attention a major step toward possible justice in the case of imprisoned priest, Father Gordon MacRae. The Boston-based National Center for Reason and Justice announced a Motion for New Trial in the case of Fr. MacRae last week, and posted it on the NCRJ website.

The published brief presents a detailed description of newly discovered evidence in the case as well as other legal considerations. I invite readers to review this compelling document and to suggest the NCRJ link to others. . . .

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Dowager Countess of Downton Abbey, restoring family values,  Attention Deficit Disorder, Masterpiece Classic, Crime and punishment, Fr. Gordon MacRae, These Stone Walls, Downton Abbey, Blue Bloods, Falling Skies, Criminal Minds, Lady Grantham, Maggie Smith, Jack Bauer, pop culture, economic downturn, EWTN, Tom Selleck, Keifer Sutherland, Noah Wylie, Will Patton, alien invasion, Walking Dead, David DiCerto, MI5, Lord Grantham, Emmy Awards, Upstairs Downstairs, Titanic, Hugh Bonneville, Carson the Butler, Jim Carter, Catholic family, Dark Ages

. . . It’s time to come clean and confess. I owe TSW readers the truth, and just can’t go on living this secret any longer. I’ve been seeing someone. I can’t really say she’s my soul mate just yet, but I find her mesmerizing and alluring in her own peculiar way. She lives far beyond my state in life, but now I feel incomplete without her. There is little so painful as unrequited love. There! I’ve said it! So, who is this new spark of joy in my life? Why, who else could she be but Lady Grantham, the Dowager Countess of Downton Abbey? Yes, yes, I know she’s old enough to be my mother, but – like justice – love is blind, and sometimes it’s deaf and dumb, too. Most people who spend five minutes with the elder Lady Grantham want to flee for cover, but I see beyond this matriarchal conniver to a heart laid bare by a looming threat: the winds of change. The incomparable British actress, Maggie Smith, plays the role to perfection. . . .

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E.T. and The Fermi Paradox: Are We Alone in the Cosmos?

by Fr. Gordon J. MacRae on February 1, 2012 · 19 comments

The Fermi Paradox, Are we alone in the Cosmos?, A Day Without Yesterday, Kepler space telescope, Milky Way Galaxy, search for extraterrestrial intelligence, Fr. Gordon J. MacRae, These Stone Walls, Enrico Fermi, Barry Hudock, Milky Way galaxy, Spock, Star Trek, Klingon, Starfleet Academy, Georges Lemaitre, modern cosmology, Stephen Hawking, amateur astronomy, Cosmos, Kepler 22B, Robert Lee Hotz, light year, speed of light, radio astronomy, Hubble, Pope Pius XII, science and faith, SETI, Einstein, Michael Crichton, Annals Australasia, rare earth, Jupiter, Shoemaker-Levy, John Gribbin, Alan Hirshfield

. . . For Father Georges Lemaitre, for me, and now for my friend, Joseph, there comes a point when “a profoundly improbable sequence” of events crosses a border into the profoundly impossible. Science has promised a better explanation for centuries, but it hasn’t ever delivered one. Creation and our Creator become the sole rational explanation for what seems otherwise irrational and impossible: life itself, and not just life, us! – the impossible mathematical odds against the very existence with which we ponder Him. And thus far, at least, we ponder Him alone. “I want to know how God created this world. I am not interested in this or that phenomenon, in the spectrum of this or that element. I want to know God’s thoughts; the rest are details.” Albert Einstein . . .

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The Conversion of Saint Paul, And the Cost of Discipleship

by Fr. Gordon J. MacRae on January 25, 2012 · 15 comments

Conversion of Saint Paul, Cost of Discipleship, Acts of the Apostles, conversion to the Catholic faith, These Stone Walls, Fr. Gordon J. MacRae, Saint Paul, conversion, stoning, executioner, Saint Stephen, Apostle Paul, Archangel Gabriel, John the Baptist, prison, prisoner, New Hampshire, Jean Casella, James Ridgeway, Solitary Watch, supermax, Ryan MacDonald, Donald Spinner, Saint Augustine, Saint Monica, Father Bernard Campbell, Deacon Jim Daly, Saint Christopher

. . . Saint Stephen, the first martyr in the Christian world, was stoned to death. Stephen was one of “The Seven” appointed to serve tables – the traditional role of a deacon – in the Church at Jerusalem. He was brought before the Sanhedrin to answer for placing final authority in Christ instead of in the high priest and Temple. The mob was stirred up against him by the Sanhedrin, and he was stoned. No one present at the stoning of Saint Stephen could have possibly predicted the transformation of Saul into the Apostle Paul. Consider this one passage and feel its chill: . . .

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These Stone Walls Returns to The Last Full Measure of Devotion

by Fr. Gordon J. MacRae on January 18, 2012 · 5 comments

These Stone Walls, Fr. Gordon J. MacRae. Martin Luther King, Supreme Court, George Santayana, Freedom of Religion, Civil Rights, Civil liberties, The Right to Life, pro-life,  abortion

. . . As America remembers the call of Martin Luther King, Jr., to “Let Freedom Ring,” a unanimous U.S. Supreme Court decision did just that for freedom of religion. . . . As I considered what to write this week to help honor and remember Civil Rights in America, I cannot help feeling oppressed by some urgent unfinished business. I wrote about it at this time last year, and I urge you to mark this Civil Rights observance by reading this and passing a link along to others. There is a denial of basic human rights in our culture, and it’s a threat to the most basic human freedom: the right to exist. . . .

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Separation of Church and Penn State: A Media Double Standard

by Fr. Gordon J. MacRae on January 11, 2012 · 9 comments

Penn State scandal, scandal in the Catholic Church, Bishop Peter Libasci, Diocese of Manchester New Hampshire, These Stone Walls, Fr. Gordon J. MacRae, Penn State, SNAP, Bishop Libasci, Cardinal Bernard Law, David Pierre, Catholic Priests Falsely Accused, civil liberties for priests, SNAP's Last Gasp, NBC Nightly News Anne Thompson, sexual abuse, ESPN Magazine, Wayne Drehs, Bishop-Accountability, Catholic priests, Charol Shakeshaft, Philip Jenkins, Educator sexual Misconduct, The New York Times, The Boston Globe, Kansas City Star, Ross Farrow, Lodi News-Sentinel, Ryan MacDonald

. . . Ted made the very same point that I made above about the news media letting pass an opportunity to truly expose and effect sexual abuse: “I hope the pendulum swings back to some degree. I never agreed with zero tolerance. There has to be some respect for priests as basic citizens presumed to be innocent . . . The lack of balance in regards to the Globe and NY Times coverage indicates that they have clearly missed a chance to address societal child abuse. This belies a more sinister agenda by people who want to destroy the Church. Since the level of sexual sin in our society is so great, it makes people somehow feel good to persecute the Catholic Church for its abuse problem as a way to feel absolved of their own sin in some way.” . . .

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New Year’s Resolutions, and a Remembrance From East of Eden

by Fr. Gordon J. MacRae on January 4, 2012 · 18 comments

New Year's resolution, Fr. Gordon J. MacRae, These Stone Walls, Rev. Gordon MacRae, Cardinal Avery Dulles, Father Richard John Neuhaus, the Annunciation, Fra Angelico, Pornchai Moontri, Prophet Isaiah, Roman Missal, Pope Gregory XIII, Gregorian Calendar, Julian calendar

. . . So my resolution for the New Year in 2012 is to let the mourning of loss become the triumph of the Spirit. It’s a tough sell to a world that measures success in the most material of terms. It’s an even tougher sell within me, however, having to witness the world of grace from within prison walls, at least for now. Hence, the resolution. . . .

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