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El Rio Debajo El Rio: The river beneath the river, by Dr. Clarissa Pinkola Estés

  El Rio Debajo El Rio: The river beneath the river, by Dr. Clarissa Pinkola EstĂ©s  
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Activist poet, psychoanalyst, cantadora (keeper of the old stories), Dr. Estés has practiced clinically as a post-trauma specialist since 1970. She served teachers and children after the massacre at Columbine High School and the survivor families of the 9/11 tragedy. She is an Associate with the Sisters of Charity, Leavenworth, Kans. Her teaching “spirit in healing” to young doctors at a Catholic hospital coincides with board appointment at Maya Angelou Minority Health Foundation, Wake Forest University Medical School. A former welfare mother, she testifies before state and federal legislatures on issues of mercy. Of Mestizo-Mexican heritage, adopted by immigrant Hungarians as an older child, Dr. Estés is a visiting diversity lecturer at universities and a Founder of La Sociedad de Guadalupe for adult literacy. As a grandmother from the Rocky Mountains and a disciple of nature, Dr. Estés holds that the largest endangered species on earth is the human soul. Learn more.

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NCR Book Club: Reviews, interviews and recommendations

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About Books
Book reviews, author interviews, recommendations and news from the editors, staff and contributors of National Catholic Reporter. We look forward to having intelligent conversations about important books.

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NCR Podcasts with Tom Fox

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Tom Fox
NCR Podcasts with Tom Fox
Podcasts on NCR Cafe offer visitors interviews with authors and other thinkers focused on spiritual and social transformation. Each week, former NCR publisher and editor Tom Fox engages in conversations with people often overlooked by the mainstream media. His goal is to share ideas aimed at building a more meaningful, just and peaceful global society.

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Introduction: On the Road to Peace

  On the Road to Peace by John Dear S.J.        
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John Dear is a Jesuit priest, peace activist, and the author of more than 20 books, most recently, A Persistent Peace, Put Down Your Sword, Transfiguration, You Will Be My Witnesses, Living Peace, The Questions of Jesus and Mohandas Gandhi. He has served as the director of the Fellowship of Reconciliation, and after 9/11, as a coordinator of chaplains for the Red Cross at the New York Family Assistance Center. From 2002-2004, he served as pastor of four churches in New Mexico. He has traveled the war zones of the world, been arrested 75 times for peace, and given thousands of lectures on peace across the country. He lives in New Mexico, and was recently nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize by Archbishop Desmond Tutu. For information about his books, articles and speaking schedule, see: www.fatherjohndear.org

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Synod: Religious orders as the 'hearing aid' of the Church

By JOHN L. ALLEN JR.
Rome

It’s long been an established conviction among synod-watchers that the most interesting speeches during these gatherings, more often than not, come from the heads of religious orders.

Perhaps that’s because the speeches are less solo performances than a reflection of the wisdom of an entire community, or perhaps it’s because most superiors are elected to fixed terms and are conscious they may not have this opportunity again. It may even be because serving as a superior these days requires continual travel around the world, so they’ve got long hours to fill on airplanes polishing their texts.

Synod: Priest shortages highlight role of Bible

By JOHN L. ALLEN JR.
Rome

So far in the Synod of Bishops on the Bible, all sorts of arguments have been advanced as to why promotion of scripture is important: Because it’s the living Word of God, because it’s a touchstone of Christian identity, because it provides natural common ground within the divided Christian family.

Quietly, however, another argument of a far more practical order has arisen. In many parts of the world, there simply aren’t enough priests to make the Eucharist available on a regular basis, and therefore Liturgies of the Word, focused on the Bible, become the crucible in which day-to-day, week-to-week Catholic life is actually forged.

Synod: Interview with Archbishop Donald Wuerl

Interview with Archbishop Donald Wuerl
October 10, 2008

Archbishop Donald Wuerl of Washington, D.C. is an old Rome hand. He earned a doctorate in theology from the Angelicum in 1974, and later returned to Rome as secretary to Cardinal John Wright, who served as Prefect of the Vatican’s Congregation for Clergy from 1969 to 1979. This is Wuerl’s fourth Synod of Bishops, though his first as the Archbishop of Washington; he succeeded Cardinal Theodore McCarrick in the nation’s capital in June 2006.

Synod: Interview with Cardinal George Pell

Interview with Cardinal George Pell
October 10, 2008

Cardinal George Pell of Sydney, Australia, is one of three co-presidents of the Synod of Bishops on the Bible, which means that he alternates with Cardinal William Levada, Prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, and Cardinal Odilo Pedro Scherer of São Paulo, Brazil, in presiding over each session. [Among other things, it also means Pell shares responsibility for tracking attendance; as we were making our way out of the parking lot in front of the synod hall on Friday afternoon, Cardinal Oscar Rodriguez Maradiaga pulled Pell aside to tell him he would be absent the next day because he was scheduled to ordain new priests. “That sounds like a great thing to do,” Pell cheerily replied.]

Synod on the Bible: Shaping the imaginations of 1.2 billion Catholics

 All Things Catholic by John L. Allen, Jr.
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From a distance, the Synod of Bishops on the Bible, currently meeting in the Vatican, may seem an oddly esoteric distraction from the unfolding global drama. After all, the world's economy is in meltdown, and America is facing a crucial election in just 25 days. Against that backdrop, bringing together 400 bishops, clergy, lay leaders, Bible experts and delegates from other Christian churches to discuss how fast lectors read scripture passages during Mass, or the precise sense in which the Bible is "inerrant," can seem like fiddling while everyplace other than Rome burns.

Synod: In first important vote, a moderate line prevails

By JOHN L. ALLEN JR.
Rome

In the first important ballot taken during the Synod of Bishops on the Bible, the roughly 250 bishops and clergy with the right to vote appear to have opted for a broadly moderate line, electing members of a commission that will craft the synod’s final message known as centrists on most theological matters.

The “Commission for the Message” will produce a brief statement at the end of the synod, which is addressed to the wider world. That public message, along with a set of private propositions presented to the pope, represents the primary “work product” of the meeting, which runs from Oct. 5-26.