Archives
Meta
Author Archives: theamericanplutarch
Junipero Serra: Work and Prayer
Franciscan Junipero Serra (1713-1784), one of the founders of Catholicism in California, should he miraculously walk the paths of California today (on tired, sore, bare feet, for he believed in the practice of mortification), he would be astonished at the … Continue reading
Posted in Biography, Christianity, God's Providence, Great Commission
Tagged california, Christianity, faith, history, missionary, saints, travel
Leave a comment
Louis Hennepin (1626-1704), Missionary of Hope
When a person thinks back to the colonial American past imagining what the first Catholic missionaries who braved the elements, journeyed into the forests, and canoed down American rivers, must have been like, they are thinking of such a person … Continue reading
Posted in American History, Biography, Christianity, God's Providence, Great Commission
Tagged history, louisiana, missionary, Religion, saints, travel
Leave a comment
God’s Shadow over History
Jean-Pierre Caussade in Abandonment to Divine Providence writes truthfully that God is behind all historical events. If so, then it is God’s will that the United States is in 2025 exactly where He wills it to be. And further, that … Continue reading
Posted in Christianity, God's Providence
Tagged bible, Christianity, divine, faith, god, Jesus, Providence
Leave a comment
God is with Us in Each and Every Moment: The Teaching of Jean-Pierre de Caussade (1675-1751)
Jean-Pierre de Caussade, an eighteenth-century French Jesuittheologian, provided a seminal study of God’s will in Abandonment to Divine Providence. Caussade writes that to sense God in each present moment that connects the past and future moments sets the mind to … Continue reading
Posted in Christianity, God's Providence
Tagged bible, Christianity, divine, faith, god, Jesus, Providence
Leave a comment
Martyr for Christ: Jean de Brébeuf (1593-1649)
The images of the great martyrs of the past, those disciples and followers of Christ who committed their all—body and soul—to the Great Commission, to spread the word to all creatures worldwide, inspired Jean de Brébeuf as a young man … Continue reading
Posted in American History, Biography, Christianity, Great Commission
Tagged bible, Christianity, faith, french-missionaries, god, Great Commission, Jesus, martyr, new-france, roman-catholicism
Leave a comment
St. James, a Son of Thunder
James the son of Zebedee and brother of John the Apostle was one of the first disciples of Jesus, was a fiery personality completely committed to the Great Commission, and was the first martyr of Jesus’ disciples. The Gospels … Continue reading
Posted in Christianity, FAQs of Christianity
Tagged bible, Christianity, faith, god, Jesus, roman-catholicism, saints
Leave a comment
Saint Anthony of Padua, Franciscan Thaumaturgist
St. Anthony (1195-1231, Anno Domini) was a Franciscan thaumaturgist famous for his erudition, oratory, works of charity, and miracles. A native of Portugal, for a time he was a cleric with the monastic order of St. Augustine. In his early … Continue reading
Posted in Christianity, FAQs of Christianity
Tagged catholic, Christianity, faith, Jesus, Miracles, Religion, roman-catholicism, saints
Leave a comment
Saint Athanasius: Saint and Doctor of the Church
Athanasius (196-373 AD) lived a long and varied life subject to philosophical, political, and theological controversies, violence, exile, and contentious relations with the most powerful rulers of his time, the Roman Emperors. Athanasius is well known for the Creed named … Continue reading
Posted in Christianity, FAQs of Christianity
Tagged bible, Christianity, creeds, faith, fourth-century-ad, history, Jesus, roman-catholicism
Leave a comment
The Sorrels Family Orchestra
Ephraim Deals (Deal) Sorrels, Arkansas farmer and woodcutter, was a singer and perhaps a fiddler–at least it is clear he had a musical bent. And Van, his son, took after his father. Whether or not Van was a singer is … Continue reading
Posted in American History, Biography
Tagged arkansas-history, family-orchestra, fiddlers, genealogy
Leave a comment
Van Sorrels, the Woodcutting Musician
As the woodcutter sawed and chopped and hewed oak, hickory, maple, and pine, he sang songs to the past, to the land, and to the Lord. His name was Van. He was a simple man. He could read and write … Continue reading
Posted in American History, Biography
Tagged arkansas-history, fiddlers, genealogy, history, rural-arkansas, wood-hewers
Leave a comment