Category Archives: God’s Providence

Four Seconds of Providence

Providence, the will and presence of God in each moment, is never felt by some people, is felt in moments of joy or consternation by others, is sensed in the minutiae of nature by some, is a product of intense … Continue reading

Posted in Christianity, God's Providence | Tagged , , , , , | Leave a comment

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 , , , , , , | 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 , , , , , | 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 , , , , , , | 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 , , , , , , | Leave a comment

God’s Providence: What did Early American Religious Thinkers Believe about the Role of God in Human Affairs?

The eighteenth century in America was a time of awakening from the slumber of the past. Light was shed on the darkness of superstition, irrationality, autocracy, aristocratic privilege, and dogma. The individual, weighed down by the chains of time, institutions, … Continue reading

Posted in American History, Christianity, God's Providence | Tagged , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

All Things are Possible

Recent conflict and protests in America, about statues and monuments recalling troubling events in the past, seem to be dividing a country that clearly needs uniting. Those who focus on division rather than unity seem to think that all things … Continue reading

Posted in books, Christianity, God's Providence | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

Historical Sites along the Maine Coast: Kittery to York

Kittery, Maine, situated on the northern shores of the Piscataqua River, was a home to seamen and fishermen. Most such men of the salt sea were not well known in their own time and forgotten today. An exception was Lieutenant … Continue reading

Posted in American History, books, Christianity, God's Providence, Great Commission | Tagged , , , , | 2 Comments

Independence: Disorder in a Democracy

In today’s day, we are confronted with disorder, almost chaos and anarchy at times. How do we bring order out of a disorderly situation? The concluding years of the American Revolution in the 1780s provides us with an example. The … Continue reading

Posted in American History, books, Christianity, God's Providence, Government | Tagged , , , , , | Leave a comment

Animals and Time

Do animals have an experience of time similar to humans? I believe so. I propose that each life, whether human or animal, experiences time and the passage of time, hence history, individually, uniquely. It is difficult for a human to … Continue reading

Posted in Christianity, General Essays, God's Providence | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment