The Curt Jester
  • Home
  • About
  • Rome Depot
  • WikiCatechism
  • Free Catholic eBooks
  • Home
  • About
  • Rome Depot
  • WikiCatechism
  • Free Catholic eBooks

The Curt Jester

"It is the test of a good religion whether you can joke about it." GKC

Book Review

Review: Something Other Than God

by Jeffrey Miller June 4, 2014
written by Jeffrey Miller

I almost always enjoy reading conversions stories as a full length book. While you usually find certain commonalities there are also aspects that flow from the uniqueness of individuals. Grace shines off the facets that can make such stories familiar and new.

In this case I am referring to Something Other Than God: How I Passionately Sought Happiness and Accidentally Found It by Jennifer Fulwiler.

The broad outline of here conversion story first took a public face when she decided when still an atheist to start a blog. She had questions about religion and wanted to see if there were actually any answers regarding this. To interact with others via the comment section and emails.

I had thought I had known her conversion story and most of the details of it. I remembered reading her posts she she wrote at The Reluctant Atheist and subsequently Et tu, Jen? prior to her entrance into the Catholic Church. She currently blogs at Conversion Diary.

So going in I found that while there was familiar territory in her story there was also much more to the story. From the start of the book I was totally engaged in how she relates her story. She really brings you into her life and some of the events surrounding her atheism and how it expressed itself as a child. How she came to grips with the fact that her non-belief in God was at odds with most of the other children she knew.

What so hooked me in her telling of her story was just how much you are invited in to both her struggles and her joys and consequently into her family. There is a very difficult struggle in going from an established atheistic view to admitting that just possibly there is something to consider on the other side of the divide. That even when there is a reconsideration of atheism and a movement towards faith that there is a fear you are losing your reason and going after something squishy. The problems where when intellectually you are increasingly satisfied there is still the divide between intellectual belief and acting on that belief.

The only thing I found lacking was that really I wanted more details regarding some aspects of her conversion. Although I totally understood why she didn’t go into them. It is a difficult balance to write about conversion while not going into every details regarding family relationships and demands of privacy. When Jennifer Fulwiler participated in a three-part reality show called Minor Revisions I was very intrigued with her relationship with her father who remains an atheists. The book goes partially into her very positive relationship with her father and his encouragement in her seeking the truth wherever it leads. Still she is also very frank about the conversations that came up between her and her husband and the struggles they had. Especially as she was coming to faith and he was starting to take his faith seriously. One of the reasons I so enjoy conversion stories is seeing real people live out the demands of the faith amidst everyday life.

The conversational tone of her writing along with the humor throughout takes on serious subjects while allowing you to think and laugh as you proceed through the book. I certainly found that my reading sessions of this book were prolonged where I was always thinking, “I will just read another page or two before I put it down for the night.” Even if conversion stories are not usually your taste, you will probably find that this one just might be. If you are looking for a book to give an atheist that is a more difficult question. The experience of atheist converts is often disregarded by atheists. Plus each person is different and are on various parts of a journey. So I would suggest reading it yourself and seeing if it would be helpful for a specific individual.

One aspect that I found difficult in writing this review is that I identified with so many points of her experience. As someone who had also from childhood identified as an atheist along with some similar aspects in family life. The difficulty is that I wanted to avoid writing about myself in reviewing this book. So I will let this last-paragraph intrusion of my ego be the extent of it.

June 4, 2014 1 comment
0 FacebookTwitterGoogle +Pinterest
The Weekly Francis

The Weekly Francis – Volume 60 – 1 June 2014

by Jeffrey Miller June 1, 2014
written by Jeffrey Miller

 

pope-francis2-300x187This version of The Weekly Francis covers material released in the last week from 19 to 31 May 2014.

The Weekly Francis is a compilation of the Holy Father’s writings, speeches, etc which I also post at Jimmy Akin’s The Weekly Francis. Jimmy Akin came up with this idea when he started “The Weekly Benedict” and I have taken over curation of it.

Homilies

  • 26 May 2014 – Holy Mass with the Ordinaries of the Holy Land and the Papal Entourage (Room of the Cenacle in Jerusalem)

Messages

  • 19 May 2014 – Message to Card. Jean-Louis Tauran for the 50th anniversary of foundation of the Council for dialogue with other religions
  • 28 May 2014 – Message on the occasion of the 103rd Session of the Conference of the International Labour Organization (ILO) [Geneva, 28 May – 12 June 2014]

Speeches

  • 19 May 2014 – To the Bishops of the Episcopal Conference of Mexico on their ad Limina visit
  • 25 May 2014 – Greeting to children of the refugee camp of Dheisheh, Aida and Beit Jibrin at the Phoenix Center of Dheisheh refugee camp (Bethlehem)
  • 25 May 2014 – Ecumenical Celebration on the occasion of the 50th anniversary of the meeting in Jerusalem between Pope Paul VI and Patriarch Athenagoras (Jerusalem, Basilica of the Holy Sepulchre)
  • 26 May 2014 – Meeting with priests, religious and seminarians in the Church of Gethsemane at the foot of the Mount of Olives (Jerusalem)
  • 26 May 2014 – Courtesy visit to the President of the State of Israel in the Presidential Residence (Jerusalem)
  • 26 May 2014 – Courtesy visit to the two chief rabbis of Israel at Heichal Shlomo Center in Jerusalem, next to the Jerusalem Great Synagogue(Jerusalem)
  • 26 May 2014 – Visit to the Yad Vashem Memorial in Jerusalem
  • 26 May 2014 – Visit to the Grand Mufti of Jerusalem in the building of the Great Council on the Esplanade of the Mosques (Jerusalem)
  • 26 May 2014 – Press Conference of the Holy Father during the return flight from the Holy Land

Papal Tweets

  • “May we enter into true friendship with Jesus, so that following him closely, we may live with and for him.” @pontifex, 29 May 2014
  • “Every Christian can witness to God in the workplace, not only with words, but above all with an honest life.” @pontifex, 30 May 2014
  • “In the difficult moments of life, Christians can turn to the Mother of God and find protection and care.” @pontifex, 31 May 2014
June 1, 2014 0 comment
0 FacebookTwitterGoogle +Pinterest
The Weekly Francis

The Weekly Francis – Volume 59 – 25 May 2014

by Jeffrey Miller May 25, 2014
written by Jeffrey Miller

 

pope-francis2-300x187This version of The Weekly Francis covers material released in the last week from 11 to 25 May 2014.

The Weekly Francis is a compilation of the Holy Father’s writings, speeches, etc which I also post at Jimmy Akin’s The Weekly Francis. Jimmy Akin came up with this idea when he started “The Weekly Benedict” and I have taken over curation of it.

Regina Caeli

  • 18 May 2014
  • 25 May 2014

General Audiences

  • 21 May 2014

Homilies

  • 11 May 2014 – Priestly Ordinations in the Vatican Basilica – World Day of Prayer for Vocations
  • 24 May 2014 – Holy Mass at the Amman International Stadium
  • 25 May 2014 – Holy Mass in Manger Square in Bethlehem

Speeches

  • 12 May 2014 – To Rectors and Students of the Pontifical Colleges and Residences in Rome
  • 15 May 2014 – Presentation of Letters of Credence of the Ambassadors of Switzerland, Liberia, Ethiopia, Sudan, Jamaica, South Africa and India
  • 24 May 2014 – Meeting with the Authorities of the Kingdom of Jordan (Amman)
  • 24 May 2014 – Meeting with refugees and young people with disabilities in the Latin Church in Bethany beyond the Jordan
  • 25 May 2014 – Meeting with Palestinian Authorities (Bethlehem)
  • 25 May 2014 – Welcoming ceremony at the Tel Aviv Ben Gurion International Airport (Tel Aviv)
  • 25 May 2014 – Common Declaration of Pope Francis and the Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew I – Private Meeting with the Ecumenical Patriarch of Constantinople at the Apostolic Delegation of Jerusalem
  • 25 May 2014 – Ecumenical Celebration on the occasion of the 50th anniversary of the meeting in Jerusalem between Pope Paul VI and Patriarch Athenagoras (Jerusalem, Basilica of the Holy Sepulchre)

Daily Homilies (fervorinos)

  • 19 May 2014
  • 20 May 2014 – Like children in the presence of a gift
  • 22 May 2014 – A healthy Christian is a joyful Christian

Papal Tweets

  • “The one who listens attentively to the Word of God and truly prays, always asks the Lord: what is your will for me?” @pontifex, 19 May 2014
  • “Come, Holy Spirit! Help us to overcome our selfishness.” @pontifex, 20 May 2014
  • “I ask all of you to pray for the victims of the floods in Bosnia and Herzegovina, in Serbia and in other countries in the region.” @pontifex, 21 May 2014
  • “We will never be disillusioned or lose our way if we are guided by God.” @pontifex, 22 May 2014
  • “To live by faith means to put our lives in the hands of God, especially in our most difficult moments.” @pontifex, 23 May 2014
  • “Dear friends, please pray for me during my pilgrimage to the Holy Land.” @pontifex, 24 May 2014
May 25, 2014 0 comment
0 FacebookTwitterGoogle +Pinterest
Parody

Former Catholic Brother becomes Religious Sister

by Jeffrey Miller May 21, 2014
written by Jeffrey Miller

<Roto Reuters> CINCINNATI A married man and former Brother did something his church doctrine says he cannot do.

Paul Hoeffer became a religious sister.

On Friday, the Deer Park resident became the 1st man to be “vowed” as a religious sister as part of the “Mens Sisterazation Movement”. A female bishop who says she was ordained by a male Catholic bishop she met in a coffee shop. led the ceremony.

Paul Hoeffer, who has taken the name “Sister Paul of the Non-Gendered Relationships in God”, released a statement:

“As a former Catholic Brother I was fed up with being a second class citizen when it came to vowed religious. Catholic Brothers are the Rodney Dangerfield of religion in that ”we get no respect.“ First off if you’re a Catholic Brother, people think you just didn’t have what it takes to be a priest. Then there is the fact that we get no attention whatsoever. Was there ever a ”Flying Brother“, ”Brother Act“, ”Two Mules for Brother Sean“ or any Hollywood attention regarding Brothers? How many Brothers had a number one hit on the charts or got viral attention on YouTube of a Brother singing a contemporary song? Again zero. If we went on a social justice tour with a bus the media wouldn’t care and no Brothers have gotten a pen from the President for helping to pass legislation.”

“Nobody ever dresses up as a Brother on Halloween and plus we don’t get to wear a wimple, cornette, or any other attention-grabbing headpiece. Plus even when Brothers go off the theological reservation they don’t get the same attention from the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith. Even if this happened we would not get the same fawning media attention defending anything we might do.”

“All the power is really with religious sisters, which is so unfair. Scripture says ”There is neither Jew nor Greek“ and yet the Church would deny my vocation as a religious sister? When the Vatican proclaims that men can not adequately represent religious sisterness they are denying that we are equal in Christ. Besides there is a statue in Rome that just might depict a male Sister if you squint your eyes at the right time of day.”

The Archdiocese of Cincinnati issued the following statement:

“Church law and teaching are clear that only a baptized female can be vowed as a women’s religious ub the Catholic Church. Any attempted vowing of men to the Catholic women’s religious life is therefore invalid, and would be even in the unlikely event that a validly ordained bishop met in a coffee shop presided.”

Hoeffer did it anyway – even if it does mean excommunication from his church.

“I’m breaking that code. And I also believe that code was man-made and I really really want to be part of the Church where I think everything I don’t agree with, which is a lot, was man-made.”

May 21, 2014 11 comments
0 FacebookTwitterGoogle +Pinterest
The Weekly Francis

The Weekly Francis – Volume 58 – 4 May 2014

by Jeffrey Miller May 18, 2014May 18, 2014
written by Jeffrey Miller

pope-francis2-300x187This version of The Weekly Francis covers material released in the last week from 24 April 2014 to 17 May 2014.

The Weekly Francis is a compilation of the Holy Father’s writings, speeches, etc which I also post at Jimmy Akin’s The Weekly Francis. Jimmy Akin came up with this idea when he started “The Weekly Benedict” and I have taken over curation of it.

Regina Caeli

  • 27 April 2014
  • 4 May 2014
  • 11 May 2014

General Audiences

  • 30 April 2014
  • 7 May 2014
  • 14 May 2014

Homilies

  • 24 April 2014 – Thanksgiving Mass for the canonization of San José de Anchieta
  • 4 May 2014 – Holy Mass in the Church of Saint Stanislaus
  • 11 May 2014 – Priestly Ordinations in the Vatican Basilica – World Day of Prayer for Vocations

Messages

  • 26 April 2014 – Video message to Argentinian youth on the occasion of the “Pascua de la Juventud” (Buenos Aires)

Speeches

  • 2 May 2014 – To the Florence and Naples Soccer Teams and a delegation from the Soccer Federation and the Series A League
  • 2 May 2014 – To Members of the Papal Foundation
  • 3 May 2014 – To the Bishops of the Episcopal Conference of Sri Lanka on their “ad Limina” visit
  • 3 May 2014 – To members of the Italian Catholic Action
  • 5 May 2014 – To the Pontifical Swiss Guards
  • 5 May 2014 – To the Bishops of the Episcopal Conference of Burundi on their “ad Limina” visit
  • 8 May 2014 – To His Holiness Karekin II, Supreme Patriarch and Catholicos of All Armenians with his Entourage
  • To the Bishops of the Episcopal Conference of Ethiopia and Eritrea on their ad Limina visit (9 May 2014)
  • To participants in the Meeting of the UN System Chief Executives Board for Coordination (9 May 2014)
  • 9 May 2014 – To participants in the meeting of the Pontifical Mission Societies
  • 10 May 2014 – To participants in the meeting promoted by the Centesimus Annus Pro Pontifice Foundation
  • 10 May 2014 – To students and teachers from schools across Italy

Daily Homilies (fervorinos)

  • 5 May 2014 – Why do I follow Jesus?
  • 6 May 2014 – Church is not just a school of religion
  • 8 May 2014 – No bureaucracy in the sacristy
  • 9 May 2014 – He must increase and we must decrease
  • 13 May 2014 – The danger of a hardened heart
  • 15 May 2014 – Amid memory and hope
  • 16 May 2014 – Three doors

Papal Tweets

  • “What does “evangelise” mean? To give witness with joy and simplicity to what we are and what we believe in.” @pontifex, 5 May 2014
  • “A society which abandons children and the elderly severs its roots and darkens its future.” @pontifex, 8 May 2014
  • “In our families we learn to love and to recognise the dignity of all, especially of the elderly.” @pontifex, 6 May 2014
  • “Holiness means giving ourselves in sacrifice every day. And so married life is a tremendous path to sanctity!” @pontifex, 9 May 2014
  • “A family enlightened by the Gospel provides a school for Christian living! There one learns faithfulness, patience and sacrifice.” @pontifex, 10 May 2014
  • “Let us all join in prayer for the immediate release of the schoolgirls kidnapped in Nigeria. #BringBackOurGirls” @pontifex, 10 May 2014
  • “Our life has been saved by the blood of Christ. Let us always be renewed by this love.” @pontifex, 12 May 2014
  • “Let us read the Gospel, a small section each day. This way we will learn what is most essential in our lives: love and mercy.” @pontifex, 13 May 2014
  • “Let us pray for the miners who died in Turkey and for the latest victims of shipwreck in the Mediterranean.” @pontifex, 14 May 2014
  • “Let us ask the Holy Spirit for the grace to live daily according to the mind of Jesus and his Gospel.” @pontifex, 15 May 2014
  • “Our mission as Christians is to conform ourselves evermore to Jesus as the model of our lives.” @pontifex, 16 May 2014
  • “The month of May, dedicated to Mary, is a fitting time to begin to recite the rosary daily.” @pontifex, 17 May 2014
May 18, 2014May 18, 2014 0 comment
0 FacebookTwitterGoogle +Pinterest
The Weekly Francis

The Weekly Francis – Volume 57 – 4 May 2014

by Jeffrey Miller May 4, 2014
written by Jeffrey Miller


pope-francis2-300x187
This version of The Weekly Francis covers material released in the last week from 10 April 2014 to 3 May 2014.

The Weekly Francis is a compilation of the Holy Father’s writings, speeches, etc which I also post at Jimmy Akin’s The Weekly Francis. Jimmy Akin came up with this idea when he started “The Weekly Benedict” and I have taken over curation of it.

Messages

  • 10 April 2014 – Message for dialogue in Venezuela
  • 25 April 2014 – Video message to the polish people on the occasion of the Canonization of Blessed John Paul II
  • 25 April 2014 – Message to the people of Bergamo, Italy on the occasion of the Canonization of Blessed John XXIII

Speeches

  • 10 April 2014 – To the Pontifical Gregorian University community and its associated Pontifical Biblical Institute and Pontifical Oriental Institute
  • 11 April 2014 – To members of the International Catholic Child Bureau (BICE)
  • 11 April 2014 – To the Italian Pro-Life Movement

Daily Homilies (fervorinos)

  • 29 April 2014 – The measure of a Christian community
  • 2 May 2014 – I weep for Christians still crucified today

Papal Tweets

  • “Inequality is the root of social evil.” @pontifex, 28 April 2014
  • “Who among us can presume to be free of sin? No one. Let us ask God to forgive our sins.” @pontifex, 29 April 2014
  • “I ask everyone with political responsibility to remember two things: human dignity and the common good.” @pontifex, 1 May 2014
  • “No one is more patient than God the Father; no one understands and knows how to wait as much as he does.” @pontifex, 2 May 2014
  • “Do not be afraid! Open the doors to Christ!” @pontifex, 3 May 2014
May 4, 2014 2 comments
0 FacebookTwitterGoogle +Pinterest
Humor

Thou shall not suffer a (bad) web designer

by Jeffrey Miller April 30, 2014April 30, 2014
written by Jeffrey Miller

In the First Book of Samuel, in the very famous scene between King Saul, the (dead) Prophet Samuel, and the Witch of Endor, the lesson to be learned is, poking about with things that are dead and buried is never a good idea. Unfortunately, I couldn’t help but be reminded of this story in checking out the Vatican’s new web site today. If you thought it was a mess before – and oh, it was – you ain’t seen nothing yet. I don’t know why the tech department at The Holy See is trying to conjure up the spirits of web designers from 15 years ago, but they’ve succeeded beyond their wildest dreams.

Funny and unfortunately dead-on commentary on the Vatican’s new site design.

William Newton of Blog of the Courtier goes on to describe just some of the unfortunate design decisions which you [should read][newton

Unfortunately things have not changed since I wrote the Lost in the Holy See parody post back in 2005.

Lovers of parchment wallpaper will be thrilled that they have kept this in their design. Those who enjoy scrolling marquees will also be thrilled with the Pope’s tweet’s been scrolled across the screen.

Those nostalgic for 90’s web design will find much to like. For example documents still use table elements instead of CSS for layout. The only thing missing is a footer saying “This site optimized for Internet Explorer and screen size of 1024 X 768.” and perhaps an animated gif (encyclicals going in-and-out of a mailbox).

Take a look at the icons they use all over the Vatican’s site for social sharing. First off they actually spaced the icons using an underscore character. Plus the icons used have very poor resolution and the Google Plus icon is really bad looking. The Catholic Church has been doing icons for more than a millennium, surely they could do a better job with the modern icon. There really is no excuse for the icons used across the site such as the video icon they use.

The up arrow appearing at the top of documents on the Vatican site is really amazing. When you click on it, it goes to the top of the page. The fact that this arrow appears at the top of the page makes it super useful!

If you had selected English and on a page in English, doing a search with no results gives you this helpful message.

Suggestions:

Assicurarsi che tutte le parole siano state digitate correttamente.

Provare con parole chiave diverse.

Provare con parole chiave piu generiche.

Hopefully this year on Pentecost I will get the gift of tongues!

As Billy noted:

Language: The default language setting for the site is “Italian”, and fair enough, since the people who maintain it are in Italy. However, virtually any site can be coded to detect the browser’s country of origin when a visitor lands there, and will adjust the language setting automatically. Why isn’t this possible here?

Why indeed?

Now if you were a normal person and saw a hyperlink that said (video) you just might think clicking it would display the video. What actually happens is that a video in wmv format will start to download to your computer. This is a format developed by Microsoft that will not play in any browser including Internet Explorer without downloading a plugin. I guess my only surprise is that their videos weren’t in RealPlayer format. Even if you were saddled by bad video format decisions in the past transcoding, even on a large scale, is just not that hard.

What is so exasperating is that there is really no good reason for this state of affairs. The Vatican run site news.va is fairly decent design-wise and their icons are much better. Sure a serious redesign of the Vatican site is certainly an intensive task. Yet even the minor refresh they did is simply amateurish. Unfortunately the state of many official Catholic sites from the Vatican on down to diocese and parishes shows the same amateurishness. Although I have seen great improvement of diocesan sites over the years.

Note: “This site optimized for Internet Explorer and screen size of 1024 X 768.” is still used on the web site for a parish close to me. Their web site is embarrassing.

April 30, 2014April 30, 2014 5 comments
0 FacebookTwitterGoogle +Pinterest
The Weekly Francis

The Weekly Francis – Volume 56 – 27 April 2014

by Jeffrey Miller April 27, 2014
written by Jeffrey Miller

pope-francis2-300x187This version of The Weekly Francis covers material released in the last week from 12 April 2014 to 27 April 2014.

The Weekly Francis is a compilation of the Holy Father’s writings, speeches, etc which I also post at Jimmy Akin’s The Weekly Francis. Jimmy Akin came up with this idea when he started “The Weekly Benedict” and I have taken over curation of it.

Regina Cæli

  • 21 April 2014, Easter Monday

General Audiences

  • 23 April 2014, “Why do you seek the living among the dead”?

Homilies

  • 27 April 2014 – Holy Mass and Rite of Canonization of Blesseds John XXIII and John Paul II

Speeches

  • 12 April 2014 – To members of the Pontifical Committee for Historical Sciences
  • 12 April 2014 – To participants in the Conference of the Italian Society of Surgical Oncology on “Digestive Surgery new trends and spending review”
  • 14 April 2014 – To the Pontifical Leonine College Seminary in Anagni
  • 25 April 2014 – To the Bishops of the Episcopal Conference of South Africa on their ad Limina visit

Daily Homilies (fervorinos)

  • 24 April 2014 – No fear of joy
  • 25 April 2014 – There are “bat-like Christians” who prefer the shadows to the light of the Lord

Papal Tweets

  • “Each encounter with Jesus fills us with joy, with that deep joy which only God can give.” @pontifex, 21 April 2014
  • “A simple lifestyle is good for us, helping us to better share with those in need.” @pontifex, 24 April 2014
  • “We must not let ourselves fall into the vortex of pessimism. Faith can move mountains!” @pontifex, 25 April 2014
  • “None of us can think we are exempt from concern for the poor and for social justice (EG 201).” @pontifex, 26 April 2014
April 27, 2014 0 comment
0 FacebookTwitterGoogle +Pinterest
Humor

He is risen!

by Jeffrey Miller April 20, 2014
written by Jeffrey Miller

empty_tombvacancies

April 20, 2014 1 comment
0 FacebookTwitterGoogle +Pinterest
The Weekly Francis

The Weekly Francis – Volume 55 – 20 April 2014

by Jeffrey Miller April 20, 2014
written by Jeffrey Miller


pope-francis2-300x187
This version of The Weekly Francis covers material released in the last week from 28 February 2014 to 20 April 2014.

The Weekly Francis is a compilation of the Holy Father’s writings, speeches, etc which I also post at Jimmy Akin’s The Weekly Francis. Jimmy Akin came up with this idea when he started “The Weekly Benedict” and I have taken over curation of it.

Angelus

  • 13 April 2014

General Audiences

  • 16 April 2014

Homilies

  • 13 April 2014 – Palm Sunday – 24th World Youth Day
  • 17 April 2014 – Chrism Mass
  • 19 April 2014 – Easter Vigil

Letters

  • 1 April 2014 – Letter to the Secretary General of the Synod for Bishops on the occasion of the elevation of the Under-Secretary to the dignity of Bishop

Messages

  • 20 April 2014 – “Urbi et Orbi” – Easter

Speeches

  • 28 February 2014 – To the members of the Pontifical Commission for Latin America
  • 3 April 2014 – To the Bishops of the Episcopal Conference of Rwanda on their ad Limina visit
  • 5 April 2014 – To the representatives of the National Association of Italian Municipalities

Papal Tweets

  • “Holy Week is a good occasion to go to confession and to take up the right path again.” @pontifex, 14 April 2014
  • “Each encounter with Jesus changes our life.” @pontifex, 15 April 2014
  • “It is not easy to follow Jesus closely, because the path he chooses is the way of the Cross.” @pontifex, 18 April 2014
  • “Please join me in praying for the victims of the ferry disaster in Korea and their families” @pontifex, 19 April 2014
  • “Christ is risen! Alleluia!” @pontifex, 20 April 2014
April 20, 2014 0 comment
0 FacebookTwitterGoogle +Pinterest
Newer Posts
Older Posts

About Me

Jeff Miller is a former atheist who after spending forty years in the wilderness finds himself with both astonishment and joy a member of the Catholic Church. This award-winning blog presents my hopefully humorous and sometimes serious take on things religious, political, and whatever else crosses my mind.

Conversion story

  • Catholic Answers Magazine
  • Coming Home Network

Appearances on:

  • The Journey Home
  • Hands On Apologetics (YouTube)
  • Catholic RE.CON.

Blogging since July 2002

Recent Posts

  • The Weekly Leo

  • The Spiritual Life and Memes

  • What is your distance from Jesus on the Cross?

  • Feast of St. Thomas, Apostle

  • Gratitude and Generosity

  • “The Heart and Center of Catholicism”

  • Post-Lent Report

  • Stay in your lane

  • Echoing through creation

  • Another Heaven

  • My Year in Books – 2024 Edition

  • I Have a Confession to Make

  • A Mandatory Take

  • Everybody is ignorant

  • Sacramental Disposal, LLC

  • TL;DH (Too Long;Didn’t Hear)

  • A Shop Mark Would Like

  • The Narrow Way Through the Sacred Heart of Jesus

  • Time Travel and Fixing Up Our Past

  • The Weekly Leo – Volume 29

  • The Weekly Leo

  • The Weekly Leo

  • The Weekly Leo

Meta

I also blog at Happy Catholic Bookshelf Entries RSS
Entries ATOM
Comments RSS
Email: curtjester@gmail.com

What I'm currently reading

Subscribe to The Curt Jester by Email

Endorsements

  • The Curt Jester: Disturbingly Funny --Mark Shea
  • EX-cellent blog --Jimmy Akin
  • One wag has even posted a list of the Top Ten signs that someone is in the grip of "motu-mania," -- John Allen Jr.
  • Brilliance abounds --Victor Lams
  • The Curt Jester is a blog of wise-ass musings on the media, politics, and things "Papist." The Revealer

Archives

About Me

Jeff Miller is a former atheist who after spending forty years in the wilderness finds himself with both astonishment and joy a member of the Catholic Church. This award winning blog presents my hopefully humorous and sometimes serious take on things religious, political, and whatever else crosses my mind.
My conversion story
  • The Curt Jester: Disturbingly Funny --Mark Shea
  • EX-cellent blog --Jimmy Akin
  • One wag has even posted a list of the Top Ten signs that someone is in the grip of "motu-mania," -- John Allen Jr.
  • Brilliance abounds --Victor Lams
  • The Curt Jester is a blog of wise-ass musings on the media, politics, and things "Papist." The Revealer

Meta

I also blog at Happy Catholic Bookshelf Twitter
Facebook
Entries RSS
Entries ATOM
Comments RSS 2.0" >RSS
Email: curtjester@gmail.com

What I'm currently reading

Subscribe to The Curt Jester by Email

Commercial Interuption

Podcasts

•Catholic Answers Live Subscribe to Podcast RSS
•Catholic Underground Subscribe to Podcast RSS
•Catholic Vitamins Subscribe to Podcast RSS
•EWTN (Multiple Podcasts) Subscribe to Podcast RSS
•Forgotten Classics Subscribe to Podcast RSS
•Kresta in the Afternoon Subscribe to Podcast RSS
•SQPN - Tons of great Catholic podcasts Subscribe to Podcast RSS
•The Catholic Hack Subscribe to Podcast RSS
•The Catholic Laboratory Subscribe to Podcast RSS
•The Catholics Next Door Subscribe to Podcast RSS
•What does the prayer really say? Subscribe to Podcast RSS

Archives

Catholic Sites

  • Big Pulpit
  • Capuchin Friars
  • Catholic Answers
  • Catholic Lane
  • Crisis Magazine
  • New Evangelizers
  • Waking Up Catholic

Ministerial Bloghood

  • A Jesuit’s Journey
  • A Shepherd’s Voice
  • Ad Majorem Dei Gloriam
  • Adam’s Ale
  • Archbishop Dolan
  • Bonfire of the Vanities
  • Cardinal Sean’s Blog
  • Da Mihi Animas
  • Domine, da mihi hanc aquam!
  • Father Joe
  • Fr. Roderick
  • Godzdogz
  • Laus Crucis
  • Omne Quod Spirat, Laudet Dominum
  • Orthometer
  • Priests for Life
  • Servant and Steward
  • Standing on My Head
  • The hermeneutic of continuity
  • This Week at Vatican II
  • Waiting in Joyful Hope
  • What Does The Prayer Really Say?

Bloghood of the Faithful

  • A Catholic Mom Climbing the Pillars
  • A Catholic Mom in Hawaii
  • A Long Island Catholic
  • A Wing And A Prayer
  • Acts of the Apostasy
  • Ad Altare Dei
  • AdoroTeDevote
  • Against the Grain
  • Aggie Catholics
  • Aliens in this world
  • Always Catholic
  • American Chesterton Society
  • American Papist
  • Among Women
  • And Sometimes Tea
  • Ask Sister Mary Martha
  • auntie joanna writes
  • Bad Catholic
  • Bethune Catholic
  • Big C Catholics
  • Bl. Thaddeus McCarthy's Catholic Heritage Association
  • Catholic and Enjoying It!
  • Catholic Answers Blog
  • Catholic Fire
  • Catholic New Media Roundup
  • Charlotte was Both
  • Christus Vincit
  • Confessions of a Hot Carmel Sundae
  • Cor ad cor loquitur
  • Courageous Priest
  • Creative Minority Report
  • CVSTOS FIDEI
  • Dads Called to Holiness
  • Darwin Catholic
  • Defend us in Battle
  • Defenders of the Catholic Faith
  • Disputations
  • Divine Life
  • Domenico Bettinelli Jr.
  • Dominican Idaho
  • Dyspectic Mutterings
  • Ecce Homo
  • Ecclesia Militans
  • Eve Tushnet
  • Eye of the Tiber
  • feminine-genius
  • Five Feet of Fury
  • Flying Stars
  • For The Greater Glory
  • Get Religion
  • GKC’s Favourite
  • God’s Wonderful Love
  • Gray Matters
  • Happy Catholic
  • Ignatius Insight Scoop
  • In Dwelling
  • In the Light of the Law
  • InForum Blog
  • Jeff Cavins
  • Jimmy Akin
  • John C. Wright
  • La Salette Journey
  • Laudem Gloriae
  • Lex Communis
  • Life is a Prayer
  • Man with Black Hat
  • Maria Lectrix
  • Mary Meets Dolly
  • MONIALES OP
  • Mulier Fortis
  • Musings of a Pertinacious Papist
  • My Domestic Church
  • Nunblog
  • Oblique House
  • Open wide the doors to Christ!
  • Over the Rhine and Into the Tiber
  • Patrick Madrid
  • Pro Ecclesia * Pro Familia * Pro Civitate
  • Recta Ratio
  • Saint Mary Magdalen
  • Sonitus Sanctus
  • Southern-Fried Catholicism
  • St. Conleth's Catholic Heritage Association
  • Stony Creek Digest
  • Testosterhome
  • The Ark and the Dove
  • The B-Movie Catechism
  • The Crescat
  • The Daily Eudemon
  • The Digital Hairshirt
  • The Four Pillars
  • The Inn at the End of the World
  • The Ironic Catholic
  • The Lady in the Pew
  • The Lion and the Cardinal
  • The New Liturgical Movement
  • The Pulp.it
  • The Sacred Page
  • The Sci Fi Catholic
  • The Scratching Post
  • The Weight of Glory
  • The Wired Catholic
  • Two Catholic Men and a Blog
  • Unam Sanctam Catholicam
  • Video meliora, proboque; Deteriora sequor
  • Vivificat
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • Pinterest
  • Email
  • Reddit
  • RSS

@2025 - www.splendoroftruth.com/curtjester. All Right Reserved. Designed and Developed by PenciDesign


Back To Top