About 15 years ago, I was having breakfast with a well-known conservative media personality, and he was lamenting all the terrible things that were going on in our country.
It was 1961. I had just opened a store in Mount Pleasant near Central Michigan University. I was working seven days a week, and on this particular night I decided to make a delivery myself.
As noted in the past, I have experienced many blessings since I started meeting regularly with my spiritual director. One such blessing came early on when he encouraged me to spend an hour a day in adoration.
We received some positive feedback from my February column on business and faith, where I explained my lifelong conviction that faith (business ethics) and success in business are not only not at odds with each other, but that being a faithful Catholic helps one to be a better CEO.
Each September as the school year begins, we feature Catholic Education as our theme for the magazine. As I thought about the current state of affairs in our society, I am compelled to share some thoughts on how this relates to Catholic education.
Many popes, theologians, and saints have written about the importance of the priesthood. Each year, on Holy Thursday, we celebrate Christ’s institution of the priesthood...but how often do we really think about where we would be without the priests who serve us?
I have previously written columns recommending books, especially those spiritual in nature. Some time ago, I also wrote about the topic of spiritual reading in general and its importance in our lives as Catholics.
At our recent Summit in January, emcee and speaker Matt Fradd gave a compelling talk entitled The Four Last Things. During his talk, he shared about a near death experience that he had last year and how it changed his whole perspective on life.
Over the years, I have been surprised by the number of times I have been asked how it is possible to be a successful businessman and also a good Catholic. I am amazed by how many people think the two are incompatible.
“Perhaps you were born for such a time as this.” (Esther 4:14) This is a powerful verse that each of us is called to take to heart, as we ask what Christ is calling us to do with our lives. I also believe this verse is true for Legatus as an organization.
As we recover from the COVID-19 pandemic, we have much to think and pray about. There has been a lot of talk about the long-term effects of this crisis on our economy, society, and the Church.
As I write this column in early April, the COVID-19 pandemic looms front and center in all of our lives. While I cannot know what the state of affairs will be when this is published, I am compelled to begin here.
It is a longstanding tradition of the Church to dedicate the month of March in honor of St. Joseph. This makes sense since the Solemnity of St. Joseph is celebrated on March 19. As I prepared to write this article for the March issue, it became evident that my topic should be St. Joseph. Let me explain.
Sometimes all we need is the encouragement of just one person … for someone else to believe in us, to give us the confidence and motivation to believe in ourselves.
Jesus, Mary and Joseph are certainly the three people most central to salvation history. Jesus, of course, as the second person of the Trinity is not only man, but is God. Mary, who is the Mother of God, has long been venerated as the Queen of the Angles and Saints; and St. Joseph, the foster-father of Jesus, among many other titles, is honored as the Patron of the Universal Church.
It is of course the mission of our Catholic schools to provide an environment where the truths of the Church (along with the array of other academic disciplines) are faithfully taught to the next generation. Thus we see a very practical means of our promoting the studying and spreading of our Catholic faith.