It's a Numbers Game: Why Scripture, Sacraments, and Community Matter in Catholic Life - podcast episode cover

It's a Numbers Game: Why Scripture, Sacraments, and Community Matter in Catholic Life

Dec 18, 202544 min
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Episode description

In this episode of It’s a Numbers Game, Ryan sits down with Father Nick Colalella to explore the deeper meaning of Catholic faith, scripture, and daily spiritual practice. Father Nick shares his personal journey to the priesthood and explains why understanding the Bible in its original languages can transform how Catholics read and live the Word of God. The conversation dives into the importance of regular Mass attendance, the reality of God’s forgiveness, and the essential role the Church plays in shaping a faithful and meaningful life. Father Nick also offers practical, accessible resources for those curious about Catholicism and reflects on the saints who continue to inspire his vocation. Whether you’re a lifelong Catholic or simply exploring questions of faith, this thoughtful discussion offers insight into living out belief with purpose, discipline, and community.

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Transcript

Speaker 1

Welcome to a Numbers game with Ryan Gurdusky. Thank you guys for being here. We are one week away from Christmas, and if you were like me, you are not ready at all. This weekend is going to be a marathon in the life of Ryan Gurdusky to try to get everything ready in the last few days and make it all seem pretty effortless. And so if you're by any stretch of the imagination seeing me running through a mall or store and a complete panic, just look, just know

I don't always look like that. Before I get to my topic, I have some pretty funny gossip that I think you guys would like. I was invited to a cool Christmas party that I wanted to tell you about it. I was invited to the Mediaite Christmas party. Media I is kind of a lefty center left website that covers

all things media. So I got the invitation last week and I immediately thought, Okay, this is either a mistake, which they follow up and said it was a mistake, or that it was going to be a very d list event, because you know, I know I was invited, so I couldn't have possibly been like a very cool thing. But I expectations Bernhei going in, I went thinking, Okay,

it's gonna be a bunch of bloggers or whatnot. And I walk in the door and the first person, first two people I see is Joe and Mika from Morning Joe, and I'm like, uh, okay, and then Brian Stelter from CNN walks in right behind me, and I just all of a sudden it dinged on me like it's not going to be a Dalist party. It's going to be a liberal party. And I am the token conservative that

was invited. That's why I thought walking in, and I was immediate scrambling with like, okay, who on earth is going to talk to me for the next hour while I just have a glass of wine circle try to find the host of the party and thank them for inviting me, because I'm never really invited to a lot of events, so I wanted to at least thank them for inviting me with the hope that, you know, I would be invited to something else in the future. So I see Joe and Mika, who I saw actually at

a party in twenty twelve. It was a Fox News MSNBC mixer in twenty twelve ahead of the New Hampshire Republic in primary and this is when Joe Meeka were just colleagues, even though that they very clearly in front of everybody else didn't seem to be colleagues anyway. So I'm circling the room and I'm trying to find somebody who will like maybe one other conservative or center right person, and I see Scott Jennings from CNN sitting down in

the corner and he's talking to somebody. And I'm always under the assumption that no one knows who I am. I just feel like, you know, because I work so much by myself, and I don't you know, I'm not always like stopped or whatever. Once in a while happens. But I walk up to Scott Jennings and I just put up my hand. I go, hi, I'm Ryan gar Dusky. He just goes, yeah, I know, I know you are. You're kind of very well known on senn among scenen

circles anyway. Could have been nicer, a little more subdued in real life than I thought he was, because some of these people who are very like show business y, even in the political media world, they're like, you know, they are very performative even in private, and he's not like that. He was very real, kind of just hung out, really real guy. And there was a guy saying next to him, and I was like, who is this person?

Like why is this guy chatting his ear up? So when the guy got up, I go, who is that? He goes, Oh, it's you know, it's an agent and you know I was throwing his card at me or whatever. And I realized that almost all of the talent, or not all of them, I would say at least half of the talent was there with their agents, and the agents were like walking them around to meet certain people. And I was like, this is like extremely this is like watching an owner of a prize horse, like showing

them to different people is very weird. Anyway, I see Megan Kelly and she couldn't have been nicer. I was a complete horre and just asked her to come back on her show. I was like, ha, me back and people from the podcast where there to Vicky Ward. I

had her on about Epstein. She was great. She's working on a new book about Luigi Menas, Scott Mangioni, Luvisy Mangioni The Killer, So we were talking about that for a little while and I saw Alex Thompson from Axios and we're talking about the Bidens and he's working on all these stories about the twenty twenty eight Democrat primary. So we're talking about Gavin Newsom, you know, sharing funny

stories about what he's like. And then I run into a girl and she must have been like twenty five years old something like that, twenty five to thirty that range, and she just goes to me, you know, New York's not the scene that it used to be. And I was like, who are you like Frand label with so he used to hang out Andy Warhol in the seventies and now you're not. I'm like, when was the scene?

And she's like twenty fifteen, and I'm like, I these people are just young people who think they've been through more than they have. Just exhausted me anyway, and then this is the kind of crazy thing. So I as I'm leaving, I see someone else who a journalist who I know I'm not gonna name his name because I don't want to give him, you know, publicity, but he was His company that he had worked for at the time, was ruthless to me when the whole scene in episode

happened last year. So I just say hello briefly because I'm like, you know, I'm not gonna be rude. And he was talking to Ari Mulber, who was just being He's just being someone very very interested in himself. And I said to him, I said, tom, oh, I've been on your I was on your show like ten years ago. And he was like, my show wasn't existed for ten years. I'm like, okay, it was twenty seventeen, whatever that math is,

that's when I was on your show. Very very smart guy. Anyway, the reporter who has been not very kind to me throughout the last year, his company has not been very kind to me. He ends the conversation by saying, if you have any scoops, please pass them my way. And I was like, I would never give you a scoop. Your outlet is left wing trash, and you've did nothing besides trash me.

Speaker 2

Why would I give you scoops?

Speaker 1

Which is just it is so commonplace for journalists who are so under the belief that yeah, I could trash you, but we're all friends, we're all kind of in the business together, or whatever whatever they believe. I was like, this is the worst kinds of people. So that was the really cool scoop of the entire story, and you know, the media and just the people who still work there. I thought it was really funny and my audience would

enjoy it. But I wanted to so I want to tell you guys about that, and I wanted to take a second to talk to you about what is upcoming, which is Christmas. And you know, it's not just about Christmas parties and shopping and wrapping gifts and trying to take the season as much as possible. So I want to talk about the faith and about faith in particular. I know it's not a religious podcast, but it is

I think appropriate given this season. I am Catholic. I put it in my bio in part because I got so tired of people calling me a fat Geo on Twitter. I thought that maybe they'll mix it up and call me a fat Italian, but it hasn't really worked out anyway. I am Catholic. I was born and raised in the faith. I briefly kind of walked away from it during college and the end of high school. I guess there's a lot of people do, and came back to on my

own accord. And as I've continue to age and as I break down data a lot, I noticed how important matters of faith and religion are and how much they are Like religion is like a muscle, right, So if you only go to the gym two or three times a year and you quit every few months, this is someone like me. If you're not super diligent and you're not going to see gains. You may be able to put off some weight, but you're not going to see

gains like you are. And if you're somebody who only typidly or randomly attends church and only praise really when the aeroplane is about to take off and the doors closed, you're probably not educating yourself that much on faith. You're probably not developing a deep relationship. You're probably not and I say this as a Catholic who both has done a lot of work on faith and still has a lot to do, so no judgment on it, but you're probably not getting to a place where you feel very

strongly about it. And you can't get to a place of deep devotion, let alone exploring the really interesting things like mysticism or miracles or other stuff. If you don't put the work in and I know religion, it's a very bad rap. People make a lot of false claims about religion, that they're all the same, or that their response for all the history of all the wars in the world, and that you know, they've only been negative.

It's only been a negative institute that has worked to divide people and break down people and use for powerful men to just kind of, you know, control everything. And I remember this a long time ago, and I've never

told the story before. A long long time ago. I was campaigning for a candidate running for office, and as most of my life story has been, and there was a woman there and she had run in the Democratic primary and for I think city council or something like that lost and she was getting into it with like and this is a long time ago, so like one of the first purple haired you know, they thems I've ever seen before, and they were the they them, the

super liberal was going aftim about religion. This woman, this Democrat who had run for office like owned and a very like in a very substantial way, owned this like, very progressive person who clearly hated religion. And she said she was just giving a brief history on the Catholic Church in New York City in the last thirty years, things that I did not know, things that people kind of bypass. She was specifically talking, and this was a

gay person. She was talking about the AIDS epidemic, and she's like, the only places that would take AIDS patients was the Catholic Church, Catholic hospitals. She's like, it was the nuns who were doing the work that the government refused to do. And I don't remember every detail she laid because she laid it on one after the other. Failder.

And this was, you know, over ten years ago. But I was, I was, I was very taken aback about how this woman, who is probably you know, central life, she was clearly a Democrat, was able to stand up for her faith and not interfere with her politics, and was able to sit there and stand up for it in the face of somebody where it would have been so convenient to join them and say no, this is a force for good. And I wanted to present my audience

with some numbers that she want thinking about that. So here are some some numbers on why religion in your life, in your society is a force for good. Students who attend church as a high school senior more often are the most likely students to have as. This has been true since nineteen seventy six. Forty two percent of millennials who attend church weekly are reported to be very happy, compared to just twenty two percent who never attend church. The most likely to a person to attend church, by

the way, is a college degree holder. According to the Manhattan Institute, they found that church attendance by Republicans is linked to lower levels a feeling of racism, anti semitism, and conspiracy theories. In other words, to attend church is to have a greater level of social trust than those who do not attend. Christians who attend mass cricuently are more likely to say it's good to be alive, that they are a person of worth, and the future doesn't

seem like it's hopeless. Compared to zele At, atheists are not people who just fall away from religion. These are people who actively hate religion. Those people have significantly more likely to say that life is hopeless and that they

aren't very youthful. You even see this in conversations with like zoomers and millennials about children, those who want to have children, and those who, you know, maybe they can't find a partner, maybe they put it off, but they want to have children, and they think that having children is important and good versus those who say the world's so bad, or that you know, it's it's a plague on the world and the environment and the earth or whatnot,

it's you could That's a very clear dividing line. And while religion is often correlated with poverty, it's and that's true on a global scale for sure, But in America in twenty twenty five, those who earn one hundred thousand dollars a year are more likely to attend mass than those who make less than fifty thousand years and fifty thousand dollars a year, and people who attend church frequently are more likely to give at least two percent of

their income to charity. They're more more likely to live longer, and until the last decade, across the board, they were more likely to have social trust. It's a little wonky in some data on social trust recently, but certainly before then, they were more likely to trust people who look differently than them and look the same as that so if religion has all these benefits, there's the benefits of society, these benefits to yourself. Why don't people participate more? And

why are people doing it less and less? I think because it's difficult. You know, It's one it's easier to be lazy, which is why sloth is a sin. It's easier to you know, sleep in on a Sunday, or go to the park, or hang out with friends or watch the football game. It's it's difficult, it's time consuming.

It's time to take out of yourself and put somewhere at like and put into someone else where you're not the center of attention, where you're not taking selfies, where you're not scrolling or doom scrolling or commenting snightly on Twitter like myself. You're placing your entire being in you know, in a different in a different realm, when you're really focused and you're really there and you're and you're you're

in that place. I can't describe it anyone else. In that place, it's a special place where you're completely in tune with the mass, with the music, with lighting the candles and with deep, deep prayer. And you know, I get why it's hard and I get why people who have doubts say it's not for me, or I'll figure it out once I get older and once I have children, And a lot of people do, but some people don't. But if you're interested in, if you're curious, it is

like going to the gym. You have to really put the work in. I've always believed that faith is a journey. It's not a guilt trip. Nothing that I'm going to say is going to make you want to do it if you don't. But society, we as a people and us individually are better even if you have doubts, even if you're sitting there and saying, I don't know if everything that my church says is true, is important to go because we as a community are better when we

go together. And those countries that don't have high levels of social trust, like especially the non homogenous countries, not like Denmark or Norway, which is no religious attendance, but everyone is basically of the same cultural background that they're able to sit there and continue levels of high social capital if it's decreasing and create like incredibly incredibly fast rate because of immigration. But those who sit there and those people who have high levels of social trust is

often oftentimes correlated with religion. So I just would say this to my listeners. If you're looking back at last year and saying, you know, I had a great year, but I could have done some things differently. I could have read more. This is my biggest gripe. Is I didn't read enough this year, Or you're saying to yourself, I didn't go to the gym enough. I gain too much weight, And look for a second in your spirituality, Look for a second where you've put faith this year.

Look for a second how you've practiced and how you've shown yourself. Even if you say you're a Christian or you say you're proudly Jewish or whatnot, how did you display that to the world. How did you show that you are a leader of some sort in your everyday life? How did you push and promote that to other people? That maybe being preachy, but I know in the last couple of years about a lot of guys, young men who said to me I'm really thinking about being Catholic.

And I've always said, like, I'm here, I want to talk to you. If you want to talk to me, I'll tell you the ups the downs, things out I'm talking to one young guy right now who's twenty four and he's evangelical, and he said to me, you know, I'm thinking about becoming Catholic, and I say, let me, let's talk about it. Let me show you by example and let me talk to you about the bigger things and help point you in that way. If that's your place to be, So think about that and try to

prioritize it for twenty twenty six. I think that is. I think that maybe if we're trying to move to a healthier place, both as individuals and as a society, I think religion plays a big part of that. So not to sound preachy, not to sound like I got it all figured out, because lord knows I don't. I think it's worth passing that message on as we're getting

to the Christmas holiday and the Christmas season. So with that, I am having on as my very special guest for the first time I think he's ever done a podcast, is my priest. It's going to be great, it'll be very interesting. That's coming up next with me on today's episode is my priest father, Nick. Father Nick, thank you for being here. I really appreciate it.

Speaker 2

You're very welcome. Thank you for the invitation.

Speaker 1

So, Father Nick, you are You're the first priest I ever had who's actually younger than me. When did you become a priest? When did you get decide that this was your life's journey?

Speaker 3

Well, I think had I sensed a vocation to the priestood very very young. So I went to parochial school and I began to serve Mass when right after I.

Speaker 2

Received communion about seven years old.

Speaker 3

And I always felt very close to the church and very interested in what the church was doing, especially at Mass. And so after I graduated high school, I wanted to see if the seminary was something that was for me, and so I joined and it kind of went from there. So I was ordained ten years ago in twenty fifteen.

Speaker 1

And you studied for a long time in Rome.

Speaker 3

Correct, So, so I finished my philosophy studies at Think Johns. I went through the Pontifical North American College in Rome, which is the US bishop's seminary next to the Vatican, and I studied at the Gregorian University. I did another bachelor in theology, and then after that I studied for

four more years at the Pontifical Biblical Institute. We seemed a graduate degree from there, and then after that I studied at Catholic University and I got another master's degree in Biblical languages, so Semitic languages.

Speaker 1

Yeah, when I met Fathernick, he said that, he spoke, I get eight languages. But then he said, but seven of them are dead or something like that.

Speaker 2

Yes, yes, exactly, yes, most of them are dead.

Speaker 3

So that's not extremely useful, no, no, in my biblical stuff yet.

Speaker 1

Yeah, of course. And you know it's great because when Father Nick does his homilies a lot of times he will discuss the language used in the writings and how the English translation doesn't always manifest as accurately as it possibly should have or could have in the language.

Speaker 3

Sure, right, So obviously the Bible was originally written in various languages. So we know that the Old Testament was written in Hebrew and Aramaic, and then the original language of the New Testament was what we say coin a Greek,

which is a dialect of ancient Greek. And so studying and being familiar with the ancient languages I think helps us to really approximate the meaning better of the scriptures than from just a translation, because there's an Italian saying that every translator is also a traitor, because when you translate something, you're sort of somewhat removed from the original text, and so learning the original languages kind of allows you to sort of get the original flavor of what the

author wanted to convey to the audience. And so that's why it's helpful to know a little bit about the original languages of the scripture.

Speaker 1

And this not to be a Catholic supremacist for any product and phantomime, but this is why a priest is so much more important than private study groups with just a circle of friends who are already in the English dialects.

Speaker 3

Sure, so again, you know it's good I mean faith sharing. I mean the Scripture is the word of God, so it does have something to say to each and every one of us by virtue of our faith. But it's Bible study and really delving into the different meanings of scripture through knowledge of the original text brings you to

a fuller knowledge. And so you know, there are only a very few people that are capable of doing that, and so I do feel somewhat privileged to be able to read the scriptures in their original but you know, that's the knowledge that I'm very happy to share with them.

Speaker 1

So my whole monologue was about the benefits of physical church, right. Why attending an actual mass, not just saying I'm a Christian or I'm a Catholic who never shows up, or maybe he just shows up once a year, The benefits to someone's personal life, the benefits to society. And I have family members even who have sat there and said to me, why is it so important just to go to a church? Why can I not be just a more fulfilled I guess, or a practicing Catholic who doesn't

attend Mass. I could just read the Bible at home. Why is it imported?

Speaker 3

Well, I think you know that really gets Yeah, no, I think that gets at the nature of what scripture is and what the church is, because when Jesus ascended into Heaven, he didn't leave us a Bible. He left us a church. He left us, for better or for worse, a juridical and hierarchical structure that we recognize even in extra biblical texts and from tradition. So as Catholics, you know, Protestants have Martin Luther was very famous for saying sola scriptua,

which means only scripture. So his point of contention was, you know, there is is a lot of corruption in the church, and the church since perhaps the Middle Ages has lost its way, it's not as pristine as the church as Jesus left it. And so what they did was they sort of abandoned the church structure as it was and went directly and only to sacred scripture. But the problem with that, of course, is that like I said, Jesus did not leave us sacred scripture. He left us

the church for better or for worse. And of course the Church is, you know, both human and divine, and so there are going to be problems. But the way we do that is not dispensing with church's trying to renew it with our own life. And so, you know, the scripture is something that the Church itself has produced and has declared authentic and inspired. And so you can't have a Bible without a church, and you can't really

have a church without a Bible. And so for Catholics, it's about not only scripture, it's about scripture and tradition. Tradition meaning what the Lord left us in terms of liturgy and sacraments. And teachings. I mean, even at the end of the Gospel of John, he says, but there are also many other things which Jesus did. Were every one of them to be written, I suppose that the world itself would not contain the books that would have been written. And so again there's much more to our

faith and scripture. I mean, obviously scripture is as countered revelation. It's very very important.

Speaker 2

But Christ calls us to.

Speaker 3

A communion, to a community of faith, and the community of faith is fully expressed in our common worship and in our common gathering on Sunday. It's a commandment. And so for people that say, you know, I just want to read scripture or pray by myself, well, that's not obeying the commandment to keep holy the Sabbath, because from the earliest times Christians prayed together. That was the whole point.

And if you see even in the Acts of the Apostle, the way in which the first Christians live was in community, and they shared everything and they prayed together. And that's just a reflection of what we believe about who God is in himself, in the Holy Trinity. It's not just sort of a being that is turned in on himself. It is a communion, a community of persons that his

Father's done and Holy stood. And so the communion or the community of believers expresses the fullness of our faith when we come together on Sunday and when we read scripture, and when we practice tradition as a community. And so that you know, there's an important ecclesiology fundamentally that somebody that would say, Okay, well I'm just going to you know, practice this by myself, that kind of goes against that ecclesiology.

Speaker 1

So we're coming on to the Christmas, coming up to Christmas faster than I am prepared for it. And a lot of people we go into math one of the two three times year they ever attend what and some will just not attend at all? Why is in this important season second most important, I guess to Easter in the faith? Why is it? Why is regular attendance into a mass I equated to working out?

Speaker 3

Right?

Speaker 1

If you go to the gym three times a year, you're not going to get you know any kind as someone from experience who goes a little more than three times a year, but not much. The more you kind of can go and spend time in your faith in some capacity, you're going to be able to really kind of and as a man who studied a lot, kind of delve into the more the most interesting parts of

the religion. If you're just getting the very basics of the life of Jesus and why it's important to do better, you can and really go and actually be a fully part of it and understand on a deeper level that sometimes it's above my head, but I know, but I can appreciate and try to learn as much as humanly possible. What what is it? What would you say to somebody who just sits there and says not to take people who are just lazy and they can't wake up on Sunday.

But take people who sit there and say it's just not my thing. And I don't think that the church wants to accept people like me. There are people like that.

Speaker 3

Sure, Yeah, well, you know again, the church is a mother that wants to embrace all of her children no matter what. And so people that might feel somewhat excluded or disenfranchised or a little shy about church for whatever reason. You know, church is there for people for everyone, you know who feels that there's some sort of lack or disorder or trouble in their interior life. I mean, the church is made for sinners, it's made for people that

feel lost. It's made for people precisely about whom you're describing. And I think that, you know, this season reminds us that just as God came down into this world in a very kind of in the midst of chaos, in the midst of darkness, that's what the Lord does even today. He enters into our life, or he wants to at least, and he doesn't mind that our soul is a bit messy or chaotic or noisy or disordered, right, because that's how He entered the world to begin with.

Speaker 2

Right.

Speaker 3

He was not born in a palace, He is not born in a hotel or you know, there was even no room for him in the end, and so he was born in the midst of you know, a manger with with noise and smells and all kind of chaos. Right, And so I think, you know, kind of maybe something to think about is the way in which Saint Luke presents the birth of Christ, because this is how the birth of Christ came about, and he describes the circumstances. I think as a spiritual exercise. Maybe that's something that

we can think about. You know, how does the birth of Christ come about in my life? Where do I feel the need to be loved or to be embraced, or what's the brokenness in my life that needs to be healed or what's the chaos that needs Christ's peace? And so the Christmas season is a way or an invitation or a moment to really ponder that question. Because the Lord wants to enter into our lives. And again he does that through the sacraments of the Church. Because

the sacraments aren't just a ritual. They're not just something that we do over and over them because it's a tradition. They actually impart something that's called thanktified and great, which means that it's God's life that wants to dwell within us and that changes us. And so that's why a regular practice of the faith is beneficial and I would say salubrious. It's healthy because it enables the natural virtues that we have to grow exponentially because you know, as

human beings, we have so many limits. We're finite beings. But if we allow Christ to enter into our life, not just through our personal prayer. But through the sacraments and through the grace that God gives us through those sacraments, then we sort of are able to achieve the goal for which we are created, which is to live in peace with Christ.

Speaker 1

Something that I grapple with and say I think about is how to insert faith in not I mean not in every single area of my life, but in most areas where I can. So. I'm a boss, I have a bunch of employees. Being a leader and showing leadership in that faith and in that tradition is very, very important to me. Making sure that I represent someone who is honorable and leader and leadership and promoting things that

I think that are important. To sit there, and you know, I will have rego conversations with people I don't know super well, kind of intrusive conversations about why if they're looking at this, why they should explore Cathos. And I've met probably like four or five young men, all young men who have converted to the faiths in the last couple of years, and I'm basically begging at them at this point to be their sponsor, and no one's taking

me up on the offer. But though, what are what are we called to aside from loving people, which I know is a big task and something that is I guess the whole entire picture. What are we called for in our daily life as practicing Catholics especially, but as Catholics to sit there and to do most where? Or can we fill this? Boy this not not philivoid, but show our faith in our daily life in some some avenue. What I'm saying it was a little slong.

Speaker 3

Yeah, sure so. I mean there is a book that was meant for this. It's called it's called The Imitation of Christ, and it was written in the Middle Ages, but if you read it, it sounds like something that was maybe written a week ago, because it addresses these very issues. How do I practice the faith day to day? And you know, I think one of the things is that we read the New Testament and we look at

what Christ does and how he does it. How does he encounter, for example, a mother whose son has died. How does he relate to his disciples kind of maybe in his employees, right, how does he interact with them? What words does he use? What's his tenor in speaking?

Speaker 2

Right?

Speaker 3

And so we looked upon the person of Christ, we dwell with those images, we pray with them, and then we try to put them into practice ourselves. So I think to summarize the entire Christian life, we can say it's an imitation of Christ. How does Christ act in this situation or that? How does He speak to this person or that? And so the attitudes of Christ in some ways have to become our own, and we apply that in the different circumstances that come before us.

Speaker 1

What about when you feel like you've fallen shore, which I know everyone does in every capacity their life, whether they are a parent or a spouse or a priest, or they feel like, this is not my part. How do you how do you sit there and say it's not you know, kick like just kick it away and say, you know what, how do you how do you as a person to sit there and say I will try better tomorrow and this is not the end all be all?

Speaker 2

Yeah? Well, I mean that's that's the entire story of the Old Testament, right.

Speaker 3

It's the fact that Israel, you know, makes a deal with God and says, you know, will will obey your commandments and will love you and this and that, and of course time and again they disobey. And there are some places leads through. God gets a little angry, but.

Speaker 2

For you know, it's kind of.

Speaker 3

An understatement, I suppose in some cases, but God does not abandon them. He's always there. And I think one of the most beautiful things about Christianity itself is that, yeah, God maybe get angry and pissed off, but he's still there for you.

Speaker 2

He's not.

Speaker 3

There's nothing, as Saint Paul says, that can separate us from the love of Christ. Even when we commit a sin, there's always the possibility of going back. I mean, look at the story of the prodigal son who distanced himself so far from his father but goes back and the father is not just you know, sitting there, but he's actively ways waiting for the son to come back. And again, what a beautiful image that is of Jesus who just is waiting for us to come back. And so it's

not like God forgets about us. It's not like God, you know, if they're okay, well, you know, this happens all the time. So I'm just going to shut the door. The door is always open. And the Christian life is really about falling and getting back up again, and that actually.

Speaker 2

Is you know, one of the.

Speaker 3

What we call a Marian antiphon, which is a hymn to the Blessed Virgin Mary for Advent and Christmas, is called the Loving Mother of the Redeemer, and one of the lines says, loving Mother of the Redeemer, assist your people who have fallen. It's strives to rise again and again. That's the Christian life, you know, if we are attentive to what's going on inside, to our interior life, then we will recognize our faults, will ask God for strength

and forgiveness and by his grave sweet wise again. And that just happens over and over and over again until we try to get a little better at it each and every time.

Speaker 1

So you're thirty five, I'm thirty eight. There's a lot of millennial men and gen Z men who didn't grow up with overly religious parents. I did, and my mother would have, like you know, she was a Shei Catholic. There was, But there are the people who don't. And if you're if this is something you're and I always say,

faith's a journey. It's not a guilt. But I can't guilt you have a belief system, of course, But if you're interested in you're exploring, what are resources outside of just attending a mess that people could go to who are intellectually and intellectually available. They're not. It's not you know, you're not reading something. You're like, well, this is way above my head. I can't I can't deal with it. But what is something that somebody could go to and

say this is worth just looking at. This is a you know, not seeing Thomas acquaintance, but you know someone on that level and say this is accessible to you in an intellectual way where you can feel like you're reaching into something that's innate in your heart because you want to look for it.

Speaker 3

Yeah, So two things come to mind immediately. The first is Introduction too Christianity by Joseph Ratzinger, who became Benedict the sixteenth. And I would say that any of his books, which are all printed by a natious threats, are like they're easily accessible. So they've written a language that is I think palatable but also engages the intellect. And so somebody, I think just picking that up would be very delighted

to read anything. But you know, one thing that comes to mind is is Introduction to the Politism, which you know that's just something that I read in high school because that's when he became pope, and there's an interest in that. The other thing I would kind of point

to is Bishop Baron's Catholicism. It's a brief sort of introduction to what the Catholic faith is, and his approach is also using the entire Catholic tradition, so he introduces the person not just to the dogmas and the adoptrines of the faith, but the architecture, the art, the music that the faith has produced over two thousand years, the literature, because there's a whole section of American and European literature that is inspired by the Catholic Faith, and so Catholicism

is very, very rich in its symbols, in its traditions, and I think this book by Bishop Baron, simply called Catholicism,

is something that people might be interested in. And again, as I mentioned before, the Imitation of Christ by Thomas the Tempest is a medieval work, but it's the second most read book aside from the Bible, really in the history of literature, and it was the favorite book of several saints, one of them being Ignacious of Loyola, always had it on his debt and it served as an inspiration for generations of Catholics, saints included, and so that might be a place to start as well. But that's

a little more on the spiritual side of things. That's so much on the academic side.

Speaker 1

So my last question to you, and this is a personal question, because I was talking to with my friends as a Protestant about this about the saints and ideology ideatry, and you know, our conversation about that, and I couldn't convince her, but it was okay, it was fine. Who are sayings that you asked to pray for you or you look to?

Speaker 2

Oh? Sure, So my favorite saying is Ignacious of Loyola.

Speaker 3

I have devoted to him because I went to a Jesuit high school and he is certainly somebody that I read about and admired his conversion story. He went from like this and its center to a saint because of an injury that he sustained in a battle.

Speaker 2

So I thought that was pretty cool.

Speaker 3

And more recently, as a parish priest, Saint John Deanni, who is the patron saint of parish priests, who kind of dedicated his life to the ordinary and simple work of caring for souls in his parish. And I also have a particular devote to Edmund Campion, who was one of the English martyrs during the Elizabethan era. So the Catholic clergy were expelled from England in the seventeenth century.

I wanted to play their sixteenth century. They did their seminary and studies in Europe in Cotton, continental Europe, and then they went back to England secretly to minister to Catholics and hiding. And I find his story very, very fascinating. As a matter of fact, evil and Law the English, the famous English author of the last century. I wrote a biography on Edmund Campion, which is another book that

people might be interested in. Who are you know looking at hypolicies, And it just tells his story and how he went from an Anglican deacon to a Catholic priest who was eventually martyred for his faith in a very difficult time in history. So his you know, I always I have a picture of him in my room. I just find his story very heroic. And you know, he was a Jesuit as well, and so he was, you know, a man that was deeply spiritual, but also committed to the intellectual pursuit of this faith.

Speaker 1

You know, that's why I understand that because she's my birthday Sampinel. So she was a bit of a rebel who a lot of trouble and I relate to that quite a bit. So right, Yeah, there you go, persisted. So anyway, father, thank you so much for coming on this podcast.

Speaker 2

Really really appreciate it. You're very welcome. There was a delight. Thank you. Ryan.

Speaker 1

Now it's time for the Asking Me Anything segment of this podcast. If you want a part of the Ask Me Anything segment, emil me Ryan at Numbers gamepodcast dot com. That's Ryan at Numbers Gameplural podcast dot com. I love these questions. It makes the show so much interesting. I love getting to know my listeners. This question comes from Greg.

Greg says, as a former member of the New Jersey Libertarian Party for fifteen years, I can say that the DSA and the Libertarian Party are very quite similar, except economically. Do you think that the rise of Bobby Kennedy, em and Donnie if they were form their own party to take the duopoly which always promised to destroy Do you think the rise of Bobby Kenny, Emmon Donnie if they were the front runner. I think he's met front runners of their own party to take the duopolity which they

promised to destroy. I don't know about that. The Libertarian Party, I just think is useless. I mean, I don't think libertarians as a whole are useless. I think they've been very important prominently libertarians in this country. Like something like Gary Johnson, who was a libertarian. He was the governor

of Mexico. He could have ran for US Senate, won the Senate seat as a Republican, and promoted libertarianism in the Senate and be an important player in the country the way that like Rampole is an important player in national discussions. But instead he decided to run as a libertarian twice, was a spoiler, was almost a spoiler for Trump in a couple of states, and then he ended up running for US Senate as a libertarian New Mexico lost there too, and now he's nowhere. I mean, he's

a rich guy. I wish him well personally, but what a waste of time and effort. The DSA is at least smarter than they work within the Democratic Party to try to promote and promote their causes and promote their issues,

and they've been enormously successful. They've really kind of figured out to work to get work successfully on immigrant groups, on populations of a lot of white yuppies, where they can win and where they can make you know, strength in in numbers, and that's why they've grown across the entire country. The DSA is, I think, much more organized than the Libertarian Party is. I don't think the Libertarian

Party and organization really go hand in hand. I will say, when I was a young kid, I think I maybe mentioned this story before. But if I haven't, if I haven't, forgive me what if I have it? It's interesting. When I was like eighteen years old, I was I was a Democrat for a year because I was going to see Iraq war and I just thought, if you're if you're against the Raq war, you must be a Democrat. So I got to work as like a on the street fundraiser for a single day for uh the I

think it was. It wasn't Code Pink. It was some one of those anti Bush organizations. I can't remember. Change changed, dot com, change dot orgs like that. I don't whatever it was, remember that was Obama. It doesn't matter what it was. It was move on dot org. That's it, move on dot org. I worked as as a person you walk on the street ask for money from random people from move on dot org. For one day. I was like eighteen years old, like I'm I'm doing change.

And beforehand we went to like meet and all like the activists met, and I was just gonna say, iraq war. I didn't have like a ton of other issues I really even thought about or believed in. But I go to the meeting and everyone is like sitting on a beanbag chair and everything smells like cannabis and coffee and feet, and it was just disgusting. And they all start talking about their number one issues and it was like we should erase all borders, we should tax everyone at one

hundred percent or whatever. I was like, these people are nuts, Like this is not where I belong at all. But the organizational ability was really kind of impressive to look at from the from like inside. I was only there for literally one day. I never went back to show up for work again, but that was very very impressive. It's very interesting how organized they are. On the right, we have some groups that are effective and like that like you know, Charlie Kirk was amazing at organization, and

there's a few other ones that are affected. But I agree with you that the DSA is destructive. I don't know about Bobby Kennedy and Mondannie I. I don't know about that answer. And the Libertarian Party, I don't agree is like the DSA because I don't think that they are nearly as organized for us. Anyway, that's some podcasts. I hope you like it. I will see you guys on Monday. Please stay tuned and please like and subscribe on the iHeartRadio app Apple Podcasts, where I get this podcast,

including our YouTube video. I appreciate you all, Thank you, and have a great weekend.

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