#2 - Conversations
by Rick Ganz on June 16th, 2025
Dirck van Delen (1604/5-1671) – “Church Interior with the Parable of the Pharisee and the Publican of Luke 18:9-14 (1653)”, in the Clark Art Institute in Williamstown, Massachusetts. Read More
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#1 - Conversations
by Rick Ganz on June 10th, 2025
John 1:35-41. The painting/illustration by James Tissot remembers the call before the call of Jesus’ first disciples. What do we mean? Unlike other “callings” of disciples, these first two were not called by Jesus. Instead, they pursued Jesus as Jesus walked again along the bank of the Jordan River (see it there in the painting?), walking by the spot where on the previous day John had baptized Him. Read More
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Introduction - Conversations
by Rick Ganz on June 3rd, 2025
Woman At the Well (esp. John 4:13-14) by Crystal Close - Oil on canvas; 36"x48"; 2016
“To Converse” The Oxford English Dictionary at “to converse” – 1. - 1340–1727 - † intransitive. To move about, have one's being, live, dwell in (on, upon) a place, among (with) people, etc. Obsolete. Read More
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Rewilding the Word #14
by Rick Ganz on May 13th, 2025
One of the earliest “habits” of the Faber Institute (founded in October 2014) was The Night School of Deeper Learning (aka, “the Night School”) . I was asked this past week how I teach these classes, wondering whether I had a particular approach to communicating so much, at depth, in so short a period of time – only one hour. I replied to him then, but I have continued to think about his question. Read More
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Lenten Meditation, Sixth Sunday of Lent 2025
by Rick Ganz on April 10th, 2025
“Our options [in a tremulous world], as they say, are no longer large. … [We] may choose to do nothing, which is to say, to go discreetly or wildly mad, letting fear possess us and frivolity rule our days. Or we may, along with admirable spirits like Deni... Read More
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Lenten Meditation, Fifth Sunday of Lent 2025
by Rick Ganz on April 3rd, 2025
Ron Hansen, Mariette in Ecstasy (1991) - And yet sometimes I am so sad. Even when I have friends over often for tea or canasta, there is a Great Silence here for weeks and weeks, and the Devil tells me that the years since age seventeen have been a great abeyance and I have been l... Read More
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Lenten Meditation, Fourth Sunday of Lent 2025
by Rick Ganz on March 29th, 2025
Pope Francis, 1 February 2025 – And for us too, the experience of faith has been stimulated by encounters with people who have been able to change in life and have, so to speak, entered into God's dreams. For even though there is much evil in the world, we can distinguish who is different: their greatness, which often coincides with littleness, wins us over. … Dear brothers and sisters, from Mary Magdalene, whom tradition calls “the apostle of the apostles”, we learn hope. One enters the new world by converting more than once. Our journey is a constant invitation to change perspective. … Instead of looking into the darkness of the past, into the emptiness of a tomb, from Mary Magdalene we learn to turn towards life. There our Master awaits us. There our name is spoken. For in real life there is a place for us, always and everywhere. Read More
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Lenten Meditation, Third Sunday of Lent 2025
by Rick Ganz on March 18th, 2025
Dan Fogelberg, “Leader of the Band” (1981): “His gentle means of sculpting souls took me years to understand.”
C.S. Lewis, The Great Divorce (1945): “You cannot love a fellow creature fully till you love God.” Read More
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Lenten Meditation, Second Sunday of Lent 2025
by Rick Ganz on March 13th, 2025
Jane Hirschfield, born in New York City (1953). “I don't think poetry is based just on poetry; it is based on a thoroughly lived life. And so, I couldn't just decide I was going to write no matter what; I first had to find out what it means to live.”
Steve Jobs once said, “Remembering that you are going to die is the best way I know to avoid the trap of thinking that you have something to lose. You are already naked. There is no reason not to follow your heart.” Read More
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Lenten Meditation, First Sunday of Lent 2025
by Rick Ganz on March 7th, 2025
The Gospel chosen in the Catholic liturgical calendar for the first Sunday of Lent this year is this one from Luke, quoting here its opening lines. We should remember that “to tempt” has two meanings. Read More
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Rewilding the Word #13
by Rick Ganz on January 21st, 2025
Last weekend, I was engaged with a men’s Retreat – 112 of us from Vancouver-Portland and environs. Read More
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Advent Meditation 2024, Week 4
by Rick Ganz on December 20th, 2024
In Matthew’s Gospel there are no Angels associated with Jesus’ birth in Bethlehem, but only an Angel who came to Joseph at Jesus’ conception, or soon after that. Matthew offers us not a “heavenly host” in the sky over Bethlehem and the Stable, but instead he speaks of Wise Men coming from the East, who can see better in the dark that which finally mattered most to them to find. I think of the dramatic opening line of Theodore Roethke’s poem: “In a dark time, the eye begins to see.” Read More
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