Dads establish the idea of home for their kids. Dads, get home to your kids, wherever home may be. I’ve tailored my life to work from home, so to be with my kids more, to establish a domestic monastery. This gives more opportunities for direct parenting and praying and going to Church together
The connection between fatherhood, the idea of home, and homelessness or rootlessness -- from Peter Kwasniewski’s new book, Treasuring the Goods of Marriage in a Throwaway Society, Chapter 5, "Fatherhood and the Being of the Home".
Rule of St. Benedict, Prologue:
Whence the Lord also says in the Gospel: “He who hears these My words and does them, I will liken him to a wise man who built his house upon a rock. There came torrents of rain and rushing winds, and they struck upon that house, but it fell not: for it was founded upon a rock.” As a consequence our Lord daily looks for it that we should respond by deeds to these His holy warnings. Thus it is on account of the need of correcting faults that the days of this life are prolonged for us, as by way of truce; and the Apostle says: “Art thou ignorant that the patience of God leads thee towards penitence?” For the Lord in His tenderness says: “I will not the death of a sinner, but that he may be converted and live.”
Just shared the new podcast on my blog -- read the article here.
Hilaire Belloc, letter of sympathy to Evan Charteris, whose father had just died:
Now what has come upon you is as hard a thing as any man can have to bear. The inanimate friends, which are the truest and which never betray, the walls and scents of home, when we lose these we lose, as it were, ourselves. It is a sharp foretaste of death ... To lose one's home, Evan, is to lose one's bones and one's skin. I know it. To lose unique and mutual affection is almost (in a mad metaphor) to lose one's soul.
Additional quotes from French Catholic Philosopher, Gabriel Marcel (1889-1973)