Me: The Night Writer, John Stewart; 50 years old and smart enough to have married my trophy wife first.
The Mrs.: The Reverend Mother
Children of the Night: two daughters, the Mall Diva and Tiger Lilly. Both are/were home educated.
Spiritually: Not a D.D. or pastor, but an enthusiastic amateur and co-Home Church leader along with my wife under the authority of our pastor, the Rev. Dr. Tom.
Professionally: Experienced writer and marketer, working in the Twin Cities in communications for a major financial services company by day. Fighting for truth, justice, common sense and at least five hours of sleep by night.
Family Motto: "If it's not fun, we don't do it."
Guiding Principles: The Bible or Monty Python or both as needed until things make sense.
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Like an Atlantis sunk beneath a sea of relativism, Natural Law may be out of sight in our culture, but still exists in the depths. Professor B. offers an accessible and thought-provoking (some might simply say "provoking") treatise on the moral laws written on our hearts, how to recognize them, how to apply them and how to defend them. Read this book; you'll laugh, you'll cry, you might even learn something.
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"Pause you who read this, and think for a moment of the long chain of iron or gold, of thorns or flowers, that would never have bound you, but for the formation of the first link on one memorable day." - Charles Dickens
I see you again and again
tumbling out of the sky,
in your slate-grey suit and pressed white shirt.
At first I thought you were debris
from the explosion, maybe gray plaster wall
or fuselage but then I realized
that people were leaping.
I know who you are, I know
there's more to you than just this image
on the news, this ragdoll plummeting—
I know you were someone's lover, husband,
daddy. Last night you read stories
to your children, tucked them in, then curled into sleep
next to your wife. Perhaps there was small
sleepy talk of the future. Then,
before your morning coffee had cooled
you'd come to this; a choice between fire
or falling.
How feeble these words, billowing
in this aftermath, how ineffectual
this utterance of sorrow. We can see plainly
it's hopeless, even as the words trail from our mouths
—but we can't help ourselves—how I wish
we could trade them for something
that could really have caught you.