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Deep Dive with Stroud - Ep. #1: Ghislaine Maxwell's Father Robert Maxwell AND Sisters Isabel and Christine Maxwell! There is always a story behind the headline! Behind the narrative - just around the corner from the media or cultural spin, there are just enough elements of truth to create confusion! If we look beyond the glare of the conispriacy theory we will see dots that connect the truth OR we may see more consipiracy! This is what Deep Dives with Stroud is about - digging just below the surface til the shovel clangs against the unknown parts of the story! News to myths and folklore to history - Stroud does the digging and brings what he finds to us - here on The Nooga Podcast Network! THANK YOU TO OUR SPONSORS: Nutrition World: https://nutritionw.com/ Vascular Institute of Chattanooga: https://www.vascularinstituteofchattanooga.com/ The Barn Nursery: https://www.barnnursery.com/ Optimize U Chattanooga: https://optimizeunow.com/chattanooga/ Guardian Investment Advisors: https://giaplantoday.com/ Alchemy Medspa and Wellness Center: http://www.alchemychattanooga.com/ Our House Studio: https://ourhousestudiosinc.com/ Big Woody's Tree Service: https://bigwoodystreeservice.com/ ALL THINGS JEFF STYLES: www.thejeffstyles.com PART OF THE NOOGA PODCAST NETWORK: www.noogapodcasts.com Please consider leaving us a review on Apple and giving us a share to your friends! This podcast is powered by ZenCast.fm
This talk was given at St. Nicholas Orthodox Church (UOC-USA) in Charlottesville, VA. In it, Fr. Anthony presents Orthodoxy's sacramental view of creation and uses music as an example of how the royal priesthood, in Christ, fulfills its commission to pattern the cosmos according to that of Eden. My notes from the talk: I'm grateful to be back in Charlottesville, a place stitched into my story by Providence. Years ago, the Army Reserves sent me here after 9/11. I arrived with a job in Ohio on pause, a tidy life temporarily dismantled, and a heart that didn't care for the way soldiers are sometimes told to behave. So I went looking for an Orthodox church. I found a small mission and—more importantly—people who took me in as family. A patient priest and his matushka mentored me for six years. If anything in my priesthood bears fruit, it is because love first took root here. Bishops have a sense of humor; mine sent a Georgian convert with no Slavic roots to a Ukrainian parish in Rhode Island. It fit better than anyone could have planned. The Lord braided my history, discovering even ancestral ties in New England soil. Later, when a young man named Michael arrived—a reader who became a subdeacon, a deacon, and in time a priest—our trajectories crossed again. Father Robert trained me; by grace I was allowed to help train Father Michael; and now he serves here. This is how God sings His providence—melodies introduced, developed, and returned, until love's theme is recognizable to everyone listening. Why focus on music and beauty? Because they are not ornamental to the Gospel; they are its native tongue. Beauty tutors us in a sacramental world, not a "God of the gaps" world—where faith retreats to whatever science has not yet explained—but a world in which God is everywhere present and filling all things. Beauty is one of the surest ways to share the Gospel, not as salesmanship or propaganda, but as participation in what the world was made to be. The Church bears a particular charism for beauty; secular beauty can reflect it, but often only dimly—and sometimes in ways that distort the pattern it imitates. Beauty meets the whole human person: the senses and gut, the reasoning mind, and the deep heart—the nous—where awe, reverence, and peace bloom. Music is a wonderfully concrete instance of all of this: an example, a symbol, and—when offered rightly—a sacrament of sanctifying grace. Saint John begins his Gospel with the Logos—not a mere "word" but the Word whose meaning includes order, reason, and intelligibility: "All things were made through Him." Creation, then, bears the Logos' stamp in every fiber; Genesis repeats the refrain, "and God saw that it was good"—agathos, not just kalos. Agathos is goodness that is beautiful and beneficial, fitted to bless what it touches. Creation is not simply well-shaped; it is ordered toward communion, toward glory, toward gift. The Creed confesses the Father as Creator, the Son as the One through whom all things were made, and the Spirit as the Giver of Life. Creation is, at root, Trinitarian music—harmonies of love that invite participation. If you like, imagine the first chapter of Genesis sung. We might say: in the beginning, there was undifferentiated sound; the Spirit hovered; the Logos spoke tone, time, harmony, and melody into being. He set boundaries and appointed seasons so that music could unfold in an ordered way. Then He shaped us to be liturgists—stewards who can turn noise into praise, dissonance into resolution. The point of the story is not that God needed a soundtrack; it is that the world bears a pattern and purpose that we can either receive with thanksgiving or twist into something self-serving and cacophonous. We know what happened. In Adam and Eve's fall, thorns and thistles accompanied our work. Pain entered motherhood, and tyranny stalked marriage. We still command tools of culture—city-building, metallurgy, and yes, even music—but in Cain's line we see creativity conscripted to self-exaltation and violence. The Tower of Babel is the choir of human pride singing perfectly in tune against God. That is how sin turns technique into idolatry. Saint Paul describes the creation groaning in agony, longing for the revealing of the sons and daughters of God. This is not mere poetic flourish; it is metaphysical realism. The world aches for sanctified stewardship, for human beings restored to their priestly vocation. It longs for its music to be tuned again to the Logos. Christ enters precisely there—as the New Adam. Consider His Theophany. The Jordan "turns back," the waters are sanctified, because nothing impure remains in the presence of God. He does not merely touch creation; He heals it—beginning sacramentally with water, the primal element of both life and chaos. In our services for the Blessing of Water we sing, "Today the nature of the waters is sanctified… The Jordan is parted in two… How shall a servant lay his hand on the Master?" In prayer we cry, "Great are You, O Lord, and marvelous are Your works… Wherefore, O King and Lover of mankind, be present now by the descent of Your Holy Spirit and sanctify this water." This is not magic; it is synergy. We offer bread, wine, water, oil; we make the sign of the cross; we chant what the Church gives—and God perfects our offering with His grace. The more we give Him to work with, the more He transfigures. And then Holy Friday: the terrible beauty of the Passion. Sin's dissonance swells to cacophony as the Source of Beauty is slandered, pierced, and laid in the tomb. Icons and hymns do not hide the scandal—they name it. Joseph and Nicodemus take down a body that clothes itself with light as with a garment. Creation shudders; the sun withdraws; the veil is rent. Liturgically, we let the discomfort stand; sometimes the chant itself presses the dissonance upon us so that we feel the fracture. But the dissonance does not have the last word; it resolves—not trivially, not cheaply—into the transcendent harmony of Pascha. On the night of the Resurrection, the church is dark, then a single candle is lit, and the light spills outward. We sing, "Come receive the Light from the unwaning Light," and then the troparion bursts forth: "Christ is risen from the dead, trampling down death by death…" The structure of salvation is musical: tension, longing, silence, and a resolution that is fuller than our peace had been before the conflict. Here is the pastoral heart of it: Christ restores our seal. Saint Paul says we are "sealed with the promised Holy Spirit." Think of a prosphora seal pressed into unbaked dough; the impression remains when the loaf is finished. Sin cracked our seal; everything we touched bore our corruptions. In Christ, the seal is made whole. In Baptism and Chrismation, that seal is pressed upon us—not only on the brow but on the whole person—so that our very engaging with the world can take on the pattern of the Logos again. We do not stop struggling—Paul's "what I would, I do not"—but we now struggle inside a music that resolves. Even our failures can become passing tones on the way to love, if we repent and return to the key. This is why the Church's common life matters so much. When we gather for Vespers and Liturgy, we enact the world's purpose. The Psalms give us perfect words; the Church's hymnody gives us perfected poetry. Music, rightly offered, is Logos-bearing—it is rational in the deepest sense—and love is the same. Music requires skill and repetition; so does love. Music benefits from different voices and timbres; love, too, is perfected when distinct persons yield to a single charity. Music engages and transfigures dissonance; love confronts conflict and heals it. Music honors silence; love rests and listens. These are not analogies we force upon the faith—they are the way creation is built. The world says, "sing louder," but the will to power always collapses into noise. The Church says, "sing together." In the Eucharistic assembly, the royal priesthood becomes itself—men, women, and children listening to one another, matching pitch and phrase, trusting the hand that gives the downbeat, and pouring our assent into refrains of "Lord have mercy" and "Amen." The harmony is not uniformity; it is concord. It is not sentimentality; it is charity given and received. And when the Lord gives Himself to us for the healing of soul and body, the music goes beyond even harmony; it becomes communion. That is why Orthodox Christians are most themselves around the chalice: beauty, word, community, and sacrament converge in one act of thanksgiving. From there, the pastoral task is simply to help people live in tune. For families: cultivate attentiveness, guard against codependence and manipulation, and practice small, steady habits—prayer, fasting, reconciliation—that form the instincts of love the way scales form a musician's ear. For parishes: refuse the twin temptations of relativism and control; resist both the shrug and the iron fist. We are not curators of a museum nor managers of a brand; we are a choir rehearsing resurrection. Attend to the three "parts" of the mind you teach: let the senses be purified rather than inflamed; let the intellect be instructed rather than flattered; and let the nous—the heart—learn awe. Where awe grows, so does mercy. And for evangelization in our late modern world—filled with distraction, suspicion, and exhaustion—beauty may prove to be our most persuasive speech. Not the beauty of mere "aesthetics," but agathos beauty—the kind that is beautiful and beneficial, that heals what it touches. People come to church for a thousand different reasons: loneliness, curiosity, habit, crisis. What they really long for is God. If the nave is well-ordered, if the chant is gentle and strong, if the icons are windows rather than billboards, if the faces of the faithful are kind—then even before a word is preached, the Gospel will have begun its work. "We no longer knew whether we were in heaven or on earth," the emissaries of Rus' once said of their time at worship in Hagia Sophia. Beauty did not close their minds; it opened them to truth. None of this bypasses suffering. In fact, beauty makes us more available to it, because we stop numbing ourselves and begin to love. The Scriptures do not hide this: the Jordan is sanctified, but the Cross remains; the tomb is real; the fast is pangful. Yet in Christ, dissonance resolves. The Church's hymnody—from Psalm 103 at the week's beginning to the Nine Odes of Pascha—trains us to trust the cadence that only God can write. We learn to wait in Friday night's hush, to receive the flame from the unwaning Light, and to sing "Christ is risen" not as a slogan but as the soundtrack of our lives. So: let us steward what we've been given. Let us make the sign of the cross over our children at bedtime; let our conversations overflow with psalmody; let contended silence have a room in every home; let reconciliation be practiced before the sun goes down. Let every parish be a school for choir and charity, where no one tries to sing over his brother, and no one is left straining alone in the back row. If we will live this way, not perfectly but repentantly, then in us the world will begin to hear the old pattern again—the Logos' pattern—where goodness is beautiful and beauty does good. And perhaps, by God's mercy, the Lord will make of our small obedience something larger than we can imagine: a melody that threads through Charlottesville and Anderson, through Rhode Island and Kyiv, through every parish and prison and campus, until the whole creation—long groaning—finds its voice. Let God arise. Let His enemies be scattered. Christ is risen, trampling down death by death, and upon those in the tombs bestowing life.
October, 2025
Father Robert J. Spitzer, S.J., is a Jesuit priest, philosopher, educator, author, and the President of the Magis Center of Reason and Faith. Born and raised in Honolulu, Hawaii, he went on to study at Gonzaga University, the Gregorian University in Rome, and the Catholic University of America, where he earned a PhD in philosophy. He later served as President of Gonzaga University, where he became known for blending academic excellence with faith formation. Today, Father Spitzer leads the Magis Center, which produces resources on the intersection of faith, science, and reason, and he continues to write and speak globally on subjects ranging from metaphysics to moral theology to spiritual warfare. In this episode, Brad sits down with Father Spitzer at Christ Cathedral in Garden Grove, California, for a candid conversation about his book Christ vs. Satan in Our Daily Lives and the reality of spiritual battle. Father Spitzer shares formative stories from his upbringing in Hawaii, his Jesuit formation, and the pivotal moments when challenges like vision loss became turning points for deeper faith. He unpacks the eight deadly sins, the tactics of the evil one, and the role of prayer, confession, and the Eucharist in resisting temptation. Along the way, he offers practical wisdom on discernment, the power of gratitude, and why the rosary remains one of the strongest weapons in spiritual life. “To live without thankfulness is the most self-centered way to live.” – Father Spitzer “Lord, you are the just judge. You take care of it.” – Father Spitzer “Nip temptation in the bud early. Don't wait until it grows into something that can destroy you.” – Father Spitzer This Week on The Wow Factor Growing up in Honolulu and how his parents shaped his faith and values Discovering proofs of God's existence in philosophy and science during college How his mother's prayers and wisdom steadied him in seasons of doubt The diagnosis of retinitis pigmentosa and how it reshaped his calling Discernment of spirits: learning to reject the “rhetoric of damaged goods” Why the devil's greatest lie is convincing people he doesn't exist The eight deadly sins, their tentacles in modern life, and how to resist them Practical tools for spiritual resilience: Eucharist, confession, daily prayer, and the rosary Why 90% of the fruit of prayer comes outside of prayer Encouragement for parents: the power of modeling prayer and faith for their children Father Spitzer's Word of Wisdom Bring every temptation and struggle to God. Don't fight it in your own strength. Dependence on Him, daily prayer, and trust in His unconditional love are the surest path to freedom and joy. Connect With Father Spitzer: Magis Center Instagram Magis Center YouTube Magis Center LinkedIn Magis Center Facebook Fr. Spitzer Facebook Connect with The Wow Factor: WOW Factor Website Brad Formsma on LinkedIn Brad Formsma on Instagram Brad Formsma on Facebook X (formerly Twitter)
Father Robert J. Spitzer, S.J., is a Jesuit priest, philosopher, educator, author, and the President of the Magis Center of Reason and Faith. Born and raised in Honolulu, Hawaii, he went on to study at Gonzaga University, the Gregorian University in Rome, and the Catholic University of America, where he earned a PhD in philosophy. He later served as President of Gonzaga University, where he became known for blending academic excellence with faith formation. Today, Father Spitzer leads the Magis Center, which produces resources on the intersection of faith, science, and reason, and he continues to write and speak globally on subjects ranging from metaphysics to moral theology to spiritual warfare. In this episode, Brad sits down with Father Spitzer at Christ Cathedral in Garden Grove, California, for a candid conversation about his book Christ vs. Satan in Our Daily Lives and the reality of spiritual battle. Father Spitzer shares formative stories from his upbringing in Hawaii, his Jesuit formation, and the pivotal moments when challenges like vision loss became turning points for deeper faith. He unpacks the eight deadly sins, the tactics of the evil one, and the role of prayer, confession, and the Eucharist in resisting temptation. Along the way, he offers practical wisdom on discernment, the power of gratitude, and why the rosary remains one of the strongest weapons in spiritual life. “To live without thankfulness is the most self-centered way to live.” – Father Spitzer “Lord, you are the just judge. You take care of it.” – Father Spitzer “Nip temptation in the bud early. Don't wait until it grows into something that can destroy you.” – Father Spitzer This Week on The Wow Factor Growing up in Honolulu and how his parents shaped his faith and values Discovering proofs of God's existence in philosophy and science during college How his mother's prayers and wisdom steadied him in seasons of doubt The diagnosis of retinitis pigmentosa and how it reshaped his calling Discernment of spirits: learning to reject the “rhetoric of damaged goods” Why the devil's greatest lie is convincing people he doesn't exist The eight deadly sins, their tentacles in modern life, and how to resist them Practical tools for spiritual resilience: Eucharist, confession, daily prayer, and the rosary Why 90% of the fruit of prayer comes outside of prayer Encouragement for parents: the power of modeling prayer and faith for their children Father Spitzer's Word of Wisdom Bring every temptation and struggle to God. Don't fight it in your own strength. Dependence on Him, daily prayer, and trust in His unconditional love are the surest path to freedom and joy. Connect With Father Spitzer: Magis Center Instagram Magis Center YouTube Magis Center LinkedIn Magis Center Facebook Fr. Spitzer Facebook Connect with The Wow Factor: WOW Factor Website Brad Formsma on LinkedIn Brad Formsma on Instagram Brad Formsma on Facebook X (formerly Twitter)
TJ speaks with Catholic Priest Father Robert McTeigue about life, faith and philosophy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
The relationship between Ghislaine Maxwell and her father, Robert Maxwell, was marked by an intense, almost pathological level of attachment and dependency. Robert, a domineering and deeply controversial media tycoon with a reputation for manipulation and control, openly favored Ghislaine among his nine children. He lavished her with attention, status, and privilege, often positioning her as a kind of surrogate heir or emissary despite the traditionally patriarchal structure of his empire. Ghislaine, in turn, idolized him, speaking of him with reverence and loyalty even after his mysterious death in 1991. Their bond bordered on obsessive—Ghislaine reportedly kept a photo of her father in her bedroom for years and sought his approval in nearly every aspect of her life. This dynamic created an identity for her that was inextricably tied to power, secrecy, and elite access.After Robert's death—under suspicious circumstances involving financial fraud and a possibly staged drowning—Ghislaine's world collapsed. Cut off from the wealth and influence she had always known, she moved to New York and quickly became involved with Jeffrey Epstein, a man whose power and manipulation tactics were not unlike her father's. Many observers have noted eerie parallels between her subservient yet strategic role in Epstein's life and the dynamic she had with her father. It's as if she transferred the emotional codependency and ambition that defined her relationship with Robert onto Epstein, replacing one powerful, controlling figure with another. In that light, her involvement in Epstein's criminal network seems less like a random fall from grace and more like a continuation of a warped legacy she never escaped.(commercial at 8:24)to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comsource:https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-11342083/Did-Ghislaine-pimp-father-met-Epstein-JOHN-SWEENEY-unravels-complex-relationship.html
The relationship between Ghislaine Maxwell and her father, Robert Maxwell, was marked by an intense, almost pathological level of attachment and dependency. Robert, a domineering and deeply controversial media tycoon with a reputation for manipulation and control, openly favored Ghislaine among his nine children. He lavished her with attention, status, and privilege, often positioning her as a kind of surrogate heir or emissary despite the traditionally patriarchal structure of his empire. Ghislaine, in turn, idolized him, speaking of him with reverence and loyalty even after his mysterious death in 1991. Their bond bordered on obsessive—Ghislaine reportedly kept a photo of her father in her bedroom for years and sought his approval in nearly every aspect of her life. This dynamic created an identity for her that was inextricably tied to power, secrecy, and elite access.After Robert's death—under suspicious circumstances involving financial fraud and a possibly staged drowning—Ghislaine's world collapsed. Cut off from the wealth and influence she had always known, she moved to New York and quickly became involved with Jeffrey Epstein, a man whose power and manipulation tactics were not unlike her father's. Many observers have noted eerie parallels between her subservient yet strategic role in Epstein's life and the dynamic she had with her father. It's as if she transferred the emotional codependency and ambition that defined her relationship with Robert onto Epstein, replacing one powerful, controlling figure with another. In that light, her involvement in Epstein's criminal network seems less like a random fall from grace and more like a continuation of a warped legacy she never escaped.(commercial at 8:24)to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comsource:https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-11342083/Did-Ghislaine-pimp-father-met-Epstein-JOHN-SWEENEY-unravels-complex-relationship.htmlBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-epstein-chronicles--5003294/support.
In this April 2025 edition of The Pioneer Hour, Father Robert McCabe reflects on the journey of hope and healing. With special prayers for Father Des Farren, the new Priest Director of Radio Maria, and a tribute to the work of Father James Ross in Fiji, Father Robert encourages pioneers to wear their emblem with […] L'articolo E61 | Pioneer Hour – Fr Robert McCabe – Pilgrims of Hope: A Journey Through Faith and Recovery proviene da Radio Maria.
Father Robert Spitzer, S.J., Ph.D., joins Deacon Charlie Echeverry to explore the crossroads of science and sacred history. They dive into the mysteries of the Shroud of Turin, examine how the Church has long nurtured scientific inquiry, and discuss near-death experiences, AI, and miracles—revealing how a scientific approach can actually deepen our Catholic faith. Christ, Science, and Reason: What We Can Know about Jesus, Mary, and Miracles by Fr. Robert Spitzer. S.J., Ph.DMagisterium AI
This episode of Joyously Free!, host Joanie Lindenmeyer has an inspiring conversation with Father Robert Thomas, an Episcopal priest, about spirituality, inclusivity, and the distortion of Christian values. Together, they explore themes of love, acceptance, and service, critiquing the prosperity gospel and the misuse of scripture to justify exclusionary beliefs. Father Thomas emphasizes the importance of […]
Hey everyone, this is Adam with Assumption and I wanted to give you a quick update on the status of Assumption Today. As you can tell, we haven't posted any new episodes for about two weeks. That is due to two parts: One, Father Robert wound up getting sick for a while and we're still giving him a much deserved and much needed opportunity to rest and recover, but don't worry, he's doing fine. And part of it was because I was away and was unable to post any updates until now. So, don't worry, we'll be back to posting new content pretty soon. So we appreciate your patience and we'll be posting some more of the best of Assumption Today soon as well. So thank you so much. We appreciate you listening. God bless.
Father Robert McCabe hosts the December 2024 edition of Pioneer Hour, reflecting on the season of Advent as a time of preparation and Christian hope. With a focus on the Pope's message for December, Father Robert encourages listeners to embrace the spirit of pilgrimage, faith, and hope, while highlighting the role of pioneers in spreading […] L'articolo E57 | Pioneer Hour – Fr Robert McCabe – December Reflections proviene da Radio Maria.
Our faith helps us believe in miracles, but do science and technology disprove them? To discuss, Father Dave welcomes back friend of the show Jesuit priest and president of the Magis Center, Father Robert Spitzer. His latest book is called, “Christ, Science, and Reason: What We Can Know About Jesus, Mary, and Miracles.”
Ken talks with Father Robert Spitzer, S.J., Ph.D. “The Four Levels of Happiness: Your Path to Personal Flourishing” (Sophia Institute Press) and Fr. Michael Brisson, LC “Death in Black and White” (Ignatius Press). Father Spitzer's book available at: https://sophiainstitute.com/product/the-four-levels-of-happiness/ and Father Brisson's at: https://ignatius.com/death-in-black-and-white-dbwp/ To lean more about Father Spitzer and the Magis Center: https://www.magiscenter.com/father-spitzer and more about Father Brisson: https://fatherbrisson.com/ L'articolo Meet the Author with Ken Huck – August 8, 2024 – Father Robert Spitzer, S.J., Ph.D. “The Four Levels of Happiness: Your Path to Personal Flourishing” and Fr. Michael Brisson, LC “Death in Black and White” proviene da Radio Maria.
I sit down with my dear friend and Catholic priest Robert Keller to talk about Catholicism. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/uponthisrockpodcast/message
Father Robert Nixon serves as your guide for The Commentaries: Abandonment to Divine Providence. In the introductory episode, Father Robert explores the life of the author of the book, Jean-Pierre de Caussade, a relatively little-known 18th-century French Jesuit priest. Discover the origins and structure of this timeless spiritual treatise and begin this season of The Commentaries with a prayer asking for God's guidance in learning to trust in His divine providence completely.Episode 1 covers the Preface.LEARN MORE - USE COUPON CODE COM25 FOR 25% OFFAbandonment to Divine Providence Deluxe Edition - https://bit.ly/3VcQPxUTAN Classics Deluxe Edition Set - https://bit.ly/3Vx8Fx2Self-Abandonment to Divine Providence - https://bit.ly/4bRf2kgAbandonment to Divine Providence (Paperbound) - https://bit.ly/3x77bjuTrustful Surrender to Divine Providence - https://bit.ly/4aUOltVThe Soul of the Apostolate - https://bit.ly/3X7blTcUniformity with God's Will - https://bit.ly/3Vy2CbBThe Commentaries is a podcast series from TAN in which you'll learn how to read and understand history's greatest Catholic works, from today's greatest Catholic scholars. In every series of The Commentaries, your expert host will be your personal guide to not just read the book, but to live the book, shining the light of its eternal truths into the darkness of our modern trials and tribulations.Fr. Robert Nixon is your guide for The Commentaries: Abandonment to Divine Providence. Abandonment to Divine Providence is an 18th-century classic that is the answer to modern doubts and anxieties. Author Fr. Jean-Pierre de Caussade offers the one sure solution to any spiritual difficulty: abandon yourself entirely to God by embracing the duties of your station in life. Join Fr. Robert on this 21-episode journey as he skillfully leads us through the timeless wisdom from the text with a perspective that provides helpful examples and countless ways to apply these lessons in our daily lives.To download your FREE Classic Companion PDF and for updates about new seasons, expert scholars, and exclusive deals for The Commentaries listeners, sign up at TANcommentaries.comAnd for more great ways to deepen your faith, check out all the spiritual resources available at https://TANBooks.com and use Coupon Code COM25 for 25% off your next order.
Our nests are not just our immediate family, they are also our extended families. Our doctors, our friends, our priests and spiritual guides, our counselors, our aunts and uncles, our honorary aunts and uncles, our teachers, our mentors. On this episode of nest, we cast the nest's net to faith and the community it catches, as a result.
Guest Father Robert Spitzer, author "The Four Keys to Happiness", joins to discuss mental health issues in society. Discussion of depression, anxiety, and finding your purpose. How does finding your purpose help bring you happiness...and how can we do it? State Department releases red alert weeks before June and "Pride Month" globally, warning of increase in hate and violence against LGBTQ community. Did we hear any alerts against the violence against Jewish communities? Discussion of violence from the left, and "justified" violent reaction from what they deep hate from conservatives.
You can learn more about Father Robert at:Nativity Catholic Church – Nativity Hollywood Please leave a review or send us a Voice note letting us know what you enjoyed at:Back2Basics reconnecting to the essence of YOU (podpage.com)Follow us on IG and FB @Back2BasicsPodcast
Calvary Episcopal in Williamsville is offering Ashes to Go for observers that don't have time to stop into church on Ash Wednesday.
Fr. Robert Dodaro, O.S.A. (Patristic Institute) is the president of the Patristic Institute in Rome, where he is also a professor. In addition, he is professor of patristic theology in the Pontifical Lateran University. He is the author of Christ and the Just Society in the Thought of Augustine, and co-edited Augustine: Political Writings and also Augustine and his Critics. He also serves as the Co-editor-in-Chief of the Augustinus-Lexikon.
Fr. Robert Dodaro, O.S.A. (Patristic Institute) is the president of the Patristic Institute in Rome, where he is also a professor. In addition, he is professor of patristic theology in the Pontifical Lateran University. He is the author of Christ and the Just Society in the Thought of Augustine, and co-edited Augustine: Political Writings and also Augustine and his Critics. He also serves as the Co-editor-in-Chief of the Augustinus-Lexikon.
Ken talks with Robert Spencer “The Palestinian Delusion: The Catastrophic History of the Middle East Peace Process” (Post Hill Press) and Father Robert Spitzer “Science at the Doorstep to God: Science and Reason in Support of God, the Soul, and Life after Death.” (Ignatius Press). Mr. Spencer's book available at: https://www.amazon.com/Palestinian-Delusion-Catastrophic-History-Process/dp/1642936235/ref=sr_1_1?crid=14XQPE2S1S8SV&keywords=robert+spencer+palestine&qid=1701092276&sprefix=robert+spencer%2Caps%2C174&sr=8-1 and Father Spitzer's book at: https://ignatius.com/science-at-the-doorstep-to-god-sdgp/ Follow Mr. Spencer at: https://www.jihadwatch.org/
Episode 175Speaker: Father Robert Kennedy SJTopic: The Experience of Enlightenment.NB. Father Robert refers to the Fukushima Power Plant problemthat took place in March 2011
Episode 174Speaker: Father Robert Kennedy SJTopic: The Christian Experience of Enlightenment I have been greatly helped to understand the mind of Jesusby listening to Jewish teaching providing an insight into the beautifulsupernatural thinking in the mind and heart of Jesus.Father Robert quotes one of these Avivah Zornberg.
Fr. Robert P. Boxie, III, a native of Lake Charles, Louisiana, is the chaplain at Howard University and the priest-in-residence at Immaculate Conception in Washington, DC. Sister sits down for a conversation with Father Boxie about, among other things, how to help develop and support personal ownership the Catholic faith in young people. Along the way, he shares how his parents did this for him. This episode is sponsored by The Catholic Theology Show with Dr. Michael Dauphinais, https://catholic-theology-show.castos.com/Journey to a new depth of hope, even in seemingly impossible circumstances, with Sr. Josephine in her new book HOPE: An Invitation. Available at osvcatholicbookstore.com. Discover more ways to live, learn, and love your Catholic faith at osvpodcasts.com. Sharing stories, starting conversations.Learn more about Sr. Josephine at: https://nazarethcsfn.org/https://www.instagram.com/sr_josephine/
Dr. Duke and Father Robert McTeigue Talk about the Abuse of Tolerance.
Did you know that Robert de Niro traveled to Russia 20 years ago? Well documented story, look it up. Well when he was there he met a beautiful woman and fell in love. 20 years later. Hasbulla. Just saying. Anyway lick and some scrub. Holler at us - http://mainpage.me/geng Twitter: https://twitter.com/GenGpodcast IG: https://www.instagram.com/gengpodcast/ Merch: https://generation-g.creator-spring.com/ #newpodcastalert #newpodcast #podcastersofinstragram #podcast #comedy #comedypodcast #funny #UFC #NFL #NBA #art #spotifypodcast#hyphy #bayarea #atlanta #breakingnews #food #calories #sports #lmao#trump #robertdeniro #hasbulla
Episode 132 of the Fit Father Project Podcast is all about addressing weaknesses and how to honestly look at your issues and find solutions. In this episode, you'll meet Fit Father Robert, who we like to affectionately call our 70-Year-Old Bad-Ass!At 69 years young, Robert is a total athlete — he's competing in 100-mile kayak races, running, doing regular workouts, and more; he's just getting after it. This is a powerful and inspiring conversation that shows you how you're never too old or “over the hill” to completely change your mind and body and live a life full of adventure. So check this episode out and ask yourself:How can I push myself a little more physically?How can I add a little more adventure to my life?How can I incorporate some of these deep emotional aspects into my daily workouts and how I approach my life?So, if you want to get the most from your health and fitness efforts, listen to this episode on addressing weaknesses, take some notes, and check out FF30X!In this episode, you'll learn: Robert's “fall from grace” and how he used the Fit Father Project to find his motivation and get back on track. How he personally approaches his life.How to take an honest, but not negative, look at your own weaknesses.How to find your motivation. Ways to modify your workouts to make them even more engaging and challenging. How to push yourself at a high level in all aspects of your life. And so much more!What is FF30X?FF30X is a simple, sustainable, and specific weight loss program that is designed especially for busy men over 40. With short metabolic training workouts, an easy-to-follow meal plan, and an accountability team that is there for you at every step, FF30X can help you lose 30, 40, or even 50+ lbs — even if you've never picked up a weight in your life. Click here to see what you get when you join the FF30X program today!If you loved what you heard on the Fit Father Project Podcast, please follow, rate, and review it on Apple Podcasts.You can also listen to the show on:SpotifyAmazon MusicGoogle PodcastsStitcherAnd don't forget to subscribe to our YouTube Channel and follow us on Instagram, Facebook, Twitter, and
Dr. Duke has an important conversation with Father Robert McTeigue about the current state of Christian theology, and the anti-gospel mutation of social-justice Christianity.
Ken talks with Father Robert Spitzer, S.J., PhD “The Moral Wisdom of the Catholic Church: A Defense of her Controversial Moral Teachings” (Ignatius Press) and Claudia McAdam “A Miracle for Micah” & “The Real Presence” (Ascension Press). Father Spitzer's book available at: https://ignatius.com/the-moral-wisdom-of-the-catholic…/ Claudia's books available at: https://ascensionpress.com/search… Visit Claudia's website: http://www.claudiamcadam.com/
In this week's episode, Fr. O'Brien welcomes first-time guest and Associate Pastor Fr. Healey. He shares his story about moving to Stillwater, his family and early life, his journey to the priesthood, and his dad's “Grillblazer®.”
AI as parlor trick, LastPass hack detailed, Xerox Alto, TikTok ban, blogger registry Bing Chat has a secret 'Celebrity' mode to impersonate celebrities. @emollick: Bing, write the first chapter of Genesis as a corporate memo. CNET editor-in-chief Connie Guglielmo steps down for AI-generated content role. Father Robert defines the Singularity. LastPass: DevOps engineer hacked to steal password vault data in 2022 breach. Microsoft set to win EU nod on Activision with licensing offer, sources say. Amazon Illegally Fired NYC Union Organizer, Labor Board Says. 50 Years Later, We're Still Living in the Xerox Alto's World. Fumbling the Future: How Xerox Invented, then Ignored, the First Personal Computer. Biden's national cybersecurity strategy advocates tech regulation, software liability reform. Florida bill would require bloggers who write about governor to register with the state. U.S. House panel approves bill giving Biden power to ban TikTok. White House: Federal agencies have 30 days to remove TikTok from devices. Host: Leo Laporte Guests: Louis Maresca, Fr. Robert Ballecer, SJ, and Dan Moren Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/this-week-in-tech Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Sponsors: kolide.com/twit decisions.com/twit expressvpn.com/twit
AI as parlor trick, LastPass hack detailed, Xerox Alto, TikTok ban, blogger registry Bing Chat has a secret 'Celebrity' mode to impersonate celebrities. @emollick: Bing, write the first chapter of Genesis as a corporate memo. CNET editor-in-chief Connie Guglielmo steps down for AI-generated content role. Father Robert defines the Singularity. LastPass: DevOps engineer hacked to steal password vault data in 2022 breach. Microsoft set to win EU nod on Activision with licensing offer, sources say. Amazon Illegally Fired NYC Union Organizer, Labor Board Says. 50 Years Later, We're Still Living in the Xerox Alto's World. Fumbling the Future: How Xerox Invented, then Ignored, the First Personal Computer. Biden's national cybersecurity strategy advocates tech regulation, software liability reform. Florida bill would require bloggers who write about governor to register with the state. U.S. House panel approves bill giving Biden power to ban TikTok. White House: Federal agencies have 30 days to remove TikTok from devices. Host: Leo Laporte Guests: Louis Maresca, Fr. Robert Ballecer, SJ, and Dan Moren Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/this-week-in-tech Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Sponsors: kolide.com/twit decisions.com/twit expressvpn.com/twit
AI as parlor trick, LastPass hack detailed, Xerox Alto, TikTok ban, blogger registry Bing Chat has a secret 'Celebrity' mode to impersonate celebrities. @emollick: Bing, write the first chapter of Genesis as a corporate memo. CNET editor-in-chief Connie Guglielmo steps down for AI-generated content role. Father Robert defines the Singularity. LastPass: DevOps engineer hacked to steal password vault data in 2022 breach. Microsoft set to win EU nod on Activision with licensing offer, sources say. Amazon Illegally Fired NYC Union Organizer, Labor Board Says. 50 Years Later, We're Still Living in the Xerox Alto's World. Fumbling the Future: How Xerox Invented, then Ignored, the First Personal Computer. Biden's national cybersecurity strategy advocates tech regulation, software liability reform. Florida bill would require bloggers who write about governor to register with the state. U.S. House panel approves bill giving Biden power to ban TikTok. White House: Federal agencies have 30 days to remove TikTok from devices. Host: Leo Laporte Guests: Louis Maresca, Fr. Robert Ballecer, SJ, and Dan Moren Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/this-week-in-tech Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Sponsors: kolide.com/twit decisions.com/twit expressvpn.com/twit
AI as parlor trick, LastPass hack detailed, Xerox Alto, TikTok ban, blogger registry Bing Chat has a secret 'Celebrity' mode to impersonate celebrities. @emollick: Bing, write the first chapter of Genesis as a corporate memo. CNET editor-in-chief Connie Guglielmo steps down for AI-generated content role. Father Robert defines the Singularity. LastPass: DevOps engineer hacked to steal password vault data in 2022 breach. Microsoft set to win EU nod on Activision with licensing offer, sources say. Amazon Illegally Fired NYC Union Organizer, Labor Board Says. 50 Years Later, We're Still Living in the Xerox Alto's World. Fumbling the Future: How Xerox Invented, then Ignored, the First Personal Computer. Biden's national cybersecurity strategy advocates tech regulation, software liability reform. Florida bill would require bloggers who write about governor to register with the state. U.S. House panel approves bill giving Biden power to ban TikTok. White House: Federal agencies have 30 days to remove TikTok from devices. Host: Leo Laporte Guests: Louis Maresca, Fr. Robert Ballecer, SJ, and Dan Moren Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/this-week-in-tech Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Sponsors: kolide.com/twit decisions.com/twit expressvpn.com/twit
AI as parlor trick, LastPass hack detailed, Xerox Alto, TikTok ban, blogger registry Bing Chat has a secret 'Celebrity' mode to impersonate celebrities. @emollick: Bing, write the first chapter of Genesis as a corporate memo. CNET editor-in-chief Connie Guglielmo steps down for AI-generated content role. Father Robert defines the Singularity. LastPass: DevOps engineer hacked to steal password vault data in 2022 breach. Microsoft set to win EU nod on Activision with licensing offer, sources say. Amazon Illegally Fired NYC Union Organizer, Labor Board Says. 50 Years Later, We're Still Living in the Xerox Alto's World. Fumbling the Future: How Xerox Invented, then Ignored, the First Personal Computer. Biden's national cybersecurity strategy advocates tech regulation, software liability reform. Florida bill would require bloggers who write about governor to register with the state. U.S. House panel approves bill giving Biden power to ban TikTok. White House: Federal agencies have 30 days to remove TikTok from devices. Host: Leo Laporte Guests: Louis Maresca, Fr. Robert Ballecer, SJ, and Dan Moren Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/this-week-in-tech Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Sponsors: kolide.com/twit decisions.com/twit expressvpn.com/twit
Father Robert Hagan, of Villanova University, speaks with Rabbi Sherman about the spirituality he brings to the Villanova University campus, in particular to the basketball and football teams. He has cut down the nets in 2016 and 2018, and has guided young athletes both on and off the court, during their time in college and beyond. What lessons do we learn from the locker room sanctuary?
Host Dave Schlom visits with two very special people. Kendra Atleework is the author of Miracle Country: a Memoir of a Family and a Landscape, and her father, Robert Atlee (find out why their names are just a little different by listening!), the publisher of Sierra Maps.
John Sweeney has been covering Ghislaine Maxwell and the Maxwell family for some time and in his podcast and other content he is involved in, he has done a fantastic job of exposing that relationship. In this episode, we once again pull back the curtain and take a look at the life of Ghislaine Maxwell at the knee of her father. (commercial at 12:50)to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comsource:https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-11342083/Did-Ghislaine-pimp-father-met-Epstein-JOHN-SWEENEY-unravels-complex-relationship.html
John Sweeney has been covering Ghislaine Maxwell and the Maxwell family for some time and in his podcast and other content he is involved in, he has done a fantastic job of exposing that relationship. In this episode, we once again pull back the curtain and take a look at the life of Ghislaine Maxwell at the knee of her father. (commercial at 13:25)to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comsource:https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-11342083/Did-Ghislaine-pimp-father-met-Epstein-JOHN-SWEENEY-unravels-complex-relationship.html
Who are the 8 John Does in the Jeffrey Epstein & Ghislaine Maxwell continued...Some back story on Ghislaine Maxwell's father and a scandal he was involved in...Robert Maxwell and an intelligence gathering software... Jeffrey's desire to preserve his brain and...penis... What did the Rolling Stones' reporter, Vicky Ward, discover? Might she be connected to Ghislaine? Jeffrey's connection to Steven Hoffenberg... Hoffenberg is serving 18 years in prison for committing a $450 million Ponzi scheme...Jeffrey's trip to the pentagon? Did Jeffrey solve Robert Maxwell's dept issue? Robert Maxwell's mysterious death... Jeffrey's soft power...What do most consider Jeffrey Epstein's downfall? Why was he trying to move to Isreal?Why did Ghislaine Maxwell choose Daphne Barak to interview her?Lisa and Dana figure out one more John Doe... Why might Ghislaine Maxwell still be alive and not Jeffrey Epstein? Who might have been wiped from the internet?What classes does Ghislaine teach in prison? What do the inmates think of her? Some of the world's greatest tax shelters...https://offshoreleaks.icij.org/Check out Lisa's other podcast, Goodbye Glam Squad, about Erika Jayne from Real Housewives of Beverly Hills!Check out Lisa's podcast, Jeffrey Epstein, The Prince and The Pervert Podcast!You can find it on Facebook and Youtube as well!Get Dishing Drama Dana Merch!https://represent.com/store/dishing-drama-dana-wilkeyFollow Lisa: @LisaPodcastsFollow Dana: @Wilkey_DanaFollow Casey: @CaseyHanley$25,000 Song - Apple Music$25,000 Song - SpotifyTo support the show and listen to full episodes, become a member on PatreonTo learn more about sponsorships, email DDDWpodcast@gmail.comDana's YouTube ChannelSupport the show
Father Robert Ciciro, the brother of the late Tony Sirico, joins Bernie & Sid in the Morning to talk about his brother's recent passing and his legacy as an actor. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
God's heart is for everyone to experience the love of a father. Last Sunday, Robert shared an encouraging message about 4 kinds of fathers everyone needs and every godly man should strive to be.
The author of “Because Our Fathers Lied” lays bare agonizing truths about America his father helped to shape.
We discuss redistricting, Arizona, American families, and the border. Our guests are: Rabbi Spero, Boris Epshteyn, Terry Schilling, Father Robert McTeigue, Victor Avila Stay ahead of the censors - Join us warroom.org/join Aired On: 1/21/2022 Watch: On the Web: http://www.warroom.org On Podcast: http://warroom.ctcin.bio On TV: PlutoTV Channel 240, Dish Channel 219, Roku, Apple TV, FireTV or on https://AmericasVoice.news. #news #politics #realnews
We discuss the history and traditions of Christmas. Our guests are: CPT. Maureen Bannon, Ben Harnwell, Father Robert McTeigue S.J., Raymond Ibrahim Stay ahead of the censors - Join us warroom.org/join Aired On: 12/24/2021 Watch: On the Web: http://www.warroom.org On Podcast: http://warroom.ctcin.bio On TV: PlutoTV Channel 240, Dish Channel 219, Roku, Apple TV, FireTV or on https://AmericasVoice.news. #news #politics #realnews
We discuss vaccine mandates, lockdowns, the economy, and the terrible job numbers. Our guests are: Rabbi Spero, Father Robert McTeigue, Julie Kelly, Darren Beattie, Joe Allen Stay ahead of the censors - Join us warroom.org/join Aired On: 12/03/2021 Watch: On the Web: http://www.warroom.org On Podcast: http://warroom.ctcin.bio On TV: PlutoTV Channel 240, Dish Channel 219, Roku, Apple TV, FireTV or on https://AmericasVoice.news. #news #politics #realnews
“They own this town, they're laughing at you,” he said. “They need to be seized and turned into public utilities.” Our guests are: Father Robert McTeigue, Jeff Brain, Maria Luisa Stay ahead of the censors - Join us warroom.org/join Aired On: 04/02/2021 Watch: On the Web: http://www.pandemic.warroom.org On Podcast: http://warroom.ctcin.bio On TV: PlutoTV Channel 240, Dish Channel 219, Roku, Apple TV, FireTV or on https://AmericasVoice.news. #news #politics #realnews