A Meditation on Suffering
Part of the Spirituality series:
- Mystery and Hermeneutics- Part Two
- James Martin: Essential writings
- The Way of Gratitude - Readings for a Joyful Life
- The Cross in Contexts
- Vesper Time
- Joyce Rupp
- Be Still and Know
- The Works of Mercy
- Spiritual Direction
- Richard Rohr
- And God Created Wholeness
- A New Way to Be Church
- Rejoice and Be Glad
- Blessed Are the Refugees
- Soul Seeing
- Jon Sobrino
- Culture over Christ
- Loving Water across Religion
- Ruth Burrows
- The Way of Forgiveness
- Love Prevails
- A Living Gospel
- Becoming New
- Catholicity and Emerging Personhood
- Vesper Time - The Spiritual Practice of Growing Older
- Ellen Birx: Embracing the Inconceivable
- When Tears Sing
- The Radical Gospel of Bishop Thomas Gumbleton
- Saints Celebrated and Unsung
- The Diary of Jesus Christ
- Catholic Social Teaching
- 99 Names of God
- Eyes of Compassion
- Hunger for Hope
- Belonging
- The Ten Green Commandments of Laudato Sí
- Letters of Tribulation
- O Death, Where Is Thy Sting?
- Mystics in Action
- Walter Rauschenbusch
- Creation's Wisdom
- Unlearning white Supremacy
- The Way of Love
- The Crucible of Racism
- Comprometernos con la diversidad
- Journey of Mother Mother Teresa Nuzzo in the footsteps of Jesus
- Matthew Fox
- The Mystics who came to Dinner
- Telling the San Jose Story
- Awakenings
“Joe Hoover has shaken the theodicean tree and stands among the fallen apples—wormy and bruised, laden with grace and gravity. Part Rolling Stone, part Rutter’s “Requiem,” O Death, Where is Thy Sting? serves up sups of Hopkins and Robert Ingersoll, doses of Job, both joyous and sorrowful mysteries, before which we mortals sit in silence, marveling.”