About: Stephen Wang
- Website
- Details
- I am a Catholic priest in the Archdiocese of Westminster, England. I am currently Senior University Chaplain in the Diocese.
Posts by Stephen Wang:
-
February 21, 2018 What is Lent? From geeky trivia to profound, life-changing significance. A homily for the First Sunday of Lent by Fr Stephen Wang
-
February 14, 2018 Ash Wednesday: What do the ashes conceal? What do they reveal?
-
February 14, 2018 How Jesus touches and heals us through the sacraments, and how we can respond.
-
February 6, 2018 How to pray when you don’t know how to pray or don’t really want to pray
-
February 4, 2018 The true meaning of authority and apostolic succession in the Church. A homily by Fr Stephen Wang
-
January 22, 2018 The extraordinary gift of religious and consecrated life. Maybe God is calling YOU!
-
January 14, 2018 The difference between just listening to God and actually hearing what he has to say
About this blog
Looking across the landscape of contemporary culture - at the arts, science, religion, politics, philosophy; sorting through the jumble; seeing what stands out, what unsettles, what intrigues, what connects, what sheds light. Father Stephen Wang is a Catholic priest in the Diocese of Westminster, London. He is currently Senior University Chaplain, based at Newman House Catholic Chaplaincy. [Banner photo with kind permission of Matthew Powell]Twitter Feeds
You can subscribe to the blog via Twitter by clicking here.-
-
Recent Posts
- A retreat for priests, Part 2: the Beloved Disciple as an icon of priestly identity and love
- A retreat for priests, Part 1: the call and response of Moses
- It takes a lifetime to appreciate the extraordinary gift of your baptism
- HOMILIES AND TALKS FROM NEWMAN HOUSE AVAILABLE ONLINE
- Four inseparable meanings of vocation: present moment + work + lifelong calling + your unique self
- Making sense of your deepest desires and of God’s even deeper desire for you
- How to meet Christ in times of both light and darkness
- What is Lent? From geeky trivia to profound, life-changing significance. A homily for the First Sunday of Lent by Fr Stephen Wang
- Ash Wednesday: What do the ashes conceal? What do they reveal?
- How Jesus touches and heals us through the sacraments, and how we can respond.
- How to pray when you don’t know how to pray or don’t really want to pray
- The true meaning of authority and apostolic succession in the Church. A homily by Fr Stephen Wang
- abortion Allen Hall Art atheism beauty Bible blogging Books Catholic Church childhood children China Christ Christianity cinema commitment communication conversion culture ethics evangelisation Facebook faith family Film freedom friendship God Google happiness hope internet Jesus justice language life London love marriage media mission Morality New Evangelisation ordination parenting parents peace personhood Politics Pope Benedict poverty prayer priesthood priests pro-life psychology reading Relationships Religion religious life saints Sartre seminary social media social networking society suffering theology truth Twitter violence vocation witness work writing
Categories
- Art (57)
- Audio (1)
- Books (53)
- Culture/Arts (182)
- Film (64)
- Media (64)
- Morality (145)
- Philosophy (92)
- Politics (114)
- Psychology (134)
- Relationships (117)
- Religion (222)
- Science/Technology (99)
- Spirituality (68)
- Uncategorized (364)
Archives
- March 2018 (6)
- February 2018 (6)
- January 2018 (5)
- December 2017 (3)
- October 2017 (6)
- September 2017 (3)
- August 2017 (3)
- April 2017 (6)
- March 2017 (1)
- January 2017 (6)
- December 2016 (1)
- October 2016 (4)
- June 2016 (1)
- May 2016 (4)
- April 2016 (2)
- March 2016 (4)
- February 2016 (6)
- January 2016 (7)
- December 2015 (9)
- November 2015 (3)
- October 2015 (3)
- September 2015 (1)
- August 2015 (2)
- July 2015 (6)
- June 2015 (2)
- May 2015 (11)
- April 2015 (9)
- March 2015 (11)
- February 2015 (22)
- January 2015 (13)
- December 2014 (11)
- November 2014 (15)
- October 2014 (20)
- September 2014 (12)
- August 2014 (12)
- July 2014 (3)
- June 2014 (17)
- May 2014 (23)
- April 2014 (18)
- March 2014 (27)
- February 2014 (31)
- January 2014 (20)
- December 2013 (11)
- November 2013 (10)
- October 2013 (6)
- September 2013 (8)
- August 2013 (9)
- July 2013 (8)
- June 2013 (13)
- May 2013 (11)
- April 2013 (12)
- March 2013 (10)
- February 2013 (13)
- January 2013 (12)
- December 2012 (16)
- November 2012 (12)
- October 2012 (13)
- September 2012 (11)
- August 2012 (9)
- July 2012 (10)
- June 2012 (10)
- May 2012 (18)
- April 2012 (15)
- March 2012 (14)
- February 2012 (13)
- January 2012 (14)
- December 2011 (12)
- November 2011 (13)
- October 2011 (13)
- September 2011 (10)
- August 2011 (10)
- July 2011 (9)
- June 2011 (12)
- May 2011 (15)
- April 2011 (12)
- March 2011 (14)
- February 2011 (15)
- January 2011 (16)
- December 2010 (17)
- November 2010 (14)
- October 2010 (17)
- September 2010 (15)
- August 2010 (16)
- July 2010 (16)
- June 2010 (17)
- May 2010 (19)
- April 2010 (13)
- March 2010 (17)
- February 2010 (15)
- January 2010 (16)
- December 2009 (16)
- November 2009 (14)
- October 2009 (14)
- September 2009 (17)
- August 2009 (4)
Images Policy
As far as I know none of the image use in this blog is against copyright law. Images copied here are either (i) my own or (ii) out of copyright or (iii) used under a Creative Commons License [CCL], which means (roughly, usually) that the photographer (or copyright owner) has agreed the unedited image can be used non-commercially with proper attribution. If I mark an image as CCL it means that I have used the image under a CCL; it does not mean that I am now licensing this image with a CCL.Culture/Arts
Fun!
General Ideas
Philosophy
Politics
Religion (Catholic)
Religion (General)
Science/Technology