Love isn’t a state of perfect caring. It is an active noun like “struggle.” — Fred Rogers. Fred Rogers’ simple definition immediately shifts love from a passive, effortless feeling to a continuous, deliberate labor. Love manifests in countless forms—maternal bonds, fraternal commitment, the deep loyalty of friendship, and the fire of a first romance. Yet, in…

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I remember the day I received my first mobile communications kit—it was my first day at the Department of Justice, and the sheer technological gravity of the moment was palpable. I was officially issued a cell phone and, for maximum redundancy, a beeper. A stern-faced security officer explained, with the intensity usually reserved for nuclear…

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Perhaps it is time to include a new ritual in the ceremony when we formally install the President or another who holds high public office. The Roman custom of the Triumphus provides a secular model. The victorious general, parading through Rome, was elevated to near-divine status—a moment of dangerous, unchecked adulation. The slave placed in…

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Remember not the sins of my youth and my transgressions; remember me according to your love and for the sake of your goodness. — Psalm 25:6. The psalmist plea is not merely a request; it is an acknowledgement of the human condition. Who among us does not carry the faint echo of youthful folly, the indelible…

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The prophet Amos’s declaration—”But let justice roll down like waters, and righteousness like an ever-flowing stream” (Amos 5:24)—offers a majestic, lyrical vision of societal perfection. Yet, this poetic ideal immediately clashes with the complexity of human reality. Here in North Carolina, we have learned that water, while life-giving, is also an undeniable, powerful force capable…

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