“Everybody Wants to Rule the World” by Tears for Fears has always struck me as a song about the human condition after the Fall. The lyrics capture humanity’s restless attempt to build a kingdom without God : “It’s my own design, it’s my own remorse.” Those words echo the struggle that St. Paul describes in Romans 7 — the painful realization that even when we know the good, we still find ourselves trapped by selfishness, pride, and disordered desire. We chase freedom “for pleasure,” believing autonomy will save us, yet “ nothing ever lasts forever. ” The song feels like a modern lament for a world that keeps trying to rule itself apart from the Creator. Even if the writers never intended a Christian meaning, truth has a way of surfacing through art because every human heart wrestles with the same hunger for redemption. Listening to the song through a Catholic lens also reminds me of the grace of Confession . So much of sin begins with the words “my own design” — my plans, my control, m...
Fr. Jean Corbon’s Wellspring of Worship offers a profound shift in how we perceive our relationship with Jesus, moving from a view of ritual as mere duty to an encounter with a living river of grace. At the center of his theology is the Wellspring—the Mystery of the Trinity —which overflows into the liturgy and the world. Corbon teaches that the Resurrection is not a past event we simply remember, but an ever-actual reality that breaks into our present moment. When we participate in the Sacraments, we are not just observers; we are invited to plunge into the same river of life that flows from the pierced side of Christ. By viewing prayer and the Mass as a synergy between our desire and the Holy Spirit’s action, we begin to see that Jesus is not a distant historical figure , but the source of life constantly seeking to irrigate the dry land of our daily existence. To create a deeper relationship with Jesus through this theology, one must practice the liturgy of the heart in the mo...