In today’s episode I explore a fine quote from Queen Elizabeth II’s former chaplain Gavin Ashenden. It’s a great reminder that any utopian vision that is presented to young people is bound to end in disillusion and bitterness. As Catholic teachers we are able to offer a much broader and ultimately truthful view of reality.

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Transcript
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Well, Hey everybody, Jonathan Doyle with you.

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Once again, welcome friends to the Catholic teacher daily podcast.

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I'm back on the horse for my American listeners.

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The Australian summer break does seem to go for a long time.

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If you're wondering where I've been.

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I got back yesterday from some time down the coast.

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Finally got some good weather, stayed at this wonderful little town

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where once a year they have this.

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Sort of big community thing where.

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Well, how do I explain this?

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Once a year, you are allowed to jump off the main bridge.

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The Gaucher, the middle of the town.

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There's a big tidal river there that runs out to the ocean and

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you get to jump off this bridge.

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It's about sort of six or seven meters.

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And, uh, you get, uh, and then after that, everybody inflates.

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Plastic inflatable animals and floats in the current, down towards the ocean.

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Yes, I know.

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It sounds a little unusual, but thousands of people do it.

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We had a great time.

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And so here I am back in the office today.

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Got up early though at the coast, jumped on the motorbike with one of my

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daughters on the back and off we went.

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They're about 300 kilometers on the motorbike getting back home

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yesterday, which is really good.

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So I've had a few adventures, had a good break.

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And really good to be back with you all.

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I hope that, uh, keep me in your prayers.

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I really want to try and stay with it this year and just keep bringing

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you regular encouragement as Catholic educators all over the world.

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It's been great to hear from many of you over the last few days.

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I've really appreciated it.

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And, uh, yeah, just, just stoked to be back and so grateful to have this chance

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to just offer some encouragement each day.

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Today.

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I want to share with you a really wonderful quote from Gavin Ashenden.

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If you haven't heard of Gavin, Ashenden.

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He is a very interesting person.

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Who's a former Anglican Bishop who converted to Catholicism.

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And as many of you will know, many Anglican converts tend to be.

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Deeply Orthodox, deeply faithful, and they have a deep love

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for their new Catholic faith.

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And he is no exception.

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He was also.

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Private chaplain to her majesty queen Elizabeth, the second, may

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she rest in peace for many years?

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And of course, uh, when he became a Catholic, he resigned that position.

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As you can imagine, it would be somewhat awkward being the chaplain.

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To the head of the Anglican church, if you're infect a Catholic.

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So, uh, not impossible, but obviously.

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It would just make for some interesting.

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Interesting discussion around the water cooler.

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Alright, so he's a fascinating guy and I'll put some links here,

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go check him out on YouTube.

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He's he's a really brilliant, interesting guy.

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And he published a piece that I really enjoyed a few days

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ago on death, life, death.

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Through the love and life and death through the lens of Benedict 16 and J.

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R R Tolkien and in it, he finished with a really beautiful quote.

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I don't want to find this for you here.

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Let me read this to you.

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He says this.

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The church cannot quell the storms through which she sails.

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But she can, and she must author rescue.

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To those that recognize they are drowning.

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And cry out for help.

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A lot jumps to mind there.

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It's interesting.

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Isn't it?

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When Jesus comes the storm in the boat, it's Jesus, that actually comes the storm.

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It's not Peter.

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It's a, it's not the apostles.

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It was Jesus himself who comes the storms.

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And so in Ashton says here, the church cannot squirrel the

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storms through which he sails.

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In the context of the actual video he was talking about, I guess the.

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Vicissitudes of history, the challenges.

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And sin and evil and wickedness that follows the human

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story down through the ages.

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The church cannot literally stop that.

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Why can't she bowl?

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She's not a political creation.

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She has no political power per se.

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She has no standing army.

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She doesn't invade countries per se, unless she invades them

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with the gospel of Jesus Christ.

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So the church cannot overpower.

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It seems the.

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Post-lab Syrian condition.

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And if you're not familiar with that cool word, why wouldn't you be Catholic?

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When we have great terms like post-lab Syrian.

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Post-lab Syrian, of course means after the lapse, after the

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fall in a fallen creation sin.

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And evil are going to stalk the human story right throughout the ages.

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And so this quote is saying that we can't.

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Necessarily create utopia.

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And I'm, I'm big on this.

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I think if you paying attention, you will notice that utopianism.

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Has been, has beset the human condition for, you know, centuries.

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We see it most obviously through marks and now through cultural Marxism.

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But this idea that we can create a perfect world.

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Is a.

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It's not biblical.

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You know, there's a reason why the book of revelation has a new heaven and a

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new earth it's God's sovereign action.

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That will bring that about.

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So, this is not, of course, to say that we then descend into defeatism,

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that we withdraw behind the barricades and have nothing to do.

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With the world around us, it's simply to recognize that.

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The pair of the church is to reach out to those who are recognizing that

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they're drowning and cry out for help.

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In the journey of Catholic education.

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This means that part of our task is to help young people see through.

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The utopianism of their moment in history.

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And personally, I think it's almost endemic in the education system.

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At least in my country, there's a progressive fascination with

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various forms of utopianism.

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Particularly around things like environmental issues.

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Uh, other issues.

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You know, geopolitical issues that are often radically simplified

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into good guys and bad guys.

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And then young people are positioned.

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To take a place on that.

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And as I've been teaching my own children, the nature of geopolitics

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and human sin is complex.

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That's great.

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Layers of complexity.

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The call for our prayer and our discernment, not just simply, you know,

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hashtag I stand with, fill in the blank.

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So what I'm getting at here is that I think what Catholic education can do

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and what Catholic teachers can do is to help young people see a bigger vision

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to help to say to young people look.

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There is objective evil and suffering in the human condition.

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But what explains it?

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You know what explains it?

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That's one of the things I love about my Catholic faith is that.

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The story of the fall.

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Really explains the human experience.

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It explains our capacity for good and beauty, but there's

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something seems to be wrong.

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And no matter what system or theory or politics you come up with, it remains.

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So we can't save ourselves.

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But what we can do is not be fatalist and go, well, it's all just terrible.

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It's got no there's much beauty.

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There's great beauty around us.

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There's much goodness in the world as much worth fighting for.

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But we can't save ourselves.

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And what the church offers is a sacramental community of faith.

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The draws people in it.

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There's a reason that the church is sometimes referred to as the

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bark of Peter, the ship of Peter.

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You know the ship that calls everybody to clam, but on board, as

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we go through the storms of history,

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I've definitely found in the last few years with the, um, debacle of

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COVID that, um, My faith has provided.

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Uh, a grounding stabilizing experience as there was so much.

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Uncertainty surrounding us.

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So my message to you today, my friends is, as you go about

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your work in Catholic education.

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Help young people to see a bigger vision.

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And is that as, as they draw upon the helps of the faith, as they enter into

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the sacramental life of the faith, as they, as you help them to pray and to

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become saints, they will play their part.

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But let's help them to play their part based on truth.

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Not on utopianism, not on some Marxist cultural Marxist view of

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reality that shifts and change like the sandbars of the ocean.

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But something much deeper, something much more true.

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That is the rock itself.

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The rock of Jesus Christ.

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Begin to teach that with courage bureau.

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Keep presenting Christ.

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Keep presenting.

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The help of the faith.

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The bark of Peter, the ship that will carry any young person

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throughout the storms of life.

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All right friends.

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That's it for me today.

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Uh, If you like what you're hearing please make sure you subscribe share

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this with some teachers go ahead if you're in leadership and grab yourself

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that uh that free 20 minute zoom call with me there'll be a link somewhere

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but that's it for today i've got some good stuff coming up this week so please

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make sure you've tuned in for tomorrow my name's jonathan doyle this has been

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the catholic teacher daily podcast and you and i are going to talk again.