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Tuesday, January 28, 2025

Mark Azzara

Mark Azzara spent 45 years in print journalism, most of them with the Waterbury Republican in Connecticut, where he was a features writer with a special focus on religion at the time of his retirement. He also worked for newspapers in New Haven and Danbury, Conn. At the latter paper, while sports editor, he won a national first-place writing award on college baseball. Azzara also has served as the only admissions recruiter for a small Catholic college in Connecticut and wrote a self-published book on spirituality, "And So Are You." He is active in his church and facilitates two Christian study groups for men. Azzara grew up in southern California, graduating from Cal State Los Angeles. He holds a master's degree from the University of Connecticut.

The ‘men’ of the NFL aren’t acting like it

Hopefully, we teach our children to accept responsibility for their actions. I say “hopefully” because it appears that our society is becoming increasingly narcissistic.

Movie stars have only themselves to blame for those nude selfies on the Web

Mass murder is taking place in the Middle East, ebola is killing Africans by the hundreds, a brewing war in Ukraine may add thousands more casualties to the list before it's over, and yet we find the time to decry a hacking scandal that has, shall we say, exposed dozens of Hollywood celebrities whose nude selfies were stolen from cyberspace and posted on the Internet.

Calling on my favorite mechanic

Picture this: A lone tourist driving on a sparsely populated island, his front wheel screeching, and seemingly nowhere to turn (excuse the pun).

How to communicate

Two sentences are all it took to show me how to communicate effectively. Last month I sat in the kitchen of my daughter's home as she and my son-in-law had a brief conversation about how an unruly child had been dealt with.

What if every Christian congregation was like this one?

After a short talk on what the New Testament says about healing and laying on of hands, the pastor called a couple to the front and had them sit down.

The message isn’t the problem but the messenger can be

There is no possibility you can mistake the Bible Belt when you're there. Just look along any highway. One year while driving on an interstate I saw the towering billboard: Where are you going? Heaven? Or hell?

If you pay attention you can learn a lot

When I make my annual visit to my daughter's family in the Midwest I don't go there with an agenda. I let God write it, and he did.

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