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June 13, 2023
by Father Ron Rolheiser
There are four distinct kinds of Christian prayer: There is Incarnational prayer, Mystical prayer, Affective prayer, and Priestly prayer. What are these? How are they different from each other?
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June 13, 2023
by Pope Francis
We are continuing these catecheses speaking about apostolic zeal, that is, what the Christian feels in order to carry out the proclamation of Jesus Christ.
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June 13, 2023
by Deacon George Hooper
In St. Matthew’s Gospel, St. Peter asks Jesus how many times must he forgive someone who sins against him. “As many as seven times?” Jesus answers “not seven times but seventy-seven times” (Mt 18:21-22).
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June 13, 2023
by Dina Dow
The liturgical season of Ordinary Time has returned.
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May 30, 2023
by Father Ron Rolheiser
In much of the secularized world, we live in a climate that is somewhat anti-ecclesial and anti-clerical. It’s quite fashionable today to bash the churches, be they Roman Catholic, Protestant or Evangelical. This is often done in the name of being open-minded and enlightened, and it’s the one bias that’s intellectually sanctioned. Say something derogatory about any other group in society, and you will be brought to account; say something disparaging about the church and there are no such consequences.
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May 30, 2023
by Ellen Eldridge
There are not many things that bring my heart as much comfort and joy as the combination of the Blessed Mother and what some might call “tacky” colored lights.
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May 30, 2023
by Pope Francis
Today we are speaking about evangelization, about apostolic zeal, of bearing the name of Jesus.
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May 30, 2023
by Deacon George Hooper
Does purgatory really exist? If it exists, where is it?
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May 30, 2023
by Dina Dow
The upcoming Sunday Mass Readings are pivotal for our mission as disciples to go into the world and tell the good news: The Ascension of The Lord and Pentecost Sunday.
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May 5, 2023
by Father Ron Rolheiser
In the musical “Les Miserables,” there’s a particularly haunting song, sung by a dying woman (Fantine) who has been crushed by virtually every unfairness that life can deal a person. Abandoned by her husband, sexually harassed by her employer, caught in abject poverty, physically ill and dying, even as her main anxiety is about what will happen to her young daughter after she dies, she offers this lament.
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May 5, 2023
by Pope Francis
After having seen St Paul’s personal zeal for the Gospel, we can reflect more deeply on the evangelical zeal as he himself speaks of it and describes it in some of his letters.
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May 2, 2023
by Dina Dow
Easter continues as we celebrate the 5th and 6th Sundays of this season. We hear in the Gospels the reality of the Trinity, as the father is known by the son; the son is the face of the father; and the Holy Spirit is the giver of life. Christ the Lord dwells within and among the faithful.
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April 28, 2023
by Father Ron Rolheiser
After Jesus rose from the dead, his first appearances were to women. Why?
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April 28, 2023
by Ellen Eldridge
It’s been more than a year since I have shared funny things my family says about our faith.
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April 28, 2023
by Pope Francis
Dear brothers and sisters, Christ is risen!
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April 28, 2023
by Deacon George Hooper
I understand that in 1983 Pope John Paul II proclaimed that the year marked 1,950 years since Jesus died. That would indicate that Jesus died in the year 33 A.D. Is the year 33 correct?
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April 5, 2023
by Pope Francis
In the path of catechesis on apostolic zeal, let us start to look at some figures who, in different ways and times, bore exemplary witness to what passion for the Gospel means. And the first witness is naturally the Apostle Paul.
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April 5, 2023
by Deacon George Hooper
What is the history of the Bible?
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April 5, 2023
by Dina Dow
“Speak, Mary, declaring, what you saw, wayfaring. “The tomb of Christ, who is living, the glory of Jesus’ resurrection; bright angels attesting, the shroud and napkin resting. Yes, Christ my hope is arisen …” (Easter stanza)
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March 21, 2023
by Father Ron Rolheiser
The night before he died, Jesus struggled mightily to accept his father’s will. The Gospels describe him in the Garden of Gethsemane, prostrate on the ground, “sweating blood” and begging his father to save him from the brutal death that awaited him.
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