Peer-to-peer ministry reaches students at primarily secular colleges.
Sean Salai
Sean Salai is the author of What Would Pope Francis Do? Bringing the Good News to People in Need (Our SundayVisitor, 2016) and holds an M.A. in Applied Philosophy from Loyola University Chicago. He also holds a B.A. in History from Wabash College, which he attended on scholarship from the Indianapolis Star, and where as editor of the campus newsmagazine he won several Indiana Collegiate Press Association (ICPA) awards as well as a Wesley Pruden Investigative Journalism Award from the Leadership Institute in 2001. Before entering the Jesuits in 2005, he was a metro desk newspaper reporter for The Washington Times and the Boca Raton News, where his articles were picked up by the Drudge Report and other national media outlets. He taught theology and coached forensics at Jesuit High School of Tampa in 2010-2014.
His freelance writing has appeared in America, National Catholic Reporter, Catholic World Report, Busted Halo, Crisis Magazine, Civil War Book Review, Homiletic & Pastoral Review, the Magis Spirituality Center's Spiritual Exercises Blog and other publications. He has been a contributing editor on two reference works for the non-profit Intercollegiate Studies Institute (ISI) and his academic writing has appeared in three publications including the Heythrop Journal. He won two scholarships for outstanding collegiate journalism from the Washington DC-based American Alternative Foundation in 2001 and 2002. He is a graduate of the Institute on Political Journalism at Georgetown University, the Leadership Institute’s Student Publications School in Virginia, the Collegiate Network Foreign Correspondent Course in Prague, and several other journalism programs. His prior internship experience included The Washington Times national desk and Policy Review magazine at the Heritage Foundation.
Life after Richard McBrien: Q&A with Father Brian Daley, S.J.
Notre Dame professor recalls colleague’s progressive principles and generous spirit
On Fighting for Life: 15 Questions for Mother Agnes Mary Donovan, S.V.
Mother Agnes Mary Donovan S V is chairperson of the Council of Major Superiors of Women Religious and superior general of the Sisters of Life an American religious congregation of women dedicated to promoting pro-life causes She assumed that post in 1993 two years after Cardinal John O rsquo C
Recalling Richard John Neuhaus: Author Q&A with Randy Boyagoda
New biography paints nuanced picture of the public intellectual.
My Journey from Atheist to Catholic: 11 Questions for Leah Libresco
‘If I am doing good, it’ll be mostly by getting out of the way of God.’
Holistic Prison Ministry: Author Q&A with Maura Poston Zagrans
Maura Poston Zagrans is an American Catholic poet author and photographer Her book ldquo Camerado I Give You My Hand rdquo published by Image in August 2013 tells the non-fiction story of Father David T Link a Notre Dame University dean and lawyer who became a priest at 71 after his wife d
The Catholic Vote: An Interview with David Domke
Catholics have never held the kind of political capital in the U.S. that they hold now.
On Catholic TV and Renewal: Q&A with Father Robert Reed
‘We see ourselves, not in competition within the church, but…with secular media.’
Pope Francis & Married Catholic Priests: Q&A with Bishop John of Parma
Bishop John Kudrick has served as Byzantine Catholic ordinary of the Ruthenian Eparchy of Parma covering several Midwestern U S states since 2002 Born in Western Pennsylvania to a Byzantine Catholic father and Roman Catholic mother he grew up with the Roman Catholic Mass and joined the Third Or
Faith and Science: 15 Questions for Dr. Stephen Barr
Professor Barr was elected a member of the Academy of Catholic Theology in 2010.
