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Architecture as Catechesis

Arthur J. Sikula talks with associate editor Kerry Weber about church architecture as a form of both controversy and catechesis. Sikula, a liturgical architect, was a member of the task force that prepared “Built of Living Stones,” the U.S. bishops’ document which details guidelines for the relationship between church art, architecture, and worship.

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From the President’s Office

John P. Schlegel, S.J., and Leo J. O’Donovan, S.J., both served long tenures as presidents of Jesuit colleges. For our annual Jesuit education issue, they talk about the challenges facing Catholic colleges in a pluralistic society and how the implementation of Ex corde ecclesia affected the way Jesuit schools think about their Catholic identity. Fr. […]

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‘The Other America’ Then and Now

When The Other America was published in 1962, Michael Harrington only expected it to sell a few thousand copies. The book, a study of the “invisible” poor in America, went on to become a national bestseller and helped shape the government’s War on Poverty. Here Thomas Landy of the College of the Holy Cross explains […]

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Lifting Up the Lowly

At a symposium marking the 100th anniversary of the Maryknoll sisters, the theologian Elizabeth Johnson, C.S.J., spoke on “Mary of the Magnificat: A Heart on Fire.” Associate Editor Kerry Weber spoke to Sister Johnson after her talk.

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A Priest Behind the Iron Curtain

James Martin, S.J., joins Tim Reidy for a discussion of Walter Ciszek’s With God in Russia, which chronicles the imprisonment of an American Jesuit in the Soviet Union. The Vatican recently gave formal approval for Fr. Ciszek’s cause for canonization to proceed. The Pennsylvania-born priest spent five years in the notorious Moscow prison, Lubyanka, and […]

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Where It All Begins

Thomas J. Scirghi, S.J., talks about his new book, Everything is Sacred: An Introduction to Baptism, on our Easter podcast. Fr. Scirghi explains why baptism is the foundation of the sacramental life of Christians, and addresses controversies surrounding “limbo” and infant baptism.

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In Search of Simone

Producing “An Encounter with Simone Weil” was a deeply personal experience for Julia Haslett, who spent six years on the project. Here she talks with Associate Editor Kerry Weber about her journey and what she discovered about the French activist and writer. Haslett’s film premiers on March 23 at Quad Cinema in New York City. […]

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