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Deconstructing Oscar IV

Is “The King’s Speech” worthy of the accolades it has received, or is just a glorified episode of Masterpiece Theatre? Why is Danny Doyle, director of “127 Hours,” so fascinated with body fluids? What to make of that Dante-esque scene of impending doom in “Toy Story 3”? For the fourth year in a row, Tim […]

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A Catholic Broadcaster

Veteran broadcaster William F. Baker talks about his long career at WNET, the flagship public television station in New York, and how his Catholic identity nourished him in his work. Baker looks back on “Great Performances,” “Religion & Ethics Newsweekly” and two films he helped to produce on Jesus and Mary in art. Drawing on […]

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A God on the Move

Daniel G. Groody, C.S.C., describes his research among migrants in the United States and abroad, and how their perception of God is shaped by their transient lifestyle. Fr. Groody also describes the unique challenges facing migrants in Europe, and what it means to understand God as a “migrant God.” Read Fr. Groody’s article from America, […]

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Painting the Saints

Michael O’Neill McGrath, O.S.F.S., widely known as simply “Brother Mickey,” talks about his vocation as a painter and some of his notable works over the years, including “Christ the Teacher,” which was recently presented to Pope Benedict XVI. View a slideshow of selections from Brother Mickey’s work.

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Sudan’s Fate

Associate Editor Kevin Clarke outlines the issues at stake leading up to the January 9 referendum in Sudan. If the populace votes in favor of independence for the South, civil war could break out again, as forces in the North seem unwilling to allow their fellow citizens to form their own nation. The referendum was […]

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Christmas in Bethlehem

Fr. Guido Gockel, former director of the pontifical mission for Palestine, describes the Christmas customs in Bethlehem, including the marathon of liturgies at the Basilica of the Nativity that begin on Christmas Eve. Fr. Gockel, a member of the Mill Hill Missionaries, also describes his current work for the Catholic Near Eastern Welfare Association, which […]

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Why Matter Matters

Drew Christiansen, S.J., first began reading the work of Pierre Teilhard de Chardin, S.J., as a novice, and the French Jesuit’s thinking served as a formative intellectual and spiritual influence. Discussing his essay, “On the Slope with Teilhard,” Father Christiansen explains Teilhard’s fascination with matter, and how matter can help the spirit to flourish.

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Uncommon Vision

John Howard Griffin is known primarily as the author of Black Like Me, a seminal book in the history of the civil rights movement in which a white man dressed up as a black man and wrote about his experiences in the segregated south. But Griffin was also a war hero, a convert to Catholicism, […]

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The Change Decade

In a discussion of his book, The American Catholic Revolution, Mark S. Massa, S.J. introduces the major moments and figures of the 1960s, including Frederick McManus and the liturgical changes introduced by Vatican II, Charlie Curran and and the resistance to Humanae vitae and the political activism of Daniel Berrigan, S.J. Scroll to minute 15:50 […]

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