Jaime Lara of Yale Divinity School considers trends in church architecture from early church history when no seating was provided for the congregation to the innovations introduced after Vatican II. Professor Lara also offers a critique of the Cathedral of Our Lady of the Angels” in Los Angeles, and an appreciation of the new Cathedral […]
Podcasts
America offers a number of podcasts. To learn more about each individual podcast series and subscribe for free, please visit http://americamagazine.org/podcasts
Getting to Know Thoreau
Robert Sullivan, author of The Meadowlands and How Not To Get Rich and a frequent contributor to the New Yorker and Vogue, talks about rats, swamps and his new book, The Thoreau You Don’t Know. Inspired by the poetry of Gerard Manley Hopkins and the theology of Karl Rahner, Sullivan’s writings seek out the divine […]
Catholic Schools and Education Policy
As President Barack Obama charts a new course for the country’s educational system, Robert J. Birdsell, the president of the Cristo Rey Network, argues that Catholic schools should have a seat at the table. The potential economic collapse of Catholic schools could become a major issues for the president and his education team, Birdsell says, […]
A Saint in the Family
Eight years ago, Justin Catanoso, a business journalist and self-described lapsed Catholic, discovered that his grandfather’s Italian cousin was up for canonization. His book, My Cousin The Saint, chronicles his attempts to find out more about his long forgotten relative, and his own faith journey along the way.
The Green Bible Revealed
J. Matthew Sleeth, a former physician who now writes and preaches on care for the environment, introduces “The Green Bible,” a new project that seeks to highlight the passages from Scripture that are environmentally friendly.
The Editors Reminisce
Members of the editorial staff share memories of America on the occasion of the magazine’s 100th anniversary.
Remembering Karl Rahner
Leo J. O’Donovan, S.J., a former student of Karl Rahner, remembers the great Jesuit theologian and offers five questions to guide the reading of his work. Father O’Donovan also shares personal memories of Rahner, a man who had little time for small talk but who enjoyed riding in fast cars and ordering dessert for dinner.
The Human Poetry of Faith
Michael Paul Gallagher, S.J., author of The Human Poetry of Faith, talks about how to nourish the religious imagination. Gallagher, an Irish priest on the faculty of the Gregorian University in Rome, also suggests ways of ministering to young people and analyzes the religious impulse at work in the films of two of his former […]
The End of Catholic Health Care?
Daniel P. Sulmasy, O.F.M., director of the ethics program at Saint Vincent Medical Center and New York Medical College, tells the story of the unraveling of health care in New York City, and makes the case for keeping Catholic hospitals open even in difficult times.
Travel Tales
Karen Sue Smith shares travel tales from her trips to Western Europe and Japan. Karen’s article, “The World by Chair,” from our March 2 issue, explores the lure of travelling in place. Listen to this episode
