Loading...
Loading...
Click here if you don’t see subscription options

Most relevant
In 2021 the Vatican launched a unique global theology project: Doing Theology from the Existential Peripheries. What can we learn from those interviewed?
a thinker crouches in thought with white background
The philosophy of Boethius and other medieval thinkers is much more relevant to today's society than we might think.
A prisoner under escort at the South Western Front during the Irish Civil War: July 22, 1922. Courtesy of National Library of Ireland Ref.: HOG106.
The peaceful sharing of power by Irish political parties that once went to war may be understood as a triumph of the common good.
A painted sign on paper reading "Goodbye Roe"
Maria McFadden Maffucci is the editor-in-chief of the Human Life Review, a quarterly journal founded by her father in 1975 after the Roe vs. Wade decision.
theodore mccarrick walks, hunched over, wearing a mask next to a young woman also wearing a mask. they are outside
As Theodore McCarrick faces criminal charges for allegedly sexually abusing a 16-year-old boy, the disgraced former cardinal’s legal defense team is now claiming he is in steep mental and physical decline and therefore not able to stand trial.
A Reflection for the Thursday of the Second Week in Ordinary Time, by Ashley McKinless
Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen, seen here in a 2022 photo, has notified Congress that the U.S. is projected to reach its debt limit on Thursday and will then resort to “extraordinary measures” to avoid default. (AP Photo/Cliff Owen, File)
Refusing to raise the cap on our national debt would not lead to reduced government spending. But it would endanger economies all over the world.
John LaFarge, S.J., a longtime editor at America, was also one of the nation's leading advocates for racial justice beginning in the 1920s.
people stand in a crowd behind a cross, they are from democratic republic of the congo and wearing white clothing
Deadly violence hit Christians in Africa Jan. 15, with a Catholic priest in northern Nigeria burned to death and as many as 17 Christians killed in a blast in eastern Congo.
Mel Gibson's past history of antisemitic remarks and behavior means holding him up as a leader is not only wrong, it’s dangerous.