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A Reflection for Thursday of the Second Week of Lent, by Colleen Dulle
A Reflection for Tuesday of the Second Week of Lent, by Noah Banasiewicz, S.J.
The latest neuroscience will blow your mind, body and soul.
In a long post on X, the Ukrainian leader said that during the conversation with Cardinal Pietro Parolin, “I wished Pope Francis a speedy recovery and thanked him for his prayers and moral support for our people.”
Solemniser Neasa Ní Argadain officiates a wedding through OneSpirit Ireland. (Photo courtesy of Neasa Ní Argadáin)
While Catholic weddings in Ireland have dropped over the past three decades, New Age marriages are rapidly gaining in prominence.
Syrian government forces are deployed amid heightened security in Damascus, Syria, Friday, March 7, 2025. (AP Photo/Omar Sanadiki)
The question asked by many Syrians from Alawite, Shiite, Druse, Christian and other minority communities has become: “Can [I] live in an Islamist country and not be [Sunni] Muslim?”
I found I was playing the whole house,
And suddenly, without warning this long year of suffering comes back in fragments,
Diane Scharper
In his 2024 National Book Award-winning novel, 'James,' Percival Everett grapples with philosophical and metaphysical questions as well as racial issues, while enveloping all in sarcasm and irony.
Valerie Sayers
With 'Featherless,' her new novel about aging, ailing and the inevitability of death. A. G. Mojtabai joins so many other prominent contemporary fiction writers (Toni Morrison, Phillip Roth, Marilynne Robinson and Margaret Atwood, to name a few) who have explored aging late in their careers.