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In recent years, a new kind of hostility has developed toward any hint of faith in the practice of health care. But the idea that health care must be a religion-free zone is absolutely bizarre.
A Reflection of the Wednesday of the Fourth Week of Lent, by Gloria Purvis
Last week in Chicago, bishops from throughout the United States and a few from other parts of the world engaged in dialogue with theologians, scholars and journalists about the state of the church.
James Martin, S.J., shares the lessons he learned as a young Jesuit about accompaniment.
A homeless person sleeps under a blanket outside a window display in New York on Jan. 11, 2017. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan, File)
For decades, the United States has responded to homelessness with small change. It’s time to think big and treat housing as a human right.
A Reflection for the Tuesday of the Fourth Week of Lent, by Jim McDermott
This tax season, Americans have an unexpected figure to thank for one of their most-used deductions. She wasn’t an accountant, a lawyer or even a politician, but an actual saint.
Archbishop Vincenzo Paglia during a news conference at the Vatican on Feb. 4, 2015, holding his glasses in hand.
The Vatican czar on life issues, Archbishop Vincenzo Paglia, is on a mission to bring Pope Francis’ holistic pro-life vision to the United States.
Leonard Feeney, writes Avery Dulles, S.J., in this 1978 encomium, should be remembered for more than his actions that led to his excommunication. He was a gifted orator, apologist, writer and counselor.
Bishops in bright red and gold vestments are pictured as Russian Orthodox Patriarch Kirill of Moscow celebrates the Divine Liturgy
Why one Orthodox patriarch can denounce Russia’s invasion of Ukraine even while another supports it