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“Tell me, how does climate change drive someone to hack a person to death with a machete?”
ashes and cross
There’s something distinctive about the physical and spiritual intimacy of distributing ashes.
Cardinal Pietro Parolin, the Vatican secretary of state, recently made comments regarding the death toll in Gaza that the The Israeli Embassy to the Holy See has defined as “regrettable.”
Maybe the real message of this ad should be not that “God Gets Us” but that “We Don’t Get God.”
Palestinians walk through the destruction left by the Israeli air and ground offensive on the Gaza Strip in Gaza City on Feb. 10, 2024. (AP Photo/Mohammed Hajjar)
“The struggle to secure our daily bread is exhausting. There is a shortage of everything. Nutritious food is non-existent. We have run out of medications and vitamins.”
Lent is around the corner. Take some inspiration from America’s staff as you decide what to give up (or take on) as we journey to Easter.
A Reflection for Friday of the First Week of Lent, by Colleen Dulle
A damaged inflatable dinghy is seen on Loon Beach in Dunkirk, France, on Nov. 25, 2021, the day after 27 migrants died when their dinghy deflated as they attempted to cross the English Channel. (CNS photo/Johanna Geron, Reuters)
Condemned by the Jesuit Refugee Service UK as a “cruel plan” that “violates human dignity,” the policy authorizes deporting people who come to the United Kingdom in search of safety to Rwanda.
In a ceremony at the beginning of Mass in St. Peter’s Basilica this morning, Pope Francis canonized María Antonia de San José de Paz y Figueroa, popularly known as Mama Antula, Argentina's first female saint.
A Reflection for Tuesday of the Second Week of Lent, by Zac Davis