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Arts & CultureBooks
Benjamin Ivry
The Life of Saint Teresa of Ávila is termed an “autohagiography,” a self-justification of saintliness, by Carlos Eire, a professor of history and religious studies at Yale University.
FaithFaith in Focus
Pia de Solenni
We have to advance the conversation beyond one that limits women to emulating male models but instead understands women and men in relation to one another.
Arts & CultureBooks
Colleen Dulle
Lest the reader assume that Sister Prejean’s work against the death penalty, is the sum total of her story, she spends the final pages of her afterword calling out the places where she sees continued injustices, particularly in the treatment of women and L.G.B.T. people in the church.
FaithFaith in Focus
Jean Molesky-Poz
Like Mary of Magdala, women who gave homilies had experienced a deep call and felt commissioned to share the good news.
(iStock/bisla)
FaithShort Take
Alvan I. Amadi
Three years ago, Pope Francis elevated the memorial of St. Mary Magdalene, on July 22, to a feast day. To help better appreciate the gifts that women bring to the church, it is time to further elevate the feast day to a solemnity.
Sister Teresa Forcades. Photo by Emily Briggson.
Politics & SocietyDispatches
Dean Dettloff
The tumult in Catalonia continues. Many Catalans wonder what the future holds for their community. Among them is a rabble-rousing Benedictine nun, Sister Teresa Forcades, one of the most recognizable voices within Catalonia’s independence movement.