“It was as beautiful as any issue of Magnolia Journal. The content was aimed at Catholic women, to help them embrace their homes. It featured more than 100 professional photographs of the homes of Catholic women across the country.”
Christina Capecchi: Theology of home: an invitation to reclaim what matters most
Greg Erlandson: What comes after the pandemic?
“While we are still in the midst of the worst pandemic of the past century, with almost 200,000 people dead in our country alone, Pope Francis is thinking about what comes next. What do we do the day after we exit the field hospital?”
Archbishop Paul D. Etienne: Preserving our mission
“While we also support our local parish and diocese, national collections allow modest gifts to the collection basket to make multi-million-dollar differences on lives and communities here at home and around the world.”
Laura Kelly Fanucci: How to live through history
“People talk about ‘wanting to be on the right side of history.’ For those of us who follow Christ, the stakes are even higher.”
Preparing ourselves as faithful citizens
Catholic social tradition can help the human family heal this world that suffers from serious illnesses.
Laura Kelly Fanucci: Liturgical living
Liturgical living encourages Catholics to follow the rhythms of the Church year at home.
Greg Erlandson: Can we disagree less disagreeably?
“The snark and the belittling are bad enough, but social media are aflame with all manner of allegations of great deceits and greater conspiracies among one’s opponents.”
The Big Question: What’s a good Catholic voter to do?
Catholics are urged to properly form their consciences and use Catholic social teaching to guide them on Election Day.