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- 1From:Publishers Weekly (Vol. 269, Issue 46)Ahead of the 2022 Annual Meetings hosted by the American Academy of Religion and the Society of Biblical Literature from November 19 to 22 in Denver, Colo., university and academic presses say that academic religion...
- 2From:Publishers Weekly (Vol. 269, Issue 30)What do you see as the relationship between Christianity and history? Christianity is a faith that is entirely rooted in history and in the fundamental and almost fantastical reality that God entered history. The heart...
- 3From:Religion Watch (Vol. 36, Issue 9)Both Catholicism and evangelical Protestantism have been seen as the more stable segments of Christianity in the U.S., but political pressures, such as the growth of populism, and the loss of Christian influence in the...
- 4From:Spectator (Vol. 351, Issue 10142)Why does the United States seem to be falling apart? The ideal that used to bring Americans together seems to have failed in some way. 'Liberty and justice for all' is the best summary. Sure, it was always a frail creed,...
- 5From:International Review of Mission (Vol. 111, Issue 2)Since 1822, French Protestantism has been engaged in world mission through the Paris Evangelical Missionary Society (SMEP). In 1971, this mission society was succeeded by two organisations--the Community of Churches in...
- 6From:U.S. Catholic (Vol. 88, Issue 2)The term deconstruction was rarely heard in Catholic spaces until early 2021, when musician Audrey Assad tweeted that she hadn't been a practicing Catholic for about three years. Assad also explained that she's not...
- 7From:America (Vol. 228, Issue 2)Who was Benedict XVI? The question sounds odd because the answer seems so obvious. For nearly eight years, until his stunning decision to resign on the last day of February 2013, Joseph Ratzinger was pope, the most...
- 8From:America (Vol. 228, Issue 2)In 2009, when Pope Benedict XVI issued his encyclical "Caritas in Veritate," I was in the period of Jesuit formation known as regency, teaching philosophy at Loyola University Maryland. There was a faculty reading group...
- 9From:U.S. Catholic (Vol. 88, Issue 2)I've touched on this here and there in my writing for U.S. Catholic, but I have not always considered myself a Catholic. Yes, I was raised Catholic, received all the sacraments of initiation--though perhaps under various...
- 10From:National Review (Vol. 75, Issue 1)Since the publication of Patrick Deneen's Why Liberalism Failed in 2018, a small but growing number of religious conservatives have been reevaluating the place of classical liberalism in America's political culture....
- 11From:The EconomistA truly catholic Church Pope Benedict's death removes a problem for liberal Catholics, but the church's future is still clouded with doubt T HE MOON was high over the avenue that stretches away from St Peter's, yet a...
- 12From:U.S. Catholic (Vol. 88, Issue 1)Since 1963, U.S. Catholic has remained true to its mission of engaging every corner of Catholicism's "big tent." To celebrate this long and storied history, each month the editors select excerpts from some of their...
- 13From:The New American (Vol. 38, Issue 24)Is it possible to be more Catholic than the pope? In the case of the current pope, simply remaining faithful to the religion's tenets would make one more Catholic. Francis the Destroyer? Cardinal Gerhard Muller has...
- 14From:National Catholic Reporter (Vol. 59, Issue 6)COMMENTARY I have a stone on my private altar given to me by Alejandro. When has brother disappeared in Cuidad Juarez, Mexico, three years ago, Alejandro went back to the place where they said goodbye to each other for...
- 15From:National Catholic Reporter (Vol. 59, Issue 5)Christ in the flesh DECEMBER 25, 2022, THE NATIVITY OF THE LORD Is 52:7-10; Ps 98; Heb 1:1 -6; Jn 1:1-18 By MARY M. McGLONE Which Christmas Mass are you going to? When I was a child, we went to an early morning...
- 16From:National Catholic Reporter (Vol. 59, Issue 5)As American Jesuit historian Fr. John O'Malley wrote in one of his last articles published in America magazine last February, the history of synodality is older than you think There are different phases in the history of...
- 17From:America (Vol. 227, Issue 5)New figures from the Canadian national census reveal that the share of the population that describes itself as Catholic is dwindling, though Catholicism continues to be the largest Christian denomination in Canada, with...
- 18From:Religion Watch (Vol. 37, Issue 12)While the Catholic Church in Canada has experienced a sharp growth in hate crimes directed against it, Canadian politicians and the country's media have been largely silent about this trend, writes Douglas Todd in the...
- 19From:U.S. Catholic (Vol. 87, Issue 10)Many have heard of Bigfoot, the Loch Ness Monster, and other mysterious creatures, generically called cryptids, because of reports by those who claim to have spotted them. Most scientists do not accept their existence,...
- 20From:New Criterion (Vol. 41, Issue 2)Dozens of Donnes Katherine Rundell Super-Infinite: The Transformations of John Donne. Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 352 pages, $30 I wish I had thought of the tide of diis review, but it is Katherine Rundell's...