Two Reflections on the Feast of the Sacred Heart
The profound theological and personal significance of the Feast of the Sacred Heart connects the depths of the human heart to the divine, sacrificial love of Jesus Christ.
The profound theological and personal significance of the Feast of the Sacred Heart connects the depths of the human heart to the divine, sacrificial love of Jesus Christ.
In consecrating the nation to the Sacred Heart of Jesus today, our bishops are making a public declaration which cannot be easily withdrawn.
Madame Bovary serves as a prophetic warning against the isolating and destructive effects of modern digital technologies.
Church leaders should embrace beautiful, sacred architecture and art to awaken us to redemption and transcendence.
This life is an essential, imperfect "womb" where freedom and hardship train us to love deeply enough for the next.
On Corpus Christi Sunday, American Catholics can look to soon-to-be Blessed Fulton Sheen as a witness of Eucharistic devotion.
Dante’s Inferno anticipates the greed, fraud, and treason driving modern prediction markets.
The Church must offer the modern world what it desperately needs: the message of sin, personal conversion, and eternal life.
Generations before us did not “build better than they knew.” They built what they knew, while we build worse than we know.
“Toxic masculinity” isn’t fixed by effeminizing young males. Thus, the shortage of good, unselfish men of virtue, trained to provide and protect.
A new term, abbreviated MAP, seeks to normalize pedophilia by wedging it into the panoply of LGBTQ, etc. But, honestly, enough is enough!
The Church speaks authoritatively on moral principles, but economic policy is a matter of prudence, evidence, and reason.