
Stefano Rebeggiani
Articles
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1 month ago |
angelusnews.com | Carol Glatz |David Agren |Maria Wiering |Stefano Rebeggiani
The Dicastery for Laity, the Family and Life has published a pastoral framework to help dioceses begin a synodal process for strengthening and promoting the pastoral care of human life.
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1 month ago |
angelusnews.com | David Agren writes |David Agren |Maria Wiering |Stefano Rebeggiani
Mexican parishioners placed eight candles on church altars in memory of the eight young people shot dead in an attack outside a parish church. Catholic leaders called for action on insecurity and urged reflection on how violence is scandalously claiming the lives of many young people. Masses were celebrated around the country March 23 as Catholics prayed for the victims of the attack, which claimed eight lives and left five injured, in the city of Salamanca in western Guanajuato state March 16.
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1 month ago |
angelusnews.com | Maria Wiering |Stefano Rebeggiani |Robert Brennan
It may feel counterintuitive, but Charlie McCullough says that pilgrimage "teaches us how to live a normal life." That has been his experience after traveling the southern route of the 2024 National Eucharistic Pilgrimage from the Texas-Mexico border to Indianapolis over the span of two months. This year, he is doing it again -- on a different route, with a different group -- as the team lead of the 2025 National Eucharistic Pilgrimage from Indianapolis to Los Angeles.
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1 month ago |
angelusnews.com | Robert Brennan |Stefano Rebeggiani |Cindy Wooden |Ad rem
It’s difficult for people today to understand what a monumental cultural impact the film “Gone With the Wind” had on the American imagination. So the scandal the film created when Clark Gable’s Rhett Butler tells Vivien Leigh’s Scarlett O’Hara, “Frankly my dear, I don’t give a damn,” is also lost in the fog of popular culture’s tenuous memory. A lot of words were not said in films then that are now routine on “family” television shows.
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1 month ago |
angelusnews.com | Stefano Rebeggiani |Cindy Wooden
These are exciting times for Bible movie lovers, with several biblical film projects just released or about to come out, like the Netflix film “Mary,” which premiered in December, and Amazon’s “House of David,” released in February. But I am not one of them, and I was not expecting much from “The Last Supper” (released in theaters March 14), written and directed by Italian filmmaker and artist Mauro Borrelli, and executive-produced by Christian music star Chris Tomlin. I was wrong.
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