
With Grace
Articles
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1 week ago |
angelusnews.com | Grazie Christie |Mike Cisneros |Dale Gavlak |With Grace
The penitential season of Lent is almost finished, and Easter beckons eagerly, promising a welcome release from our privations and inviting us to bask in the golden glow of the Resurrection. Is it any wonder that we are tempted to hurry past Golgotha, our eyes fixed firmly on the ground? Who wants to look up at the wretched derelict who hangs there, naked and blood-soaked, limbs trembling and eyes bulging, as he breathes his agonized last?
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1 month ago |
angelusnews.com | Grazie Christie |Robert Barron |Mark Pattison |With Grace
It’s clear that America is in the process of reassessing, and probably revolutionizing, its public health policy. That’s the expectation after the confirmation of Robert F. Kennedy Jr. as secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services. He brings a famously jaundiced eye to the government’s cozy relationship with pharmaceutical companies, to the politics of medical research, and — most notoriously — to vaccine schedules.
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Jan 22, 2025 |
angelusnews.com | Grazie Christie |Robert Barron |Peter Laffin |With Grace
I have a 25-year-old nephew who is gentleness itself. His smile is shy and diffident, and his whole nature tends, naturally, to the good. After studying something mathematical in college and getting the usual shallow education in high school, he’s found there was a world of rich culture and philosophy in books he hasn’t read, and he is hungry.
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Dec 9, 2024 |
angelusnews.com | Grazie Christie |Carol Glatz |With Grace
When corporations spend big money on advertising, they target that empty spot in men’s and women’s hearts that might just be filled perfectly with the product or experience on offer. Of course, in a consumerist society like ours, the most effective ads don’t simply aim to fill an empty space — but to create the space itself.
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Oct 24, 2024 |
angelusnews.com | Grazie Christie |Robert Brennan |With Grace
There is a charming religious custom that is widespread among Catholic Hispanics but is making its way into the English-speaking world at a fast pace. It’s called a palanca, a word in Spanish that means “lever.” When a family member or friend leaves to make a religious retreat, we write them a short letter of encouragement that is meant to lift them up toward God, like a lever lifts an object.
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