Raymond (Maximilian) Kolbe had a vision when he
was 10 years old. Biographer Tom Cowan describes it in
The Way of the Saints: “Our Lady stood before him holding out two crowns, one white, the other red, and asked
him to choose between them. He took both. When he
told his mother about this, he explained that white meant
that he would remain pure and red meant that he would
be a martyr.”
San Rafael Expeditions, a Catholic missionary organization rooted in
West Texas, has joyfully returned
from its inaugural mission trip to
serve the people of Honduras. Our
team of 21 dedicated missionaries offered seven days of medical care to
communities with limited or no access to health services.
In the ongoing crisis in Gaza, Christians and other innocent victims of violence are struggling to survive, protect their children, and live with dignity in dire conditions. The Holy Father Pope Leo XIV continues to call for aid to enter the territory, noting with great sorrow that “Gaza is starving.” The Catholic Church is there providing emergency humanitarian relief through the Catholic Near East Welfare Association (CNEWA) and Catholic Relief Services (CRS).
En el mundo actual, la gente trabaja más horas, pasa
más tiempo en línea, y se toma menos días de vacaciones
más que nunca. Nuestras agendas están tan llenas, es comprensible que algunos sientan que no tienen tiempo para ir a
la iglesia. Algunos dejaron de asistir a Misa por alguna
razón y aún no han vuelto. En este artículo, me gustaría
ofrecer varias buenas razones para ir a Misa.
In today’s world, people work longer hours, spend
more time online, and take fewer vacation days than ever
before. Our schedules get so full, it is understandable how
some people feel they don’t have time to go to church.
Some got out of the practice of attending Mass for whatever reason and have not yet found their way back. In
this article, I would like to offer a variety of good reasons
to come to Mass.
St. John Henry Newman — the 19th-century theologian, intellectual, and preacher who journeyed from Anglicanism to Catholicism, powerfully shaping religious thought in both faith traditions — will be named a doctor of the church by Pope Leo XIV.