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One of the great things about social media is that you get to keep in touch with people who otherwise may have exited your life. One of those people for me is Jessica. We both attended John Carroll School in Bel Air, Maryland. She graduated two years after me. Not too long ago, we would […]
It’s not graduation, but kindergarten end-of-year programs are every bit a symbol of change and growth as a high school or college commencement. As with other Arlington diocesan elementary schools, kindergartners from St. Mary School in Alexandria put on a show for their parents June 15. God and country were honored with flags waving, allegiance […]
Many of the nearly 30 founding parishioners who returned to St. Ambrose Church in Annandale June 18 for the parish’s 50th anniversary Mass moved slowly, aided by wheelchairs, walkers and canes. When the parish was young, they witnessed their children’s first Communions and weddings. Over 50 years of parish life, they watched their children, grandchildren […]
Bible verses and good wishes are hidden behind the walls of the new Lamb Center in Fairfax. In February, about 100 supporters of the drop-in shelter gathered in 10-degree weather for a beam signing party. They walked through the unfinished shelter in winter coats, grabbed Sharpies and wrote on the bare beams. “Bless all the […]
And so, in this exceedingly strange political year, what has become of the Catholic vote? There was a time not so long ago when the actual or anticipated voting behavior of American Catholics was a matter of intense interest to the secular media. Not today. Journalists have virtually ignored the Catholic vote, concentrating instead on […]
Q: Please tell me how Catholics justify hospice care, especially withholding food and water from the patient. Doesn’t this starve the patient to death? And doesn’t the heavy medication they use actually cause death? (Illinois) A: Patients are typically admitted into hospice care when curative treatment has been deemed futile and the prognosis is that […]
Missionhurst Father Andrew Labatorio will present a lecture “Ministry to Haiti” July 11 at St. Ann Parish Hall, 5300 N. 10th St., Arlington, from 7:30 to 9 p.m. Pastor of St. Jude Church in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, Father Labatorio will provide a short history of Haiti, its current situation and the role of the church there […]
Most of us are aware that Jesus sent His Twelve Apostles out to preach the Good News in the towns and villages of Galilee. We also know that the Apostles were the first priests of the church, those anointed by Christ to stand in His place, through whom He makes Himself sacramentally present to the […]
All of us have been on a journey in our lives. Young people love the adventure of travel. As we get older, we might settle for simply watching a travel channel on cable television. Jesus, however, calls each of us to a spiritual journey – a journey like no other. In St. Luke’s Gospel, Jesus’ […]
Rome is the city of popes because it was in Rome that St. Peter taught the gospel and it was there that he was martyred in A.D. 67 during Nero’s persecution of the Christians. Our Lord appointed Peter the first pope in the famous scene in St. Matthew’s gospel when Jesus declares, “You are Peter, […]

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