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A woman leaves the Jesuit-run Central American University in Managua, Nicaragua, on Aug. 16, 2023. The university suspended operations Aug. 16 after Nicaraguan authorities branded the school a "center of terrorism" the previous day and froze its assets for confiscation. (OSV News photo/Reuters)
Nicaraguan officials ratcheted up a harassment campaign targeting Jesuits in Managua over the weekend.
Since this synod was announced in 2021, I have worked with the Seattle chancery as a synod volunteer and responded to the call for dialogue by personally talking with 100 people who were baptized and are now non-practicing.
A Reflection for Saturday of the Nineteenth Week in Ordinary Time, by Molly Cahill
In the year following Dobbs, accurate reporting on any story even remotely tangential to abortion is not to be expected.
James Martin, S.J.
The newest book by James Martin, S.J., inspires us to ask: Do you believe that Jesus can give you new life?
Sarah Vincent
in 'Fireworks Every Night,' the debut novel by Beth Raymer, is an ode to Florida—to the rattlesnakes, the humid heat and the Palm Beach pretensions of those who out of necessity live a life apart from that glitz and glamor.
Timothy Michael Dolan
Cardinal Timothy M. Dolan reviews Msgr. Thomas Shelley's 'John Tracy Ellis: An American Catholic Reformer,' calling it "a well-documented yet very readable biography of the 'dean' of American Catholic history."
A scene from the film Dead Poets Society of students outside in gym gear carrying their professor, played by Robin Williams
Mr. Keating and his real-life counterparts now dominate secondary and post secondary education. That’s a problem.
Students from Fordham Prep and other Viva House volunteers join Brendan Walsh, at left in dark blue shirt, and his wife Willa Bickham, standing below, on the steps of Viva House in Baltimore, Md., in March 2023.
In 1960, three young men graduated from Fordham Preparatory School and set out on paths that would painfully clash as the Vietnam War unfolded. 
Schools face changing realities, including geographic population shifts, questions about affordability and a generation of parents who are less likely to participate in Catholic life than their parents or grandparents were.