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Bishop Michael C. Barber waves to the congregation after being installed as the fifth bishop of the Diocese of Oakland, Calif., May 25, 2013, at the Cathedral of Christ the Light. The 58-year-old Jesuit priest was previously the director of spiritual formation at St. John's Seminary in Brighton, Mass. (CNS photo/Jose Luis Aguirre, The Catholic Voice)
In All Things
Sean Salai
'We are feeling the effects of climate change sooner than most.'
In All Things
Francis X. Clooney, S.J.
The people of Nazareth were put off by the mix of ordinary and extraordinary in Jesus.
In All Things
Joseph McAuley
On this Independence Day when the flags are unfurled and whipping in the summer breeze and the bunting is put out and the picnic tables are festooned with the arrangement of hamburgers and hot dogs the pickles and the pretzels and potato chips macaroni and potato salads and don rsquo t forget th
In All Things
Joseph McAuley
Getting older is about to get a lot tougher if a recent article in The Irish Times is to be believed According to bureaucrats politicians and social scientists in Japan the latest phenomenon to become worried about is the problem of how to handle the increasing growth of what is called the ldqu
A "Climate" banner is seen hanging from the U.N. General Assembly building in New York City June 30, a day after the U.N. hosted a high-level event on climate change. (CNS photo/Gregory A. Shemitz)
In All Things
Kevin Clarke
Cardinal Peter Turkson President of the Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace took ldquo Laudato Si rsquo rdquo on the road presenting the ldquo green encyclical rdquo from Pope Francis to a packed audience during a special conference at the United Nations on June 30 nbsp Turkson told hi
Jorge Mario Bergoglio, now Pope Francis, is pictured, left, with his brother Oscar following their first Communion in this 1942 family photo. (CNS photo/courtesy of Maria Elena Bergoglio via Reuters)
In All Things
Raymond A. Schroth, S.J.
At this moment four new books on or by Pope Francis mdash four in an endless flood several every week of pope publications which have swept across my office desk in the months since the publishing world decided there was no limit to the market for a man who in the earlier stages of his career decl