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Arts & CultureBooks
Daniel P. Horan
It isn’t too late to reclaim liturgical language that is more prayerful, understandable and theologically sound.
iStock, CNS/Illustration: America
FaithMusic
Colleen Dulle
Composer Jan Michael Joncas kept the song under wraps for years.
Worshippers recite the Lord's Prayer during Mass at Corpus Christi Church in Mineola, N.Y., on Oct. 13. (CNS photo/Gregory A. Shemitz, Long Island Catholic)
FaithNews
Kevin Clarke
Making ancient Scripture sensible in contemporary languages will always prove a hazard-heavy challenge.
Pope Francis greets a girl during a March 12 visit at the Rome parish of St. Magdalene of Canossa. (CNS photo/Angelo Carconi, EPA)
FaithInterviews
Sean Salai
Matthew Halbach talks about his vision for “total parish evangelization.”
Tridentine High Mass at Saint-Laurent Chapel, in the Strasbourg Cathedral Notre Dame, for Sainte Jeanne d'Arc. (Wikimedia Commons)
FaithFaith in Focus
Patrick J. Nugent
“I’ve joked with friends: I’ll come back to the church when it restores the old Mass—celebrated by women priests.”