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Features
Tuesday, May 28th, 2013
David Stoliar’s neat house sits atop a hill on the edge of Bend, a small city in central Oregon. A few steps lead up to the front door. Stoliar’s wife, Marda, opens, followed by a happy beagle. “Come in,” she says cheerfully. “Come in.” Her husband is waiting in the living room, surrounded by souvenirs Read more
Tags: David Stoliar, Holocaust, Israel, Jew, Jewish, Jews, Palestine, Rumania, Rumanian Jews, Struma
Posted in Features | Comments Off on Holocaust at sea: the lone survivor of the ‘Struma’
Friday, May 24th, 2013
The “2013 Survey of U.S. Priests on the New Roman Missal” was conducted under the auspices of the Godfrey Diekmann, OSB Center for Patristics and Liturgical Studies at Saint John’s University School of Theology Seminary in Collegeville, Minnesota. The objective of the survey was to determine as accurately as possible the views of U.S. Catholic priests about the new translation Read more
Tags: Catholic, Catholics in U S, English Missal, Liturgy, New Roman Missal, Roman Missal, U S, U S Catholic priests
Posted in Features | Comments Off on 2013 Survey of U.S. priests on the New Roman Missal
Friday, May 24th, 2013
Since it was first published in 1952, the DSM has been the has been the diagnostic bible for many psychiatrists. Each time the manual is updated, new conditions are introduced, often amid much controversy. DSM-5, the latest edition published on Saturday, is one of the most controversial yet. Many conditions we’re now familiar with were Read more
Tags: Anorexia, binge eating, bipolar, DSM, DSM-5, hoarding, hoarding disorder, internet addiction, Mental Disorders, Mental Health, schizophrenia
Posted in Features | Comments Off on Five new mental disorders you could have under DSM-5
Tuesday, May 21st, 2013
Every week or so, Father Ray toted a suitcase past the rectory offices. “Dry cleaning,” he’d say. “Liquor bottles,” feared both the pastor and Mary Catherine Meek, who worked in the suburban Chicago parish. People caught whiffs of alcohol on Father Ray (not his real name) at Mass. He had undergone treatment for alcoholism before Read more
Tags: Alcohol abuse, Priest, Priests, priests and alcoholism
Posted in Features | Comments Off on Priests and alcoholism
Friday, May 17th, 2013
The April 22nd kidnapping of Syrian archbishops Mar Gregorios Ibrahim of the Syriac Orthodox Church and Paul Yazigi of the Greek Orthodox Church of Antioch, and the killing of their driver, has reminded us once again of the vulnerability of ancient Christian peoples living in the Middle East. More than 1,000 Christians have been killed Read more
Tags: Archimandrite Robert Taft, Catholic, Greek Orthodox Church of Antioch, Mar Gregorios Ibrahim, Mar Paul Yazigi, Melkite, Melkite Greek Catholic, Orthodox, Orthodox Catholic relationships, Orthodox-Catholic, Orthodox-Catholic dialogue, Syriac Orthodox Church
Posted in Features | Comments Off on Enhancing Orthodox-Catholic relationships
Friday, May 17th, 2013
I was motivated to write the book A Catholic Guide to Depression because I believe that our Catholic tradition – including the writings of the Church Fathers and saints – has something important to say to those suffering from this terrible affliction. Depression is often misunderstood; most people mistakenly believe it’s nothing more than intense Read more
Tags: Catholic, Catholics and depression, Confession, Depression, Dr Aaron Kheriaty, Mass, Reconciliation
Posted in Features | Comments Off on Catholics conquering depression
Tuesday, May 14th, 2013
It was fortuitous the Catholic Church in New Zealand had Hamilton priest, Fr Michael Gielen, who happened to be studying in Rome, to liaise with New Zealand media, commenting on the atmosphere, the scenes, the hopes and excitement as the world waited for a new pope. Fr Gielen captured some of the excitement of the event Read more
Tags: Conclave, Lyndsay Freer, Media relations
Posted in Features | Comments Off on Media spokesman Fr Michael Gielen recalls his Rome papal election experience
Tuesday, May 14th, 2013
Adam Franssen, a biology professor at Longwood University, has a bold theory: mothers are smarter than other women. He and other researchers, including Craig Kinsley of the University of Richmond, have found that there’s more science than previously thought to being equipped for motherhood. Mothers are better at problem solving, handling stress and at completing Read more
Tags: brain, Longwood University, motherhood, Mothers, Neuron, neuronal pathways, neurons, problem solving
Posted in Features | Comments Off on Motherhood makes you smarter
Friday, May 10th, 2013
When Pope Francis visited his predecessor at Castle Gandolfo in March, he said to Benedict XVI that “we are brothers.” This image nicely frames the differences between them. It underscores that the election of Cardinal Jorge Bergoglio was not a rupture in the Church (as some suggest) but an unexpected lesson in apostolic continuity. Specifically, Read more
Tags: Cardinal Jorge Bergoglio, Jorge Bergoglio, Pope Benedict XVI, Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI, Pope Francis
Posted in Features | Comments Off on Benedict, Francis and apostolic continuity