What are we really doing when all we can do is pray—or not even?
It may be Easter, but lament comes more readily than alleluia.
It may be Easter, but lament comes more readily than alleluia.
The idea of this place is incarnation. When someone here gets sick, so does everyone else.
How can we be “witnesses to the ends of the earth” right now? I have found some help from St. Benedict and St. Gregory.
As the coronavirus pandemic takes a disproportionately deadly toll on seniors and African Americans, a new oral history initiative aims to train black Muslim youth to document their elderly community members’ stories.
When local and state governments across the nation began instituting shelter-in-place policies back in March, there was immediate concern for the risk staying at home would pose for survivors of domestic violence.
Marianne Hester, a Bristol University sociologist who studies abusive relationships, told the Chicago Tribune that domestic violence goes up whenever families spend more time together—like during Christmas and summer vacations.
Indeed, many communities have observed an upswing in the number of reported domestic violence incidents.
The World Association for Christian Communication has launched a rapid response fund to help support grassroots community media outlets that provide accurate coronavirus-related information to vulnerable people who often cannot access mainstream media.
It turns out the government can take big action to help people.