Kathryn Thompson (ND '17), University of Chicago medical student, on how anointing of the sick configures the ill to Christ's passion and resurrection.
Carolyn Pirtle, ND Center for Liturgy Program Director & composer of liturgical music, celebrates the Month of Mary with a Spotify playlist with liner notes.
Renée Roden, ND MTS and Graduate Fellow at MICL, escapes the abstractions of mythopoesis by delving into the flesh and blood mysteries of the Virgin Mary.
Gwendolen Adams, PhD (Catholic Studies, Maryvale Institute) draws on Alsadair MacIntyre and sociological data to argue for stability's evangelizing value.
Elaine Stratton Hild, musicologist and NDIAS Fellow, looks at how medieval rites for the dying, especially music, can be applied to contemporary contexts.
Charles Camosy, Associate Professor of Christian Ethics at Fordham, discusses the bioethics of healthcare providers aiming at the death of young patients.
James Keating, Creighton Institute for Priestly Formation director of spiritual formation, on God searching for, and remaining with, us amidst the din of pop culture.
Peter Andrastek, Senior Consultant for The Evangelical Catholic, clarifies how and why the ministry and the apostolate should work together instead of competing.
Kathryn Thompson (ND '17), first year medical student at the University of Chicago, examines married life and the end of life in her series on the sacraments.
Randall Rosenberg, professor of theology at Saint Louis University, unveils the deep liturgical roots of Dante's poetic re-integration of desire and love.
Timothy O'Malley, Director of the ND Center for Liturgy, doubts whether, unlike Europe, America is safe from the technocratic paradigm and market forces.
Kathryn Thompson (Notre Dame 2017), medical student at the University of Chicago, on what God does with us in the sacraments of baptism and confession.
Samuel Bellafiore, seminarian for the Diocese of Albany, NY, looks to the Virgin Mary to show us how to approach priestly celibacy in sex-saturated times.