The Angelus - Mar/Apr. 2024: Traditional Catholic Devotions
This issue of The Angelus is directed to fostering our life of prayer. Our faith is extremely rich and provides us with many beautiful resources for accessing God.
Since 1978, The Angelus has examined serious Catholic thought on faith, culture, morality, and family life. Today, after more than thirty years, The Angelus continues to represent a bastion of traditional Catholic teaching.
This issue of The Angelus is directed to fostering our life of prayer. Our faith is extremely rich and provides us with many beautiful resources for accessing God.
Just before Our Lord ascended into Heaven, He gave the Apostles a mission: “Go into the whole world and preach the Gospel to every creature” (Mk. 16:15). This was a mission to conquer the world for Christ.
One of the most precious heritages of our Catholic Tradition is the Cross of Our Lord Jesus Christ. He chose the Cross as the privileged means of our redemption.
Those who love God love His reality. They seek Him through the things that He has created. This is particularly true of the Catholic artist. Using his God-given talent, he attempts to represent what God has done, whether it be by depicting a pastoral country scene, a family around the hearth or the Madonna with her Child.
What did the Catholic Church look like during its infancy? We'll find out through a series of articles, touching on the Liturgy, to history, to art, and beyond!
At the beginning of his pontificate, during the World Youth Day on Copacabana Beach in 2013, Pope Francis exhorted the youth to “¡Hagan lio!” or “Make a mess!”
In the popular conception, the word “medieval” is bereft of positive connotations. It denotes something ignorant or close-minded, at best; something to be pitied or looked upon with contempt....
In this issue of The Angelus, we look at the prevalent cultural currents during the Victorian Era with particular attention paid to Catholicism’s role during it.
In the early years of the 20th century and the decades that followed, a so-called “back-to-the-land” movement emerged on both sides of the Atlantic.
"In this issue of The Angelus we present a number of articles that explore how education has been corrupted in our day. And so as to not present a purely gloomy picture of the state of education, you will also find in these pages examples of healthy Catholic education."