“When Jesus came to the Jordan, He was considered to be the son of Joseph the carpenter; and He appeared without comeliness, as the Scriptures declared; and He was deemed a carpenter.”
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Frs Franck Labbé and A. de Malleray tell the story of the exemplary pastor who died wearing his priestly vestments.
The Church of the 1800s entrenched itself in its traditions and doctrines in the face of liberalism, secularism, and nationalism.
Do not touch me? What do you mean, Do not touch me? Lord, should your Resurrection on this Easter morning keep me from you?
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Reflection on the vivid depiction of Christ’s Holy Face by engraver Claude Mellan (1649)
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As a Lenten meditation Fr Armand de Malleray, FSSP explains how the thorns of the crown prophetically stem from the timber of the cross.
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Armand de Malleray’s stunning prose draws the reader into a world of intrigue and uncertainty where nothing is quite as it seems.
Philologist, teacher, literary critic, youth activist, lover of liturgy – Ivan Merz was all of these things and much more.
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In ‘World Invisible’ Fr John Saward provides a timely synthesis of the perennial faith of Holy Church regarding God’s incorporeal creatures.
As dusk was arising on an unusually gloomy spring morning in Palestine, the Roman Governor Pontius Pilate proposed the question, “What is truth?”
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