St. Catherine of Siena: United With Christ’s Mystical Body

Born on the Feast of the Annunciation in 1347, Catherine was the twenty-third child of the wool dyer Jacopo Benincasa and his wife Lapa. From a young age, Catherine was devoted to Christ and the Church. She wished to join a group of third-order Dominican women known informally as the Mantellate or “Cloaked Sisters” and … Read moreSt. Catherine of Siena: United With Christ’s Mystical Body

Vatican II: Taking on the Threats of Modernism, Relativism, and Neo-Paganism

The Second Vatican Council was the first ecumenical council in nearly a century and was the most attended ecclesial gathering in Church history. Its business was conducted over four sessions from October 1962 to December 1965; however, the man behind the vision of the council died in the summer of 1963 after the conclusion of … Read moreVatican II: Taking on the Threats of Modernism, Relativism, and Neo-Paganism

The City of Man and the City of God

Augustine’s magnum opus not only answered the immediate objections of his contemporaries; it provided (and provides) a foundation of authentic Christian historical perspective. As a young man, Augustine had known well the pagan mentality, as he rejected the Faith and embraced the cults of false gods. Eventually, through the patient prayers of his saintly mother … Read moreThe City of Man and the City of God

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