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Real families facing real issues with grace, hope, and determination; In His Image; Living Word; Live from the Sheen Center; Molloy: Public Square 2.0; Papal Audience from Rome; Real Food, hosted by Monsignor Jim Vlaun, highlights the importance of faith, gathering with family, and the spiritual nature of sharing a meal, bringing faith into the ...
Good News with Monsignor Jim Vlaun; Hope on Campus (campus ministry with the Brotherhood of Hope) House+Home (family life) Images of Jesus; In & Out (the work of Catholic missionaries) Issues and Faith (religious news, from the Archdiocese of New Orleans) Listen Up (news and current events) Matters of Faith (from the Diocese of Buffalo ...
Father De Smet. Joseph Robidoux settled the area that is now the city of St. Joseph in 1826. The Rev. Pierre-Jean De Smet, SJ was the first priest to visit the area in 1838. He met with Robidoux and expressed his desire to establish a chapel in his settlement. [2]
A monsignor on a motorcycle, a rabbi who escaped the Holocaust, and priests who pack heat: Meet the chaplains of the LAPD Mike Valerio and Amber Sumpter, CNN December 20, 2023 at 3:30 PM
St. Andrew's had another long-serving priest in Msgr. James Hourihan, a native of Ireland, educated at All Hallows College, Dublin, who served at St. Andrew's first as assistant pastor from 1931-1936 and then as pastor for 27 years from 1955 to 1982. [10] In 1986, Msgr. Hourihan published a 224-page history of St. Andrew's parish.
A New York City monsignor who raised eyebrows by allowing pop star Sabrina Carpenter to film a video in his church was relieved of duties after he allegedly mishandled nearly $2 million of church ...
James Michael Reardon (August 31, 1872 – December 12, 1963) was a Canadian-American Catholic priest and professor of the Archdiocese of Saint Paul.A prominent churchman in the first half of the 20th century, he was rector of the Basilica of Saint Mary from 1921 until his death and wrote the definitive history of the diocese.
Monsignor (/ m ɒ n ˈ s iː n j ər /; Italian: monsignore [monsiɲˈɲoːre]) is a form of address or title for certain members of the clergy in the Catholic Church. Monsignor is the apocopic form of the Italian monsignore , meaning "my lord".