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In an upper room above those streets, the Book of Acts tells us, disciples of Jesus, recently crucified, cowered. Yet, filled ...
And yet, the art created in New York in the 1980s, in all its messy duality of saints and sinners, has endured over the past ...
Rev. Paul Nicholson, S.J., begins his homily for the Ascension with a striking image from Medieval art: Jesus’ feet dangling ...
Two of Ang Lee’s most disruptive films celebrate anniversaries this year; they may be five years apart, but the connective ...
Artist and educator Anita Guerra and her family escaped the Castro regime as refugees in 1961. They found miracles in the ...
From the Pilgrims' Madonna at the Basilica of St. Augustine to the Martyrdom of St. Ursula that closes the "Caravaggio 2025" ...
As a theologist teetering on the edge of fanaticism with a disillusioned God complex, Mr. Reed is a paradox: profoundly erudite in religious doctrines yet devoid of any palpable faith. He is both ...
In a time of disconnection, one writer reclaims the Black tradition of hospitality — as a political practice, sacred care, ...
And this is what Andrew Klavan aims to provide in The Kingdom of Cain: Finding God in ... true work of art about murder,” Klavan declares, “he is confronting death with art, making creation ...
It includes artists who seem to have gone through a religious phase, one that left a mark on them, such as Toni Morrison, ...
Finding God in the Literature of Darkness," bestselling crime novelist and Daily Wire host Andrew Klavan makes a provocative claim: horror helped lead him to Christ.
As the visual point of view shifts, its audience is invited to eavesdrop on interactions that are extraneous to the plot, as characters loiter in hallways and cars, and make small talk with strangers.