February 2024

VOL. 89, NO. 2

Scroll through the Table of Contents to view what’s in this month’s print issue. Some articles are available only in the print issue: Subscribe today to get full access to all the material you see listed below. And remember to sign up for our weekly email so you never miss an online article!

Features

people-raising-hands-at-colorful-worship-service

Spirit of renewal

BY RHINA GUIDOS

In Latin America, the Catholic charismatic movement is a force for community and rejuvenation.

Speaking out

BY JENN MORSON

Are Catholic leaders really listening to women?

Columns

THE EXAMINED LIFE

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Holy dirt

BY EMILY SANNA
Dust, dirt, and ash connect all of creation.

CULTURE IN CONTEXT

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Enough already

BY DANNY DUNCAN COLLUM
A new documentary makes a compelling case for reviving the Sabbath.

SALT & LIGHT

Free lunch

BY DAVID CLOUTIER
Look out for the common good, not individual group interests.

MARGIN NOTES

Messy business

BY KEVIN CLARKE
Canada’s bishops have demanded more scrutiny of global miners.

TESTAMENTS

Be present

BY ALICE CAMILLE
Characters throughout scripture struggle with their mental health.

GLAD YOU ASKED

Departments

Editors’ Note
You May Be Right (Letters to the Editor)
From the Archives
Poetry
Reviews (Music, Film, Books)
Eye of the Beholder (Art meditation)

In Person

Acts of faith

BY JENNIFER VOSTERS
Actress Angela Sauer channels her Catholicism on stage and screen.

Essays

Will art save us again?

BY JOSEPH MALHAM
Artists have long been at the forefront of innovation in the church.

Wild faith

BY JANE MCCAFFERTY
The work of this Maryknoll priest reminds us of what a gospel-informed church can be.

Sounding Board

Under the influence

BY JEAN P. KELLY
Have Catholics allowed alcohol to take over parish life?

Expert Witness

Prophetic theology

An interview with Rosemary P. Carbine
Faith-based social movements lead the way to reenvisioning the relationship between faith and public life.

Home Faith

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Beyond our power

BY TERESA CODA
A parent’s job isn’t to eradicate hardship from their kids’ lives but rather to help build resilience.