Parishioners of the Mary, Mother of the Church Area Catholic Community will make a pilgrimage to Rome and other Italian cities this coming March 1-10.
Fathers Aaron and Matthew Kuhn to lead pilgrimage to Italy in March 2024
‘Tears are sign of love,’ says rector of French sanctuary known for praying for the dead
Montligeon is a second most visited sanctuary in France. It is located in the Diocese of Séez, in the Normandy region, in a village of only 700 people.
This is the way: The Eucharistic pilgrimage of the Mass
As someone who leads an apostolate for Catholic pilgrimage, I often get asked which one pilgrimage journey is my favorite. Easy answers recount long, arduous pilgrimages between California missions, or through the Wisconsin farmland that leads us to the National Shrine of Our Lady of Champion, where the Blessed Virgin Mary appeared to a local girl.
My favorite pilgrimage, however, is the one I make each time I attend Mass.
Good questions, FOCUS and large stuffed pigs: one new Catholic’s journey to the faith
The annual SEEK conferences hosted by FOCUS are for anyone interested in deepening their faith and spreading the Gospel.
With ‘The Journey’ Bocelli gives us a Holy Week treat
The new film is coming exclusively to theaters from Fathom Events April 2-4 and again on April 6.
New shrine to Blessed Stanley Rother to be dedicated in Oklahoma City
Pilgrims will walk from Blessed Stanley Rother’s hometown of Okarche, Oklahoma, to Oklahoma City for the Feb. 17 dedication of the shrine named for the U.S. missionary priest martyred in Guatemala.
Author hopes Holy Land book will encourage greater solidarity with Christians
An Irish Catholic journalist who has led thousands of pilgrims to the Holy Land hopes his new book on the subject will encourage greater solidarity with the small Christian community in the Middle East.
After rocky start, pilgrims find hospitality, fellowship on way to shrine
“Perhaps a key part of the eucharistic revival so needed in the Church includes prioritizing hospitality over liability, embracing God rather than mammon, and relearning the art of welcoming the stranger and sharing a meal together.”