Sundays at CTU
This presentation explores the dynamic relationship between the Church’s understanding of marriage and that of...
What if we woke up one morning and discovered that the Second Vatican Council had...
Reconciliation has become a much-discussed and much sought-after hope in many parts of our lives...
Most Reverend John Dennis Corriveau, O.F.M., CAP. joins the Sundays at CTU community for Franciscan...
Matthew's Gospel begins with the genealogy of Joseph, the husband of Mary, and the reader knows, the foster father of Jesus. Why mention Joseph's lineage at all if Jesus is not his biological son? As the evangelist goes on to demonstrate, Joseph is very much a main character in his infancy narrative. In this day when hypenations bescribe family relationships, step-, foster-, and half-, often do more to seperate us than connect us. Perhaps by reflecting on Matthew's portrayal of Joseph, we can come to understand that what makes the family "Holy" has less to do with biology and much more to do with love.
In March 2008 a cover story of Christian-Muslim conflicts in Nigeria appeared in the Atlantic....