Marked by success in bringing retreatants closer to God, the “Spiritual Exercises” of St. Ignatius of Loyola, published in ...
31 (UPI) --Can a charter school be religious? The Supreme Court decision about St. Isidore ... or prohibiting the free exercise thereof." The question is whether a state violates the free exercise ...
When Mother Teresa picked up the sick, cleaned and tended to them with her own hands and took them "home", she didn't ask for the religious identity.
In some recent cases where those portions of the Constitution have been in tension, the Supreme Court came down on the side of protecting religious exercise ... The proposed St. Isidore of ...
Daniel Reece attended church every Sunday as a child growing up in Connecticut, and he went to a Roman Catholic middle school. His parents are still deeply observant; his mother goes to Mass every ...
An artist rendition of the new St. Teresa of Avila Catholic School campus. St. Teresa of Avila Catholic School opened its doors 67 years ago on the west side of Carson City, where it has taught ...
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Training for the junior varsity and varsity girls basketball teams at St. Teresa’s Academy does not stop when they are dismissed from practice. It also involves historical ...
First, it’s ridiculous to believe that service to refugees isn’t free exercise all by itself. In fact, serving the poor is one of the purest forms of religious service that exists. It’s ...
Construing Wisconsin v. Yoder, the Fourth Circuit found no free-exercise burden because no one was forced "to change their religious beliefs or conduct." The question presented is: Do public ...
In early January, Catholic news outlets released a reminder ... Also in December 2024, officials launched an AI-powered "digital twin" of St. Peter’s Basilica, created through a partnership ...
ruling the parents were unlikely to succeed because they could not show “that the no-opt-out policy burdens their religious exercise.” That ruling was upheld by a divided panel of the U.S ...
ST. LOUIS — An annual religious conference that attracts about 60,000 people annually will return to America’s Center downtown next year, the St. Louis tourism bureau announced Thursday.