News

Unable to attend the Good Friday ceremony in person for the third consecutive year, the pope offered deep meditations for the ...
Much like similar derogatory titles “siren” and “fury”, the term “harpy” is derived from a group of monstrous female figures ...
Archaeologists found another example of a crucified heel 49 years later in Cambridgeshire, England, in a grave in an ancient ...
Amidst the decline of Catholicism in France, the reconstruction of the Abbey of St. Wandrille emerges as a powerful sign of ...
With a new monograph publishing this month, the Japanese designer, at 83, discusses his pioneering technique, lifelong ...
It was created in the 7th century BC - It was found in the mud in 1914, then disappeared, ending up in the Metropolitan ...
It once happened that Rabbi Eliezer, Rabbi Yehoshua, Rabbi Elazar Ben Azaryah, Rabbi Akiva and Rabbi Tarfon were reclining in ...
Je suis né croyant.” I’ve been snagging on that phrase for decades. It means, “I was born believing.” The mystic modernist ...
However, not all doubt can be resolved by correct understanding. Faith involves revealed mysteries that go beyond our human ...
Believers like Garry Tan are flipping the script in the venture capital world, making faith matter just as much as the ...
In 1910, Baron Jacques d’Adelswärd-Fersen, an opium-addicted French poet (whose neo-Classical villa attracts tourists today), staged a human sacrifice to the ancient Roman sun god Mithras.
A large number of indirect pieces of evidence point to the belief that in ancient Greece, killing a dolphin was punishable by death. Scholars and historians have studied the depiction of dolphins in ...