Parish Articles

Category: Media Watch

Druid Hill Farmers Market

The Druid Hill Farmers Market continues working to bring you local farm-fresh fruits, and vegetables. We’d love it if you joined us in supporting our local farmers by attending our October market! Location: 3100 Swann Drive, Baltimore, MD 21217 Adjacent to the Rawlings Conservatory The Druid Hill Farmers market is

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Bunting Peace and Justice Speaker Series – Carolyn Forché

Voice of Witness: An Evening with Carolyn Forché October 7, 2021, 6 p.m., Loyola university, MD, 4th Floor Program Room Renowned as a “poet of witness,” Carolyn Forché is the author of five books of poetry, including Gathering The Tribes (Yale University Press, 1976), The Country Between Us (Harper and Row, 1982), The Angel of

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Bunting Peace and Justice Speaker Series – Doug Tallamy

Douglas Tallamy, “Nature’s Best Hope” October 7, 2021, 6 p.m., Loyola university, MD, 4th Floor Program Room Doug Tallamy is the T. A. Baker Professor of Agriculture in the Department of Entomology and Wildlife Ecology at the University of Delaware. He is the author of Bringing Nature Home (2007), The Living Landscape (2014; co-authored

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Cannonball Examen: The Cry of the Earth as a Cannonball Moment

Written by: Eric Clayton A cannonball moment, the Ignatian tradition suggests, is a moment of both agony and opportunity. The phrase is a literal one, referring to a specific moment in the story of St. Ignatius of Loyola, when a wartime injury spurred a lifelong conversion. The soldier, Iñigo de

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Author Q&A: The Spiritual Work of Racial Justice

ISN spoke with Patrick Saint-Jean, S.J., author of The Spiritual Work of Racial Justice: A Month of Mediations with Ignatius of Loyola, published by Anamchara Books. Saint-Jean designed the book to lead the reader through a month-long Ignatian “retreat,” focusing on racial justice, following the format of St. Ignatius’ Spiritual

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A Parish Journey for Racial Justice & Equity

Wednesday, October 27 Join ISN for the the next session of A Parish Journey for Racial Justice & Equity, titled Let’s Talk About Social Sin. You’ll hear from speaker Tom Ulrich, author of On Earth as it is in Heaven. Learn more.

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Equity as a Core Value of Soccer Without Borders

UN International Day of PeaceEquity at Soccer Without Borders Every September 21 we celebrate the International Day of Peace, a day that observes 24 hours of non-violence and cease-fire around the world. But peace is not achieved solely through the absence of violence. It requires valuing every person’s humanity and

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JARS – Jesuit Antiracism Solidarity East

JARS East is a space for those who have a passion for racial justice to come together to pray, reflect, and act.  JARS is open to all connected to the Province in any way: Jesuits, colleagues and friends.  Known primarily for our monthly consolation & desolation reflections on racism, which

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Caring for Our Common Home & The Renewing the Earth Campaign

The Universal Apostolic Preferences (UAPs) and the Laudato Si’ goals and action plan insist that the Jesuits pursue ecological conversion.  With transformed hearts, hearing the integrally connected cry of the Earth and the cry of the poor, we are called to the front lines where individuals and communities are responding

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The Seventh Sunday of Easter

Jim Carrey played Fletcher Reede in a film “Liar Liar.” Everyone knew that Fletcher lied his way through life, even his son. While blowing out the candles on his birthday cake, this little boy wished that his father would stop lying for just one day. This wish turned Fletcher’s life

The Sixth Sunday of Easter

In yesterday’s Gospel, Jesus used the agricultural analogy of a vine to teach us that two lessons:  a)     There must be regular pruning of fruitless branches. b)    Branches that remain close to the vine will bear fruit.  The first lesson, that of pruning, hit home for me personally. I’m wearing a cap on

The Seventh Sunday of Easter

Jim Carrey played Fletcher Reede in a film “Liar Liar.” Everyone knew that Fletcher lied his way through life, even his son. While blowing out the candles on his birthday cake, this little boy wished that his father would stop lying for just one day. This wish turned Fletcher’s life

The Sixth Sunday of Easter

In yesterday’s Gospel, Jesus used the agricultural analogy of a vine to teach us that two lessons:  a)     There must be regular pruning of fruitless branches. b)    Branches that remain close to the vine will bear fruit.  The first lesson, that of pruning, hit home for me personally. I’m wearing a cap on

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