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by Christin Tomy

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July 17, 2015
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Columns
  • Read more about Let us play: Reflections on holiness and humor

I have laughed more in the past two years than almost any other time in my life. Coincidentally, it has also been two years since I entered my religious community. When I first began spending time with sisters, one thing surprised me: how much they laughed. Sure, they possessed a number of other attractive qualities, like prayerfulness, courage, hospitality, humility, compassion and a commitment to justice. I had sort of expected these qualities.

by GSR Staff

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July 17, 2015
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  • Read more about July 17, 2015

"A true ecological approach always becomes a social approach; it must integrate questions of justice in debates on the environment, so as to hear both the cry of the earth and the cry of the poor."

by Vinnie Rotondaro

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July 16, 2015
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  • Read more about Ruling against sisters latest, not last action in Obamacare cases

The recent court ruling against the Little Sisters of the Poor, a congregation of Roman Catholic women religious, marked the latest, but likely not the last, dustup in the debate over the Affordable Care Act’s (ACA) contraception mandate. 

by Sophia Park

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July 16, 2015
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Columns
  • Read more about A legacy of border-crossing spirit

Commentary - A popular current topic regarding religious life in the U.S. is the “middle space.” In fact, LCWR dedicated its Winter 2015 volume of The Occasional Papers to this particular theme. The middle space – which can also be called the “in-between space” or “the borderland” – signifies adaptability, ingenuity and mobility in the midst of uncertainty. In the early history of immigrant women religious in the U.S. (1727-1917), I clearly see the border crossing spirit regarding adaptability. Many religious communities’ chronicles show that the first group of sisters came to the U.S. to launch their apostolic work, becoming immigrants serving immigrants. How can the border-crossing spirit be applied to today’s society?

by Joachim Pham

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July 16, 2015
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  • Read more about Single women offer comforts of home to orphans

In Vietnam where parents abandon children when a spouse dies or they otherwise cannot afford to care for them, the Austrian-based SOS Children's Villages network offers a way for the children to have a stable life. There are 17 such "orphan villages" in this country of about 9.5 million people, where women who have committed themselves to remaining single provide maternal care. Often they are Catholic and have the help of women religious in educating their children.

This story appears in the See for Yourself feature series. View the full series.

by Nancy Linenkugel

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July 16, 2015
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  • Read more about She can't even

See for Yourself - “Aren’t you listening? She can’t keep her life together. You don’t have to have a lot of possessions or be wealthy or have the fancy things. Just take care of what you have. So my friend is one big fat frustration to me because I truly don’t understand why she can’t even.”

by GSR Staff

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July 15, 2015
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  • Read more about July 15, 2015

"The sun, the earth, love, friends, our very breath are part of the bouquet."

by Dawn Araujo-Hawkins

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July 15, 2015
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  • Read more about Ethiopia is now polio-free. But what about the rest of the world?

Three Stats and a Map - Earlier this week, the World Health Organization announced that Ethiopia was finally polio free. Yet, polio, not to mention other preventable diseases, are still found in other countries around the world.

Julie Vieira

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Maxine Kollasch

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July 15, 2015
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  • Read more about Prayer in the fast lane

From A Nun's Life podcasts - No time to spare for prayer? Road-tested ideas to rev up your prayer life!

This story appears in the Notes from the Field feature series. View the full series.

by Angela Mahoney

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July 15, 2015
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  • Read more about Salesian sisters from the world share common goal in Ethiopia

Notes from the Field - Reading this blog, you may be sitting and relaxing after a long day or week at work or you may still be at work wishing you were sitting and relaxing at home. Either way, I want you to stop for a moment, close your eyes and think, “Is this a big world we live in or a small world?”

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