David Copperfield by Charles DickensPAUL JOSEPH PREZZIA
It is a true truism that art imitates life.
Come, O Key of David!ARCHBISHOP LUIS MARIA MARTINEZ
O Jesus, you who open and no one can close, open to me light, love, happiness, and life forever!"
Another War an interview with David LimbaughKATHRYN JEAN LOPEZ
Persecution that's the name for it. Tolerance might be the highest virtue in our popular culture, but it doesn't often extend to Christians these days. Christians are increasingly being driven from public life, denied their First Amendment rights, and even actively discriminated against for their beliefs. So argues David Limbaugh in his new book.
David Brooks' "Itinerarium Mentis in Deum"FR. ROBERT P. IMBELLI
Almost fifty years ago, the renowned sociologist of religion, Peter Berger, wrote a short yet suggestive book, A Rumor of Angels.
Son of David, Lord of AllRONDA CHERVIN
In proclaiming the Father as divine, we understand the beauty of created life as springing from the absolute pinnacle of being.
One priest's impact on the New York Times' David BrooksCATHOLIC NEWS AGENCY
New York Times columnist, best-selling author and all-around pundit David Brooks has written a book making the case for a societal return to morality.
The Truth About Stem Cells: An interview with Dr. David PrenticeKATHRYN JEAN LOPEZ
David Prentice, professor of life sciences at Indiana State University and an adjunct professor of medical & molecular genetics at the Indiana University School of Medicine, explains why human embryonic stem-cell research is illegal, immoral, and unnecessary.
A brief history of Gregorian chant from King David to the presentPETER KWASNIEWSKI
One might think that something called "plainchant" or "plainsong" would not furnish much to talk about; after all, its very name says it’s plain and it's chant.
Intellectual Stormtroopers Force Suspension of Scottish Academic for Not Criticizing David HumeTHEODORE DALRYMPLE
A senior academic at Edinburgh University, Neil Thin, Ph.D., who teaches social anthropology, has been suspended by the university from what are called "student-facing activities," formerly known as teaching. . .
Shakespeare On Babies: The Bard makes a case against childlessnessDAVID MORRISON
While the percentage of people choosing only one, two or no children may have reached its high point in the contemporary developed world, there is evidence that the conflict over whether to have large or small families is centuries old, at least in England.
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