VATICAN CITY - Pope Francis named 71-year-old Cardinal Giuseppe Versaldi, president of the Prefecture of the Economic Affairs of the Holy See since 2011, to be the new prefect of the Congregation for Catholic Education.
Reflecting on my Rome trip
PHOTO GALLERY: YSN reporter Vincent Mastromatteo shares what he saw at the Vatican when he visited last year.
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Of all the places a Catholic can be during Holy Week, few can beat Rome. The bustling capital of Italy is awash with pilgrims that week, and last year, 21 classmates and I were among them.
Higher Education
The Catholic Register is proud to present our special feature on Higher Education.
This feature would not be possible without our generous supporters:
The Higher Education special feature came out in the Feb. 28 print and digital issues.
Over the weekend, we'll be adding articles on the CatholicRegister.org homepage for readers to browse.
Here are the articles that you can expect this Sunday:
- Catholic universities take next step in Truth and Reconciliation, by Jean Ko Din, The Catholic Register
- When it comes to theology, Newman bookstore is the place to get it all, by Lasha Morningstar
- New Brescia principal finds right fit, by Evan Boudreau, The Catholic Register
- Saint Mary’s enlists peers in mental health counselling, by Michael Swan, The Catholic Register
- Ignoring spiritual dimension education’s ‘biggest crisis,’ by Junno Arocho Esteves
Five people who helped me understand myself
Although I grew up in a loving, safe and nurturing family and community, one of the dominant memories of my childhood and teenage years is that of being restless and somehow discontent. My life always seemed too small, too confined, a life away from what was important in the world. I was forever longing to be more connected to life and I feared that other people didn’t feel that way and that I was somehow singular and unhealthy in my restlessness.
Accepting truth, whatever its cloak
When I was a student in the seminary, I had two kinds of teachers: One kind, precisely because they were fiercely loyal to all that is Christian and Catholic, would have us read great secular thinkers but always with the intent of wanting to help show where these thinkers were wrong. Our intellectual task as Catholic seminarians, they would tell us, is to be able to defend Catholicism against the kinds of criticisms found in the writings of these secular, sometimes anti-Christian thinkers and to keep our own faith and teaching free of their influence.