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Voices
Cecilia González-Andrieu, PhD. is professor of theology at Loyola Marymount University and a contributing writer for America. Among her many publications is Bridge to Wonder: Art as a Gospel of Beauty. She is also an advisor to Discerning Deacons, the Ignatian Solidarity Network and Catholic Women Preach.
FaithLast Take
Cecilia González-Andrieu
Young adults are ready and willing to take on responsibility for and within the church. And many already have.
FaithFeatures
Cecilia González-Andrieu
Just as I saw with my coworkers, the expressions of faith of the poor and vulnerable are occurring against a background of chaos and fear.
Students at Loyola Marymount University organized a march of solidarity in support of undocumented immigrants.
Politics & SocietyFeatures
Cecilia González-Andrieu
Catholics are called to act and to equip ourselves with truth-telling tools to transform the polemics of immigration into a grace-filled response to human suffering.
Politics & SocietyLast Take
Cecilia González-Andrieu
DACA is a small and imperfect step in realizing what we Christians assert as truth about the dignity of all.
Arts & Culture
Cecilia González-Andrieu
Latin American towns, like their exemplars in Spain, reflect in their organization the way the inhabitants lived together as a people.
FaithShort Take
Cecilia González-Andrieu
The distinction between the disciplines of theological work and how these function in our common life is necessary.
Arts & CultureArt
Cecilia González-Andrieu
At first encounter, Harmonia Rosales’s “The Creation of God” is striking. It is beautiful and familiar. Like Michelangelo’s “The Creation of Adam,” Rosales’s painting portrays the creation of humankind. However, the skin tones, gender and story being depicted by the artist are strikingly different.
FaithFeatures
Cecilia González-Andrieu
Life lived intensely in God’s love is never convenient.
Politics & SocietyLast Take
Cecilia González-Andrieu
We have not loved our nation in spite of its flaws—too often we have covered over those flaws and allowed them to grow.
Politics & Society
Margot PattersonKevin E. StuartJane Sloan PetersCecilia González-AndrieuC. C. PecknoldJim McDermott
A majority of Catholics—52 percent—voted for Mr. Trump.