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This Morning, Mother Angelica says it's always pizza time, [BN]'s Jay Skurski joins us to talk mandatory minicamp, we take a ride down to The Villages, and Michael Lehman joins us to talk about the new Allman Brothers documentary & Gregg Allman's connection to Buffalo. Follow us on Facebook, Instagram and X. Listen to past episodes on 97Rock. Follow the Show on Apple, Spotify or Amazon MusicSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
A Question and Answer session with Father Leonard Mary on his personal background and his encounters with Mother Angelica, including many miracles that have happened in relation to her.
Dónal presents a Lourdes special while Fr Eamonn is on the Cloyne diocesan pilgrimage there, including a live report from his co-presenter from the shrine itself. The episode also features the third and final part of an interview with John Pridmore on faith, media, and the experience of carrying his testimony into hostile rooms — […] L'articolo Hope in the Media – Lourdes and Mother Angelica's Miraculous Antenna – Fr. Eamonn McCarthy & Dónal O'Sullivan-Latchford proviene da Radio Maria.
Dave's been throwing parties. Three in four days. Confirmation sponsor for a friend's son, family and friends over the next night, and then — because the universe has a sense of humor — some local gentleman decided to remodel Dave's brick mailbox. With his truck. At speed. Bricks were found over a hundred feet away. The guy left his license plate behind, which Dave is now holding like a man who accidentally picked up evidence and doesn't know what to do with it. The driver's fine. Well — he's in jail. But he's alive. Dave wants him to know that God's mercy is always ready and present, even for the man who turned a brand-new brick mailbox into gravel.Meanwhile, Adam got a new plum tree. Planted a maple. He's getting oaks for the pig pen so they'll drop acorns someday. One of his chickens died in a water barrel trap that nobody designed on purpose — the lid flipped, the chicken couldn't get out. Farm life. And then the real news: baby Mary is doing better. Haylee got to hold her. Adam held her for over three hours — only his second time since she was born in February. Three months of NICU, and the man finally got to just sit with his daughter. Praise God. Keep those prayers coming.Also — Adam's turning 40 on June 2nd. And Lady Pamela is due with their next baby on June 4th. They floated the idea of recording an episode in the delivery room. Pamela has not been consulted.This week we're sipping 13th Colony Distilleries Southern Rye Whiskey, French Oak Finish, Small Batch — 47.5% ABV. Platinum award-winning. Silky texture with hints of rye, apricot, and brown sugar. The rye's there but it doesn't overpower — still has a lot of bourbon elements to it. About forty bucks. That's a great buy.Then the conversation turns to something Adam's son Jude sparked. Jude — Adam's second oldest — just finished reading the entire Bible, Genesis through Revelation, straight through. Now he's reading the Council of Trent Catechism. He's a kid. Nobody told him to do this. He just had good books lying around the house and picked them up. That's the whole point.The virtue of study — studiositas — isn't what school taught us it was. It's not cramming. It's not memorizing facts to dump after the test. Aquinas calls it a habit of the mind ordered towards truth. Classical education at its best doesn't fill your head — it forms the way you think. The more you read rightly, the more you can arrive at correct conclusions through a sound process, not just recall. Study leads to contemplation. Contemplation is rest in truth. And it's not about finishing the book. If you're reading to check the box, you've already lost the plot. Sit with it. Let yourself be carried. The intellectual life doesn't compete with the family — it serves the family.From there, Adam and Dave go back and forth on the books that actually formed them. Adam leads with Joseph Pieper's In Tune with the World — a short, devastating argument for why festivity dies when we strip the divine out of celebration. Dave counters with The Soul of the Apostolate — the book that reordered his understanding of what has to come first before any ministry means anything. Adam brings John Senior's The Restoration of Christian Culture — hard opinions, harder truths, and a quote worth sitting with: the virtue of study requires a canon, a body of great works proven across time. Without tradition to guide what's worth studying, you're just chasing novelty.Dave goes deep on Fr. Timothy Gallagher's The Discernment of Spirits — a practical walkthrough of St. Ignatius's rules that shed light on the stages of the spiritual life and how the enemy shifts tactics as you grow. Adam responds with Raymond Arroyo's biography of Mother Angelica — a story of suffering, faithfulness, and a woman who said yes without knowing where it would lead. Dave makes a case for the Psalms — Psalm 51, the De Profundis in Latin, and the realization that there's a psalm for every moment of a man's life, and he'd been skimming past them for years.Adam goes deep cut: Fr. Paul Murray's Aquinas at Prayer — a book that reoriented his understanding of St. Thomas from pure intellect to contemplative soul. Dave brings Divine Mercy in My Soul by St. Faustina — hundreds of pages of our Lord's words on mercy that are sometimes scandalously generous. Adam throws in Simon Sinek's Start with Why as the non-Catholic book that changed how he thought about business, marriage, and fatherhood. Both men land on fiction that haunts them — Adam with Sigrid Undset's Kristin Lavransdatter, Dave with Candice Millard's Hero of the Empire on young Churchill. They touch on Lencioni's Five Dysfunctions of a Team, Gone with the Wind, the bishop chapters of Les Misérables, Neil Postman's Amusing Ourselves to Death, and close with John Senior's Thousand Good Books — the canon itself, the list that connects it all.They end where they always end: with Plato. They're halfway through the Republic in their great books group. David sits on the dumb couch. He knows he sits on the dumb couch. He's fine with it.Raise your glass.TOPICS COVEREDDave's brick mailbox obliterated by a truck — bricks found 100 feet away, driver in jail, license plate left behindThree parties in four days at Porter Prairie: confirmation, family gathering, and involuntary demolitionDave building a grain cradle for his scythe for the upcoming grain harvestAdam's new plum tree, maple tree, and oak trees planned for the pig penThe chicken that died in a water barrel trap nobody designed on purposeBaby Mary update — doing better, Adam held her for three hours, Haylee held her tooAdam turning 40 on June 2nd and Lady Pamela due June 4thBourbon of the week: 13th Colony Distilleries Southern Rye Whiskey, French Oak Finish, 47.5% ABVJude Minihan reading the entire Bible and now the Council of Trent Catechism — and nobody told him toWhy having good books lying around the house matters more than assigned readingThe virtue of studiositas — Aquinas on study as a habit of the mind ordered towards truthStudy isn't cramming — it's forming the way we think, not filling our headsWhy finishing the book isn't the point — sit with it, let yourself be carriedThe intellectual life doesn't compete with family — it serves the familyJoseph Pieper's In Tune with the World — why festivity dies without the divineThe Soul of the Apostolate — what has to come first before any ministry mattersJohn Senior's The Restoration of Christian Culture — hard opinions and the necessity of a canonFr. Timothy Gallagher's The Discernment of Spirits — St. Ignatius's rules made practicalRaymond Arroyo's biography of Mother Angelica — suffering, faithfulness, and saying yesThe Psalms as treasure — Psalm 51, the De Profundis in Latin, and why Dave had been skimming past themFr. Paul Murray's Aquinas at Prayer — reorienting Aquinas from intellect to contemplativeSt. Faustina's Divine Mercy in My Soul — mercy so generous it's almost scandalousSimon Sinek's Start with Why — a non-Catholic book that changed everythingSigrid Undset's Kristin Lavransdatter — fiction that haunts you because it doesn't read like fictionCandice Millard's Hero of the Empire — young Churchill before the cigar and the brandyPatrick Lencioni's Five Dysfunctions of a Team — why hard conversations are acts of charityGone with the Wind — Rhett Butler as a man whose virtues take a lifetime to findThe bishop chapters of Les Misérables — Hugo's best character, written by a man who wasn't even a fan of the ChurchNeil Postman's Amusing Ourselves to Death — prophetic in 1985, terrifying nowJohn Senior's Thousand Good Books — the canon that connects all the great worksThe Count of Monte Cristo as a commentary on Dante's InfernoPlato's dialogues — the Republic, Euthyphro, the Symposium, and why you need a great books groupAdam sits on the dumb couch at great books night and he's fine with itREFERENCED IN THIS EPISODEBooks & Writings:In Tune with the World: A Theory on Festivity by Joseph PieperLeisure, the Basis of Culture by Joseph Pieper (mentioned)The Intellectual Life by A.G. SertillangesThe Soul of the Apostolate (Dave's pick)The Restoration of Christian Culture by John SeniorThe Death of Christian Culture by John Senior (mentioned)The Discernment of Spirits by Fr. Timothy Gallagher (based on St. Ignatius's rules)Mother Angelica: The Remarkable Story of a Nun, Her Nerve, and a Network by Raymond ArroyoAquinas at Prayer by Fr. Paul Murray, O.P.Divine Mercy in My Soul by St. Maria FaustinaStart with Why by Simon SinekKristin Lavransdatter by Sigrid UndsetAnna Karenina by Leo TolstoyThe Five Dysfunctions of a Team by Patrick LencioniGone with the Wind by Margaret MitchellHero of the Empire: The Boer War, a...
Adam went out to the shop and heard birds. Which would be fine — except the shop has closed-cell spray foam insulation. Thick stuff. Solid. Apparently it doesn't matter, because the birds had been pecking through it anyway, six spots deep, living inside the walls like they owned the place. He grabbed a can of expanding foam, took his six-year-old Leo out to help seal the gaps, and watched Leo immediately stick his hand in the wet foam. It went everywhere. On Leo. On the shop doors. On a previous car that is now long gone. If you've ever tried to wipe expanding foam off anything, you know how the rest of that goes.He opened the show with that story. Then Jim Spencer showed up — back after a long hiatus, cowboy hat on, ready to weigh in — and they cracked a bottle of Kilchoman's 14th Edition, an Islay scotch that doesn't get the attention of a Laphroaig or Ardbeg but probably deserves it. A $110 bottle. Jim put it at a 3.91 on the yummy scale (it was a prime number recording day, so that's out of 7 — work it out yourself). They all agreed it was legitimately good.Before getting into the main topic, Dave gave an update on Baby Mary. She's been on a paralytic to help her grow, and they're trying to wean her off it. She tolerated the second attempt better than the first, but not well enough. They'll try again Monday or Tuesday. Pray for her blood pressure to stay stable when she comes off, and for her heart and lungs to stop fighting the ventilator. Dave said it directly and without dramatics, and that's the right way to hear it.The episode is about the dinner table. Not as a feel-good idea — as a liturgy.Adam had done a piece on this for his Substack: what makes a good day? Not an emotional high. A good day. He landed on three things: early morning prayer and reading, honing his craft in some way, and making it to the dinner table. They spent the hour unpacking why that third one carries so much weight.Dave brought in the biblical thread — Abraham hosting God and the angels, Moses eating with the elders on the mountain, the Passover meal, the Last Supper, Christ asking for fish in his glorified body just to show the disciples he wasn't a ghost, the Road to Emmaus where he revealed himself in the breaking of bread. The pattern is not subtle. God keeps showing up at tables. There might be something to that.Adam made the distinction between communication and communion. A lecture is communicative. The dinner table — done right — is a place of communion. The giving and the receiving. The statement and the response. That's not an accident. It's what the table is for.They got into the practical mechanics: one conversation at a time, husband and wife starting the conversation before the kids are brought in, ending dinner with prayer for the souls in purgatory, the escalating formality through the day (breakfast is just survival, lunch gets the flowers on the table, dinner gets the candles). Dave's daughters were wearing hoop skirts on the grass at the contra dance they hosted the night before. He mentioned a Clear Creek inspiration — the monks don't even sit at breakfast. He's pondering it. Adam is not.The story that landed hardest was from Alabama. He and Dave were on their way to EWTN — they recorded an episode in Mother Angelica's office, and Adam has video of Dave in makeup, which is apparently a treasure. They had dinner at the home of a man named Charlie Remore, a friend of a friend they'd never met. Large family. Long dinner table. Every child had a job, and they knew it cold. One managed silverware, one managed plates. When dinner ended, one stood up and cleared. Adam tried to stack the plates to help, and Charlie's kid corrected him — politely, but clearly. Don't stack the plates. We have to wash both sides. That's my job.That's disinterested service. The Catechism (CCC 2223) actually names it. Charlie's household had made it habitual. No one was waiting for a thank-you. The family is the mission.The picky eater section was, as promised, a hot take. Adam doesn't tolerate it. Eat what's served or it goes in the fridge and that's what you're eating next time. He said it, Dave agreed, and they both acknowledged it's hard — the chicken nuggets are right there, it's easier, you're tired — but the long-term cost of caving is worse than the short-term cost of holding the line. Your kid spreading butter with their fingers in your presence, knowing the rule, is an event that requires a response. Even when it happens to be this morning.After dinner prayer. Pray it. For the faithful departed. It's been jettisoned by most Catholic families, including strong ones, and it shouldn't be. You're feeding those who can no longer feed themselves. That's what it is.Raise your glass.TOPICS COVEREDBirds pecking through closed-cell spray foam — and why Leo is now microdosing industrial chemicalsKilkeman's 14th Edition Islay scotch: Jim Spencer's 3.91 on the yummy scale (out of 7 — prime number day)Baby Mary update: weaning off the paralytic, prayer request for blood pressure stabilityWhat makes a good day — Adam's three metrics: morning prayer, honing the craft, the dinner tableGod keeps showing up at tables: Abraham, Moses, Passover, Last Supper, Road to Emmaus, the glorified body asking for fishCommunication vs. communion — and why the dinner table is the latterDave's contra dance at Niles Ranch and Fecundity Farm — live violin, Jonathan and Jessica Hodge, Becca Niles, ~20 adults, a lot of kidsJonathan Hodge's classroom liturgy: "Why are we here? To learn from the great men and women who have come before us."Adam's daily school drop-off call and response: "Today's a great day" / "To be a great saint"Charlie Remoure's table in Alabama: disinterested service in a large family done rightOne conversation at a time — why the loudest voices always win in a free-for-all, and why that's not the goalHusband and wife start the conversation before the kids — the table as marriage prep for your childrenEscalating formality: breakfast informal, lunch flowers, dinner candlesAfter dinner prayer for the souls in purgatory — and why it's been quietly dropped by most Catholic familiesPicky eaters: Adam's position, the fridge play, and why every picky eater somehow likes chicken nuggetsREFERENCED IN THIS EPISODECharlie Remoure — dinner host, Alabama; friend of a mutual friend; large family with exceptional dinner table cultureJonathan Hodge — teacher, Tulsa Classical Academy; contra dance musician; Jonathan Hodge's classroom liturgyJessica Hodge — violinist, piano teacher to the Niles kidsBecca (Dave's sister) — violinistLittle House on the Prairie: The Long Winter — Laura Ingalls WilderEWTN — mentioned in passing (recording trip, Mother Angelica's office)The Catechism of the Catholic Church, para. 2223 — disinterested serviceDeuteronomy 6 — instruction of children "when you sit in your house"Clear Creek Monastery — mentioned re: standing breakfast, monastic orderFather Ketterer — shout-out listenerMatt — listener, North Dakota, protecting the northern borderGage — listener, home from deployment, birthday shout-outSponsor: Select International Tours — selectinternationaltours.com Adam and Dave have used them. When they decided to lead their first pilgrimage and started asking around, Select was the name everyone gave them. Whether you want to lead a pilgrimage or join one, they're the real deal — go see what they've got.
On today's episode, Johnnette Williams celebrates the 103rd birthday of Mother Angelica!
On today's episode, Johnnette Williams celebrates the 103rd birthday of Mother Angelica!
Marcus imagines a conversation between Mother Angelica and Hitler, who share a birthday, and Fr. Sebastian Wolfe reflects on the sufferings of the Holy Family.
Matt Swaim joins to highlight this week's The Journey Home (airing tomorrow night at 8ET on EWTN). Andriana Gonzalez talks about producing the upcoming docudrama "That They May Be One". T's Two Sense looks at the life and legacy of Mother Angelica, and is later joined by Fr. John Paul Mary of EWTN to reflect upon Mother Angelica on her 103rd birthday!
Pope Leo XIV is set for a historic visit to Monaco. Meanwhile, Mass was held in memory of Mother Angelica at St. Peter's Basilica. And, Chicago Catholic parents have appealed to the Vatican to keep their school open.
Ref.: Martin Rothweiler, Programmdirektor EWTN-TVRef.: Amelie Beierle, Social Media-Redakteurin EWTN-TV Eine Nonne, die in der Hinterhofgarage ihres Klosters einen internationalen Fernsehsender gründet: Die Geschichte von Mutter Angelica ist wahrlich filmreif. Aber hinter dem quirligen Unternehmergeist der US-amerikanischen Ordensfrau verbirgt sich eine tiefgründige Seele voller Lebenserfahrung und Weisheit. Mother Angelica hat vom Leben nichts geschenkt bekommen - und wurde doch in in ihren Augen von Gott mit Gnaden überhäuft. Das wollte sie den Menschen weitergeben. Zu ihrem 10. Todestag erzählen Martin Rothweiler und Amelie Beierle von EWTN-TV uns von dem berührenden Leben und den zahllosen Anekdoten rund um die humorvolle Gründerin des weltweit größten katholischen Fernsehsenders.
The Vatican announced that Venerable Fulton J. Sheen will be beatified on September 24. Meanwhile, Bishop Seitz of El Paso speaks about the “grave moral evil” of the mass detention and deportation of immigrants. And, as this Friday marks 10 years since the passing of Mother Angelica, we reflect on the profound impact she had on viewers around the world.
March 24 marks the feast of St. Óscar Romero, a radiant witness of faith. Meanwhile, Trump has a new DHS Secretary, former Senator Markwayne Mullin. And, ahead of the 10th anniversary of EWTN foundress Mother Angelica's passing, we reflect on her global impact and her faith that moved a mountain.
Pope Leo advances Fr. Flanagan's cause for sainthood, declaring him Venerable. Meanwhile, the traditional Palm Sunday procession in Jerusalem has been canceled due to the Iran war. And, we remember EWTN foundress Mother Angelica's global impact ahead of the tenth anniversary of her passing.
Host Stan Ketcik interviews the founder and longtime volunteers about the origins and growth of Catholic Spirit Radio, from a small low-power station to a 16-station network inspired by Mother Angelica. Bishops' greetings, listener support, and the role of dedicated volunteers are highlighted throughout the episode. The episode also outlines anniversary events, fundraising efforts, volunteer opportunities, and future plans including station expansions, a gala, and community outreach, emphasizing prayer, providence, and continued service to listeners.
Pedir ajuda não é fraqueza. É caminho de graça.Nesta meditação, refletimos sobre algo simples — e ao mesmo tempo profundamente exigente: aprender a pedir. Pedir a Deus. Pedir aos outros. Pedir sem medo, sem orgulho, sem manipulação. Pedir como filhos.A partir de histórias marcantes da vida de Madre Angélica — desde mafiosos construindo uma gruta mariana até o nascimento improvável de uma rede de TV católica — vemos como Deus age quando alguém ousa pedir… e confiar.
Former EWTN President Doug Keck joins Fr. Mark Mary on Power & Witness to explain why trust still matters in Catholic media amid scandals, digital chaos, and cultural doubt. He reflects on 30 years at EWTN, the rise of lay evangelization, young Catholics (especially men) seeking solid tradition, Mother Angelica's legacy of bold faith and redemptive suffering, and the network's role as a reliable touchstone today.
Naoimh Barbieri talks to Matthias Conroy about trusting the Lord and Mother Angelica's great faith and trust. The relics of St Therese making their way around the country and the book called “Abandonment to God”, the way of peace of St Therese by Pere Joel Giubert. Click this link to listen back to more Breakfast […] L'articolo RM Breakfast Show – Focus on the Lord in Advent- Naoimh Barbieri and Matthias Conroy proviene da Radio Maria.
Doug talks with Fr. Joseph Mary Wolfe, MFVA about Mother Angelica's advice for keeping Christ at the center of the Advent and Christmas season and all your holiday celebrations!
Fr. Mitch and Fr. Joseph Mary Wolfe discuss a series of meditations from Mother Angelica which offer wise advice on how to put Christ at the center of your holiday celebrations.
Fr. Joseph Mary Wolfe talks preparing for Advent and a new book from EWTN Publishing "Advent and Christmas with Mother Angelica". Indira Rice, president of the Washington DC Legatus Chapter joins to discuss the integration of faith into your business. Plus, Mike Fulmer joins to shed light on the teaching of the Fourth Cup, and T's Two Sense looks at St. Frances Xavier Cabrini!
Matt Swaim visits to highlight tonight's The Journey Home on EWTN TV. Ken Ogorek visits to talk over Year A of Breaking the Bread: A Biblical Devotional for Catholics. Father Joseph Mary Wolfe also joins to discuss preparing for Advent and new book from EWTN Publishing "Advent and Christmas with Mother Angelica". Plus, Gail Buckley-Barringer with the Scripture Verse of the Week!
In this episode, Matt interviews Raymond Arroyo—host of EWTN's "The World Over," New York Times Best Selling author, award-winning producer, chart topping vocalist and broadcaster, and podcast host. The conversation touches on the papacy (specifically the differences between JPII, Benedict XVI and Francis), Vatican II, what Mother Angelica was like in-person (and he does the BEST imitation of the Reverend Mother's voice), Pope Leo's stance on the TLM, and much more.
Hour 1 for 10/9/25 Drew tells the amazing story of Our Lady of Champion and Adele Brice (1:00). Then, callers share their stores of healing: Mother Angelica (31:20), daughter had disabilities (39:17), healing of endometriosis (41:17), and my wife has had 5 medical miracles (45:08). Link: https://championshrine.org/
On this episode of Catholic Conversations, hosts Paul Garcia and Will Tatro speak with Kathy Fulton and several pilgrims who traveled to the Shrine of the Most Blessed Sacrament and EWTN in Alabama. Guests describe the shrine's golden beauty, cloistered nuns, times of adoration and Mass, behind-the-scenes visits to EWTN, and personal stories of prayer, healing, and renewed faith. Listeners will hear reflections on Mother Angelica's legacy, the power of pilgrimage to deepen Eucharistic devotion, and encouragement to consider making a pilgrimage of their own. https://www.olamshrine.com/
“Who were the Desert Fathers and their impact on Catholicism?” This episode explores the lives and teachings of these early Christian ascetics, while also addressing questions like why Mother Angelica has not been beatified and how to interpret the recent LGBT pilgrimage to Rome. Tune in for a rich discussion on the early church and its relevance today. Join The CA Live Club Newsletter: Click Here Invite our apologists to speak at your parish! Visit Catholicanswersspeakers.com Questions Covered: 12:35 – why has Mother Angelica not been beatified? 14:45 – How should we interpret the recent LGBT pilgrimage to Rome? 18:15 – If the early church had martyrs, are those martyrs saints. Also, if Charlie Kirk is considered a martyr, could one day he be considered a saint? 22:40 – Did the early church interpret Genesis literally, and then after we realized it doesn't really correspond to our scientific knowledge, we just started saying it's not literal? (this is what her son is claiming) 31:12 – I was raised in an independent fundamentalist Baptist church. I'm looking at Catholicism. I want to read writers of the early church. Where do I find that and how do I know if it's a good translation? 34:30 – How do we know if the early church fathers were Catholic? Because Protestants quote them too. How do we know St. Augustine wasn't Protestant? 41:15 – I understand for a sin to be mortal we need have knowledge that the act is sinful. But do we have to know the act is specifically a grave offence, or do we just need to know that it is sinful. For example, if one commits a grave offense, but things that act is only venially sinful, would it still be a mortal sin? 46:28 – The Bible says that Mary visited Elizabeth in her sixth month. I saw a video that says that means the sixth month of the year, not Elizabeth's sixth month of pregnancy. Which way does the Church teach? 50:40 – Were some of the early church fathers Eastern Orthodox? I know the Eastern Orthodox have their church fathers, so whose are right?
Saturday marks 100 days since Robert Francis Cardinal Prevost was elected Supreme Pontiff of the Catholic Church. And, on this day, 44 years ago, Mother Angelica “flipped the switch,” marking the on-air launch of EWTN.
On today's episode, Johnnette Williams gives glory to God our Lady on the Solemnity of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary and for EWTN on their 44th anniversary! Listeners call in to express their gratitude for Mother Angelica, the network, and most importantly, the Blessed Virgin Mary.
On today's episode, Johnnette Williams gives glory to God our Lady on the Solemnity of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary and for EWTN on their 44th anniversary! Listeners call in to express their gratitude for Mother Angelica, the network, and most importantly, the Blessed Virgin Mary.
Jim and Joy sit down with Matt Scalici, the first employee at EWTN. He shares stories about the early days at EWTN and speaks about his time with Mother Angelica.
Guests: Fr. Richard Heilman and Doug Barry
EWTN's first employee, Matt Scalici, joins Jim and Joy to share his experience in the early days of the network and recounts his relationship with Mother Angelica.
Fr. Daniel Klimek explains the purpose and effects of the Transfiguration. Paul Darrow also shares his story of abuse and a lifestyle he left after seeing Mother Angelica on TV.
Fr. Joseph Mary Wolfe introduces a new book for every Catholic who cherishes Mother Angelica's wit and wisdom on the often messy nitty-gritty of family life, faith and forgiveness.
On today's reaired episode, Johnnette Williams and Sue Brinkmann answer your questions about dream catchers, mushrooms, the new Disney Movie, "Pauline" and Johnette reflects on thoughts on Mother Angelica on the 8th Anniversary of her passing.
On today's reaired episode, Johnnette Williams and Sue Brinkmann answer your questions about dream catchers, mushrooms, the new Disney Movie, "Pauline" and Johnette reflects on thoughts on Mother Angelica on the 8th Anniversary of her passing.
On today's reaired episode, Johnnette Williams and Sue Brinkmann answer your questions about dream catchers, mushrooms, the new Disney Movie, "Pauline" and Johnette reflects on thoughts on Mother Angelica on the 8th Anniversary of her passing.
Today is Wacky Wednesday and Johnette Williams brings in expert Sue Brinkmann on answering your questions about dream catchers, mushrooms, the new Disney Movie, "Pauline" and Johnette reflects on thoughts on Mother Angelica on the Anniversary of her passing. This is a re-air of the 03/27/24 show.
Today is Wacky Wednesday and Johnette Williams brings in expert Sue Brinkmann on answering your questions about dream catchers, mushrooms, the new Disney Movie, "Pauline" and Johnette reflects on thoughts on Mother Angelica on the Anniversary of her passing.
Todd and Ellen discuss the news from a Catholic perspective, Dr. Jim Schroeder on focus, and Debbie Cowden on Mother Angelica's timeless advice to tired parents.
On this anniversary of Mother Angelica's passing Johnnette shares her memories of Mother.
On this anniversary of Mother Angelica's passing Johnnette shares her memories of Mother.
Mother Angelica died on this day in 2016. Matthew Bunson honors her wit and wisdom and also discusses the latest Church news, and Will Estrada looks at how a Illinois homeschooling bill overreaches.
Pope Francis' clinical condition remains stable. Meanwhile, the U.S. government faces a shutdown unless Congress extends funding. Additionally, Mother Angelica provides five tips for getting the most out of this Lenten season.
Join Johnnette Williams on Fat Tuesday, and hear about how joy is the ineffable sign of the Holy Spirit. Learn about having joy in a relationship with the Holy Spirit, and hear about people such as, Mother Angelica, Fr Andrew Apostoli, and Father Benedict Groeschel, and more...who used the fruit of the spirit to bring people close to God in their daily walk. Find out more about Johnnette and Women of Grace at www.womenofgrace.com
Join Johnnette Williams on Fat Tuesday, and hear about how joy is the ineffable sign of the Holy Spirit. Learn about having joy in a relationship with the Holy Spirit, and hear about people such as, Mother Angelica, Fr Andrew Apostoli, and Father Benedict Groeschel, and more… who used the fruit of the spirit to bring people close to God in their daily walk.
Sources: https://www.returntotradition.org Contact Me: Email: return2catholictradition@gmail.com Support My Work: Patreon https://www.patreon.com/AnthonyStine SubscribeStar https://www.subscribestar.net/return-to-tradition Buy Me A Coffee https://www.buymeacoffee.com/AnthonyStine Physical Mail: Anthony Stine PO Box 3048 Shawnee, OK 74802 Follow me on the following social media: https://www.facebook.com/ReturnToCatholicTradition/ https://twitter.com/pontificatormax +JMJ+ --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/anthony-stine/support
Why was Jesus' birth so complicated, messy, and humble? How does weakness and suffering help us in the spiritual life? How has blindness affected Fr Spitzer's spiritual life? Today, I sit down with the well-loved Father Robert Spitzer, theologian and philosopher. We dive into Christmas, suffering, and a very personal account of his blindness and how he has come to view it as a blessing. I hope you enjoy this Christmas episode!Check out Fr Spitzer's work: https://www.magiscenter.com/Join our Locals community: https://lilarose.locals.com/ Support us on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/LilaRose865 A big thank to our partner, EWTN, the world's leading Catholic network! Discover news, entertainment and more at https://www.ewtn.com/ Check out our Sponsors: -Hallow: https://www.hallow.com/lila Enter into prayer more deeply this season with the Hallow App, get 3 months free by using this link to sign up!-Good Ranchers: https://go.goodranchers.com/lila Purchase your American Meat Delivered subscription today and get a free add-on of beef, chicken, bacon, or salmon! Use code LILA for $25 off!-EveryLife: https://www.everylife.com Buy diapers from an amazing pro-life diaper company and use code LILA and get 10% off!-Seven Weeks Coffee: https://www.sevenweekscoffee.com Buy your pro-life coffee with code LILA and get up to 25% off! 00:00:00 - Intro00:00:32 - Welcome, Fr Spitzer00:01:10 - What's the tradition of celebrating Christmas?00:02:29 - Modest means is the main thing00:11:31 - Why such a specific birth narrative?00:12:34 - Hallow00:13:58 - Jesus is true man00:15:14 - Jesus doesn't get special privileges00:16:01 - Free choice00:21:52 - Why the slaughter of the innocents?00:22:57 - Good Ranchers00:24:13 - God's project is not limited to a single group in a single era00:27:55 - If you've got everything in this world...00:37:14 - EveryLife00:38:02 - Fr Spitzer's Blindness00:45:41 - Seven Weeks00:46:39 - Fr Spitzer felt utterly humiliated00:58:57 - We must become like children01:06:17 - Mother Angelica's quote01:11:04 - Scroll of Isaiah01:14:02 - Why did Jesus come as a baby?01:21:10 - Every child is the Christmas miracle
On today's episode, Liz breaks down Vice President Kamala Harris' CREEPIEST lie from the ABC News Presidential Debate. Then, she'll break down what President Donald J. Trump did right and wrong in Philadelphia. Liz blasts David Muir and Linsey Davis for their debate shenanigans. Liz also dives deep into Rep. Chip Roy's explosive 36-page report exposing the devastating effects of the Biden-Harris administration's open border policies. The numbers in this report are staggering. Plus, Liz reacts to videos featuring Jim Carrey, Larry King, Melania Trump, and even Mother Angelica. Stay tuned! SPONSORS: My Patriot Supply: Go to https://preparewithliz.com and save $200 per kit — free shipping included! American Hartford Gold: Go to https://offers.americanhartfordgold.com/liz or call 866-996-5172 or text LIZ to 998899 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Who is Mother Angelica? And how did this 58-year-old cloistered Nun start an international television show? What can she teach us about faith, entrepreneurship, and providence? In this episode, I sit down with EWTN Chairman and CEO Michael Warsaw who was Mother Angelica's right-hand-man for decades. We talk about how this cloistered Poor Clare of Perpetual Adoration built a television studio that rivaled the largest TV networks in the world. We discuss her resiliency and dogged persistence, often mischaracterized, that led her to accomplish so much during the twilight of her life. Finally, we talk about the deep faith life that empowered her bold business decisions. Join us to hear this and more!A big thank to our partner, EWTN, the world's leading Catholic network! Discover news, entertainment and more at https://www.ewtn.com/ Join our Locals community: https://lilarose.locals.com/ Support us on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/LilaRose865 Check out our Sponsors: We Heart Nutrition: https://www.weheartnutrition.com/ Get top notch vitamin supplements for 20% off using the code LILA. Seven Weeks Coffee: https://www.sevenweekscoffee.com Buy your pro-life coffee with a 10% discount using the code LILA. EveryLife: https://www.everylife.com Buy diapers from an amazing pro-life diaper company and use code LILA and get 10% off!