Asian-American Heritage Month
This prayer celebrates and honors the Asian Pacific culture in the United States during the month of May.
If you are not happy with the results below please do another search
This prayer celebrates and honors the Asian Pacific culture in the United States during the month of May.
This prayer service includes excerpts from Dr. King’s famous “Letter from a Birmingham Jail” and includes reflection questions after each reading.
This resource draws on the wisdom and witness of A.J. Muste, a nonviolent activist who was influential in the global pacifist movement of the mid-20th Century.
This prayer service includes prayers, quotes, and questions that invite us to reflect on the life and words of Thomas Berry, C.P. Through this reflection, participants are challenged to think more deeply about the environment and our role within our sacred universe.
This striking movie tells the true story of a young boy in El Salvador who, during the country’s civil war, must choose between joining the military or the rebels. A synopsis, connections to CST themes, and reflection questions are included.
This prayer service honors the Asian Americans who, over the past century, have been activists, artists, heroes, and persons for others.
The life of Peter Maurin, co-founder of the Catholic Worker movement, is prayerfully told through this prayer service.
Pierre Teilhard de Chardin, S.J., is regarded as one of the foremost thinkers of our time. His spiritual writings on humanity, the universe, and God are entwined together in this prayer service based on his Eucharistic prayer, “The Mass on the World.”
This reflection is based on the words of Pope Francis’s Homily in Ciudad Juárez, Mexico on February 17, 2016. The message of his homily was how mercy can transform our lives and the lives of those on the margins of society. View the reflection here: http://bit.ly/1R90xI3.
Based on Cardinal Bernardin’s personal reflections, this prayer service remembers this compassionate, humble, and strong servant leader.
Charlene Teters is an activist from the Spokane Nation who has defended the human dignity of Native peoples and led nonviolent resistance to oppose the use of Native American symbols as mascots in sports.
This prayer service follows the life of St. Josephine Bakhita, a Sudanese woman who was trafficked and enslaved time and time again. St. Bakhita is the patron of victims of trafficking.