The Waiting City
NEW YORK –– A poignant yet challenging drama, Australian writer-director Claire McCarthy's "The Waiting City" (Emerging) is a well-crafted exploration [...]
NEW YORK –– A poignant yet challenging drama, Australian writer-director Claire McCarthy's "The Waiting City" (Emerging) is a well-crafted exploration [...]
NEW YORK –– Just when you thought Hollywood couldn't – or wouldn't – make family-oriented films anymore, along comes "Flipped" [...]
NEW YORK –– George Clooney is in a very bad mood in "The American" (Focus), playing a hired assassin who [...]
NEW YORK –– Considering that the Arizona Legislature has recently brought the issue of illegal immigration to the fore, the [...]
NEW YORK –– Drew Barrymore and Justin Long are girlfriend and boyfriend living on opposite sides of the country in [...]
Simon Humke, 21 months, chases bubbles during a visit to his grandmother, Betty Humke’s house in Sheboygan. Simon is the [...]
Every spring the students at the now-closed St. Catherine School on the northwest side of Milwaukee would celebrate the end [...]
My 11-year-old daughter recently spent the night at a friend’s house and accompanied the friend’s family to a non-denominational Christian service on Sunday morning. Did that meet her Sunday obligation or should we have made sure that she attended a Catholic Mass as well?
The Third Commandment instructs us to “Keep holy the Lord’s day.” Certainly your daughter did this by going to church with her friend’s family. The Catechism of the Catholic Church further instructs: “The Sunday celebration of the Lord’s Day and his Eucharist is at the heart of the Church’s life. (2177)” And, “On Sundays and other holy days of obligation the faithful are bound to participate in the Mass.” (2180)
It’s probably good that the wedding vows are very general. Catholic wedding vows are just two sentences long: “I promise to be true to you in good times and in bad, in sickness and in health. I will love you and honor you all the days of my life.”
Perhaps there are a few young couples who grasp exactly what they’re promising with those sentences, but most – myself included – stand on that altar and think the words about bad times and sickness are more of a formality.
As a 25-year-old bride, sickness to me still meant a case of strep throat, and a bad time was rain at Summerfest. The naiveté of youth blended with the fairytale tulle of the wedding dress and the two-foot tall cake for dessert seemed to whisper “liar” to the hints of trouble in the vows.