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COLUMNS
 | ‘No person accorded the honour of being a guest stays a stranger for long’ |  | ‘It seems fine to write about a committed faith as long as it is distanced by history’ |  | ‘Sympathy cannot be magicked up in the heated setting of a court room’ | | Letter from Rome |  | Glimpses of Eden |
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In this week’s issue
Lessons from the starving ‘Sacred ritual is not enough’ As the Celtic Tiger slinks away another beast returns Mancunian miracle Don’t cover her face An Iraq inquiry that may yet reveal the truth In the household of God Reap what Paul sows Moving experiences
Bishop Davies: leading or dividing? Christopher Lamb
Without justice, charity is undermined Abigail Frymann
Errant Knights need to show some humility Elena Curti
Secularism - good or bad? Archbishop Nichols and Cardinal Murphy-O'Connor take opposing views
The two most senior clerics in England and Wales set out on the same day contrasting visions of the threats posed to Christianity by secularism.
In a lecture at Ushaw College ... Clare Short: ‘Church gave me best of values that have continued into my political and adult life' Former Labour minister offers candid and fond reflection on her Catholic upbringing
I've chosen as my theme the link between a Catholic childhood and radical politics. I fear this may be slightly self-indulgent and autobiographical but there are some points that ... Koch: ‘Church has become ally in fight against anti-Semitism' Vatican cardinal recounts 50 years of Catholic-Jewish dialogue
I am honoured to be here today to present the John Paul II Lecture on Interreligious Understanding, the fifth in a series of prestigious annual lectures organised by the John Paul ... Tiptoeing towards Scripture
Pope Benedict XVI has exhorted Catholics to become more familiar with their Bibles, in his round-up of the 2008 Synod on the Word of God. At the same time the Bible Society ...
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