Tag:
God the Father
New Testament
“You have received a Spirit who has made you sons, and in him we cry out, ‘Abba!’ that is, ‘Father!’” (Rom 8:12-17)
From slavery to sonship: how the Holy Spirit makes us cry “Abba” and transforms our identity, from fear to filial freedom and glorious hope.
News
"Dilexi te": love as the axis of Leo XIV's pontificate
A title that says it all: the echo of a divine love The first word of Leo XIV's first great text is already a world in itself:...
Prayer
Spiritual Reflections on the Christian Faith
Spiritual reflections on the Christian faith are at the heart of many stories of transformation and renewal. Why does faith seem to be a...
Prayer
Encouraging Others with Bible Verses
In a world that can sometimes seem overwhelming, how to use Bible verses to encourage others is a crucial question. The words of...
Old Testament
«For to us a child is born, to us a son is given; and the government will be on his shoulders. And he will be called Wonderful Counselor, God…”.
Isaiah 9:5 invites us to welcome the Prince of Peace: meditations and concrete ways to make peace a lived gift, an active justice and a daily vocation.
Old Testament
“The Lord said to Abram: Go from your country, from your kindred, and from your father's house to the land that...
Departing to be reborn: Genesis 12:1-2 explores uprooting, promise, and missionary election—an invitation to risk trust in a Word.
Old Testament
“God saw everything that he had made, and it was very good” (Gen 1:1-2:2)
Genesis 1:1 Explained: How “In the beginning God created” establishes the Christian view of the world, God, and human dignity—meditation, practical applications.
Reading plans
The Bible for Beginners: From Creation to Eternal Life
The Bible for Beginners: 50 essential verses to discover Creation, Redemption and eternal life, step by step.
Reading plans
The entire Bible, one story: the canonical adventure in 365 days
A 365-day journey to reading the Catholic Bible according to the canonical approach: daily readings, meditations, links between the Old and New Testaments and times of prayer.


