Sr. Kathryn James Hermes is a Daughter of St. Paul, an author, and is blessed to be able to spend all her life living Jesus and giving him to the world. Two of her titles, Surviving Depression: A Catholic Approach and Reclaim Regret: How God Heals Life's Disappointments, spring from her own experience of healing and love of spirituality.

by Margaret Galiardi

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Among the better-known Native American tales is a conversation between a grandfather and his grandson. The elder explains to the younger that two wolves live inside of each of us. One is ferocious, harmful and vengeful. The other is gentle, loving and steadfast. They are, the grandfather explains, perpetually at war with one another.

GSR Today: To this day, the 1980 murders of four U.S. churchwomen in El Salvador looms large in the consciousness of the religious community. Also, did you know that the things refugees bring across the U.S.-Mexico border are thrown away by the authorities?

by Melanie Lidman

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Life skills combined with a vocational education help young women in Tanzania gain confidence and skills to be able to say "no" to early marriage based on financial need. Sisters and others are helping them to start their own businesses and make their own choices.

Religious and clergy in the Philippines say their experiences in the People Power Revolution 30 years ago have had a lasting impact on their faith and vocations. Sr. Porferia "Pingping" Ocariza, a member of the Daughters of St. Paul said that what she did Feb. 23, 1986, was worth it.

Simone Orendain is a freelance multimedia journalist who reports from the Chicago/Midwest area and Asia. A seasoned journalist of nearly 20 years, Simone regularly covers the Catholic Church in Asia and the United States. She was a foreign correspondent based in Manila for six years before returning to the United States in the summer of 2016. In the United States, Simone was an education reporter and regularly covered business and religion.

In the week since the sudden death of Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia, much has been written in remembrance of his life, his manner on the court, and his legacy. Even in the midst of such commentary and the almost immediate speculation about the process of nominating his successor, there arose a story that I had never heard: the infamous friendship between Scalia and fellow Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg.