Number of articles: 5272

Common Works and Auxiliary Societies of Opus Dei: What were they, and why did they cease to exist?

From the foundational years, St. Josemaría said that Opus Dei would have personal and collective ways of communicating the Christian faith and the spirit of the Work. This article describes the evolution of its collective apostolate.

"Nothing lasting is born or grows without love"

Young people who served as volunteers for the papal Mass in Singapore share their hopes before the Pope’s visit and other attendees’ experiences after.

Recent News

Daily Meditations Resume

Daily meditations are texts meant to feed our mental prayer, inviting us to stop and converse with God each day of the liturgical year.

Recent News

God yearns for your heart

Everyone is called to participate in God's love. This is the first article in "Called to Love," a series on celibacy.

Saint Raphael

Reliving our university years in Rome, “ubi Petrus, ibi Ecclesia”

The First Grand Alumni Homecoming of the Pontificia Università della Santa Croce at the Makiling Conference Center, Calamba, Laguna on July 22-25, 2024

"I'm sanctifying the world one donut at a time"

Chelsea (Trinidad & Tobago) talks about how she finds God and brings joy to other people through her work as an entrepreneur.

The World & I

Transforming hearts, one byte at a time

ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE is no longer a distant concept confined to science fiction; it is actively shaping our culture, influencing how we execute tasks, and even affecting how we process information—how we come to learn and believe.

Letter from the Prelate (11 September 2024)

On the occasion of the upcoming feast of the Exaltation of the Holy Cross, the Prelate of Opus Dei offers reflections on one of Jesus' seven last words on the Cross.

"Greater than your heart": Contrition and Reconciliation

Only God is greater than our heart, and therefore only He can heal it and reconcile it to its depths. The sixth installment in the "Combat, Closeness, Mission" series.

Ruth Pakaluk: Wife, Mother, Friend, Activist

Ruth Pakaluk was an extraordinarily warm and talented woman. She entered Harvard University as a pro-choice atheist. After her conversion to Catholicism, she dedicated herself to raising her family and to pro-life activism. At age 33, Ruth was diagnosed with cancer. Shortly before dying peacefully at age 41, she wrote to a friend: "I have loved the life God gave me. There is no other life I would rather have lived.”