The CatholicTV® Network is set to Join Conan O’Brien, Edward Burns, Piers Morgan, Chris Matthews, John King and Many More at the U.S. Cable Industry’s Premier Event!
From May 21-23, the CatholicTV Network is set to exhibit at the 2012 Cable Show hosted by the National Cable & Telecommunications Association held at the Boston Convention & Exhibition Center.
The National Cable & Telecommunications Association, formerly the National Cable Television Association, is the principal trade association of the cable television industry in the United States. Founded in 1952, NCTA's primary mission is to provide its members with a strong national presence by providing a single, unified voice on issues affecting the cable and telecommunications industry.
Now in its 61st year, The Cable Show 2012 takes place in Boston, a city at the forefront of technology innovation and academic leadership. The Cable Show 2012 continues a tradition of presenting the key themes, emerging technologies, successful business models and instrumental players who will influence the next era of innovation in an industry that continues to rewrite the rules of media and communications.
The Cable Show expects nearly 13,000 attendees this year in Boston and will offer an immersive, one-stop experience in everything cable: the people, platforms, programming and possibilities of an industry that' setting the global pace in multi-screen video, interactive advertising, breakthrough content and compelling combinations of mobility, interactivity and social media.
The Cable Show will provide captivating panel discussions, exclusive networking events and a comprehensive exhibit floor filled with technology, content and service applications.
Thursday, May 17, 2012
Thursday, May 10, 2012
Karen Edmisten on This is the Day
On Friday, May 11, 2012, author Karen Edmisten will be featured on the CatholicTV Network’s nationally broadcasted live talk show; This is the Day, to discuss her book, After Miscarriage: A Catholic Woman's Companion to Healing and Hope.
After Miscarriage: A Catholic Woman's Companion to Healing and Hope is a book about grief, healing, and hope after miscarriage. Not afraid to examine the raw emotions that accompany such an experience, the author tells women that they are not alone in reacting strongly, even frighteningly, to their loss and reassures them that hope and healing will come. Having experienced multiple miscarriages herself, Karen shares excerpts from her personal journals, as well as other women's stories, rich quotes about grieving and the healing process, and practical advice. A helpful resource section includes a wide variety of information from both Catholic and secular sources.
Frequent CatholicTV guest Lisa M. Hendey, founder of CatholicMom.com and author of A Book of Saints for Catholic Moms, said,
After Miscarriage: A Catholic Woman's Companion to Healing and Hope is a book about grief, healing, and hope after miscarriage. Not afraid to examine the raw emotions that accompany such an experience, the author tells women that they are not alone in reacting strongly, even frighteningly, to their loss and reassures them that hope and healing will come. Having experienced multiple miscarriages herself, Karen shares excerpts from her personal journals, as well as other women's stories, rich quotes about grieving and the healing process, and practical advice. A helpful resource section includes a wide variety of information from both Catholic and secular sources.
Frequent CatholicTV guest Lisa M. Hendey, founder of CatholicMom.com and author of A Book of Saints for Catholic Moms, said,
For every soul who has felt the loss of life through miscarriage or the absence of hope that accompanies infertility, After Miscarriage by Karen Edmisten offers a wellspring of grace. Filled with both the voices of those who have experienced this sacrificial love and helpful resources full of practical insights, Karen's book will be a gift of compassion and healing for many.Karen is also the author of The Rosary: Keeping Company with Jesus and Mary, and Through the Year with Mary: 356 Reflections, both published by Servant Books. A popular blogger and a regular guest on Relevant Radio, she is also a contributor to Atheist to Catholic: Stories of Conversion.
Wednesday, May 2, 2012
CatholicTV wins 'Religious Station of the Year'
It was announced this week that the Gabriel Award for “Religious Television Station of the Year” will be awarded to two nationally recognized Catholic television networks by the Catholic Academy for Communications Arts Professionals (CACAP). The CatholicTV® Network will receive the honor this year as “Religious Television Station of the Year” alongside the Eternal Word Television Network (EWTN). The CatholicTV Network was honored as the “Religious Television Station of the Year” in 2010 as well.
The Gabriel Awards are designed to honor works of excellence in film, network and cable television and radio programs. These include, feature films and documentaries, entertainment and news programming, public service announcements, and stations which serve audiences through the positive, creative treatment of concerns to humankind. Categories for TV and radio include both English and Spanish language programs.
President of the CatholicTV Network, Father Robert Reed said of the award, “It is a tremendous thrill for us to be given this prestigious Gabriel Award, not for a specific program, but rather for our entire network. I hold in deep esteem our team members and on-air personalities as well as the entire CatholicTV family of viewers who have sustained the network for some 57 years. This Gabriel Award is a true honor for Cardinal Seán O’Malley and the Archdiocese of Boston as it indicates that the Academy looks upon both nationally broadcast networks as providing complimentary service to the Church in the United States.
When asked about the award, General Manager Jay Fadden said, “This impressive award not only reflects the professional and hard work of our entire staff and the leadership of Cardinal Seán, but is recognition of the faith of the many loyal viewers who have supported CatholicTV for so many years.”
The Gabriel Awards are designed to honor works of excellence in film, network and cable television and radio programs. These include, feature films and documentaries, entertainment and news programming, public service announcements, and stations which serve audiences through the positive, creative treatment of concerns to humankind. Categories for TV and radio include both English and Spanish language programs.
President of the CatholicTV Network, Father Robert Reed said of the award, “It is a tremendous thrill for us to be given this prestigious Gabriel Award, not for a specific program, but rather for our entire network. I hold in deep esteem our team members and on-air personalities as well as the entire CatholicTV family of viewers who have sustained the network for some 57 years. This Gabriel Award is a true honor for Cardinal Seán O’Malley and the Archdiocese of Boston as it indicates that the Academy looks upon both nationally broadcast networks as providing complimentary service to the Church in the United States.
When asked about the award, General Manager Jay Fadden said, “This impressive award not only reflects the professional and hard work of our entire staff and the leadership of Cardinal Seán, but is recognition of the faith of the many loyal viewers who have supported CatholicTV for so many years.”
Tuesday, May 1, 2012
Persecution of Christians
The problem of religious persecution is one that is frequently ignored by those of us who are blessed with religious freedom. We are often unaware of the degree to which Christians are persecuted throughout the world. According to Mark, over 70% of the acts of religious persecution around the world are against Christians.

Learn more about the persecution of Christians around the world and how you can stand in solidarity with them and offer aid by checking out Aid to the Church in Need.
Friday, April 6, 2012
Good Friday Homily | Monignor James P. Moroney Rector-Elect of Saint John’s Seminary, Brighton
Usually
it is Christ who does the seeking.
Seeking Lost Sheep
He
seeks out lost sheep. The ones caught in the brambles. The ones
entirely separated from the flock.
I
used to know a family who raised sheep, and their kids, in high school at the
time, were part-time shepherds. They would sit out in the field,
sometimes late into the night, watching their sheep. And while they never
saw a vision of angels announcing good news to them, they did have some rather
interesting insights into the profession of shepherding.
A
sheep, they once told me, needs to be rescued when it gets lost, because when
the sheep becomes frightened its joints lock up and it becomes literally petrified
with fear. That’s why the good shepherd needs to pick the sheep up and
place him on his shoulders, and carry him home. Because the lost sheep is
petrified with fear.
The lost sheep becomes petrified.
- Petrified, sometimes, by emptiness and by a breathless attempt to grab for all the gusto he can get out of life, anesthetizing the fear with another drink, or another hundred shares, or a more prestigious title;
The lost sheep becomes petrified.
- Petrified by a frantic attempt to break free from the brambles of his own self-deception, when he can’t keep track of the lies anymore and lives in dread fear of being found out;
The lost sheep becomes petrified.
- Petrified by a loneliness so deep it screams into the darkness in the middle of the night, so petrified he will grab onto anyone or anything to make believe that lust is love and lies are truth;
There
are a lot of sheep who stand petrified by their own sin out there, and even in
here on this Friday we call good. Sheep who look desperately from side to
side and all around and suddenly realize that they have wandered so far from
the flock that no GPS could ever get them home, no God, they’re convinced,
could ever forgive them! No sacrifice, they’re certain, could ever save
them. No words, they’re determined, could ever do them any good.
Which
is why it is usually Christ, "with unhurrying chase, and unperturbed pace..." who does the seeking.
Seeking Our Salvation
And
the one thing he seeks most fervently, even more than he seeks the lost sheep,
is the lost soul of the lost sheep. With a certain divine desperation,
Christ seeks out the soul of the lost sinner, that he might repent and live.
The
great print artist Fritz Eichenburg, who with Ade Bethune brought so much to
the Catholic Worker movement in its earliest days, once crafted a brilliant
print of a be-haloed figure rummaging through a trash bin by the side of the
road. When Dorothy Day first saw it she was convinced of its
meaning. Surely, this is
Jesus, she declared enthusiastically, the
hungry beggar among us, looking for something to eat amidst all the old
fish-wrap we’ve thrown away.
No, Eichenburg
told her. It is
not Jesus in the poor man rummaging for food. No, we are the trash can in which Jesus is rummaging.
He is rummaging through all the trash of our poor, sinful, selfish lives,
looking for something worth while, something of value, something to save.
For
there is nothing God desires more than our holiness, our capacity to reflect
his love in our lives. It is why he made us in his own image and likeness
and why he was incarnate of the Blessed Virgin Mary.
Christ
seeks our salvation with a real desperation. He seeks it preaching on the
hills of Galilee. He seeks it falling on bloodied knees as he walks the
the via dolorosa. He seeks it as he offers the perfect sacrifice on the
altar of the cross.
So
desperately does he desire to save us that he offers his very life in ransom
for us. This just Abel does more than offer the fruit of his labor; he
offers the blood in his veins. This modern day Melchizedek, offers more
than bread and wine; He offers his body and blood. This God does not send
an angel to spare his only-begotten Son, but gives him up to be offered for us
on Calvary hill. This innocent lamb is the priest and the victim, the
giver and the gift, offers the perfect sacrifice of love unto death, death on a
cross.
Which
leads us to the five first words of Christ in John’s account of his Blessed
Passion.
It’s
the middle of the night. And before an enormous crowd of temple police
and soldiers, storming the Garden where he is at prayer, Jesus goes out to meet
them armed with five words: “Who
are you looking for?”
He
says the same to us this Friday afternoon. Who are you looking for?
And
each one of us can answer him.
- A young teenager might say, I’m looking for someone to inspire me. someone to make sense of my life…to lead me, advise me, and guide me to be happy and successful and content.
- The old man is looking for someone to take away the pain of his body and the loneliness of his soul. Someone who can remove the fear that gnaws at him every time he loses one more thing, every time he thinks of getting sicker and dying.
- Another one is looking for someone to take away the guilt which he’s carried on his back like a bag of bricks for so many years. It was stupid and wrong and sinful, and he’s never been able to forgive himself…he needs someone to lift those sins off his shoulders.
- And then there’s the young mother who is looking for someone to watch over her kids or maybe lighten her load, as she works three jobs, one for each kid. She’s looking for someone who will help her to sleep all night without waking up worrying about the next day’s burdens.
- And then there’s that guy who is looking for someone to answer all those questions he has about life…and to show him how to solve the problems of the world…to feed the poor, and heal the sick, and end the violence which he knows makes no sense.
- There’s the accomplished businessman, who has all the money he needs, but feels strangely empty inside,
- And there’s the alcoholic, at the bar down the street who’s fallen into his bottle for the umpteenth time,
- And the middle aged woman whose breast cancer is back and needs a miracle
- And the guy who’s been dumped again and feels desperate and alone, and needs someone to love him…
- And each one of us….
Look
deep in your heart, my fiends, and hear Jesus’ voice asking you today: Who are you looking for?
Whomever
you seek…whatever the pain of your heart that cries out to heaven…the one
who has been seeking you down every alley and detour hangs from the cross for
you today.
- He hangs there dying, to teach us how to live.
- He hangs there rejected, to teach us how to love.
- The nails, filed sharp by our sins, piece the wrists of his body. But we are forgiven by him, for we know not what we do.
- The crown of thorns, pierces his flesh, but the blood that drips down cleanses all it touches from darkness and sin.
- From his side, pierced by the lance of our selfishness, blood and water flow out, not as a harbinger of death, but as the beginning of newness of life. For those who are baptized in that water will never die. And those who drink of that blood will live forever.
- By his blessed passion upon that cross, by his suffering, we are healed of every brokenness, freed of every sin, and the bonds of death are, once and for all, broken.
Who are you looking for? You are looking for the Shepherd
who has been looking for you, the Christ,
the Son of the Living God: Who by his holy cross, has redeemed the world.
Monignor
James P. Moroney
Rector-Elect
Saint
John’s Seminary
Thursday, March 22, 2012
The CatholicTV® Network to Support the Nationwide Religious Freedom Rally to Oppose the HHS Mandate
The Nationwide Rally for Religious Freedom is being held Friday, March 23, 2012. The theme for the Rally is “Stand Up for Religious Freedom—Stop the HHS Mandate!”
Thousands of Americans of all faiths will be participating in these peaceful rallies, organized by the Pro-Life Action League and Citizens for a Pro-Life Society to oppose the new mandate from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) that requires all employers provide free contraceptives, sterilization and abortion-inducing drugs through their health plans, even in violation of their consciences.
Religious leaders and other public figures will speak out against the HHS Mandate at each Rally site. Holding signs reading “Stand Up for Religious Freedom” and “Stop the HHS Mandate,” participants will offer hymns and prayers for our nation and pass out literature to the public about why the HHS Mandate is unconstitutional and un-American.
President of the CatholicTV Network, Father Robert Reed, spoke out against the HHS Mandate in support of religious freedom:
I believe that not just Catholics, but all citizens need to oppose the HHS mandate, recognizing the dangerous precedent it would set. The First Amendment (Amendment I) to the United States Constitution, part of the Bill of Rights, prohibits the making of any law respecting an establishment of religion. As a result, the mandate would impose a law that contradicts the conscience of many faithful individuals.Here's Father Reed's official statement on the HHS mandate, as seen on the CatholicTV® Network:
Tuesday, March 20, 2012
The CatholicTV® Network to Exhibit at the Archdiocese of Boston Catechetical Congress
On March
24, 2012, the CatholicTV Network is set to exhibit and participate at the
upcoming Archdiocesan Catechetical Congress taking place at Boston College High
School, Dorchester, MA.
The Congress will begin the day with Mass presided by Cardinal Seán P. O'Malley, OFM with music by the Archdiocesan Black Catholic Choir. Over 24 workshops in English, Portuguese and Spanish will be offered throughout the day. The keynote speaker at the Archdiocesan Catechetical Congress will be Bishop Richard Malone.
Bishop Richard Malone, a native son of Salem, Massachusetts, is the 11th Bishop of Portland, Maine. A graduate of Saint John's Prep, Danvers and Saint John's Seminary, Boston, Bishop Malone was ordained in 1972 by Cardinal Humberto Medeiros. In 1981 then Father Malone earned his Doctorate in Theology from Boston University and in 1990 his Licentiate in Sacred Theology from Weston Jesuit School of Theology in Cambridge. Bishop Malone was Professor of Theology at Saint John's Seminary and chaplain at Harvard University. He was named Director of the Office of Religious Education in 1993 and later appointed Cabinet Secretary for Education for the Archdiocese of Boston. In March, 2000 he was ordained Bishop and appointed Auxiliary Bishop, Archdiocese of Boston, South Region. Bishop Malone was installed as Bishop of Portland, Maine on March 31, 2004. He is a member and immediate past Chair of the Bishops Committee on Evangelization and Catechesis for the United states Conference of Catholic Bishops.
Workshop
sessions include “The Mass is Boring? No Way! We've Got to Talk!”
presented by CatholicTV’s own Fr. Dan O’Connell, Saint Joseph Parish, West End.
This workshop will focus on ways religious educators can teach children to
appreciate and love the Mass; making it come alive.
To learn
more about the Archdiocesan Catechetical Congress visit: www.rc.net/boston/religiouseducation.
The Congress will begin the day with Mass presided by Cardinal Seán P. O'Malley, OFM with music by the Archdiocesan Black Catholic Choir. Over 24 workshops in English, Portuguese and Spanish will be offered throughout the day. The keynote speaker at the Archdiocesan Catechetical Congress will be Bishop Richard Malone.
Bishop Richard Malone, a native son of Salem, Massachusetts, is the 11th Bishop of Portland, Maine. A graduate of Saint John's Prep, Danvers and Saint John's Seminary, Boston, Bishop Malone was ordained in 1972 by Cardinal Humberto Medeiros. In 1981 then Father Malone earned his Doctorate in Theology from Boston University and in 1990 his Licentiate in Sacred Theology from Weston Jesuit School of Theology in Cambridge. Bishop Malone was Professor of Theology at Saint John's Seminary and chaplain at Harvard University. He was named Director of the Office of Religious Education in 1993 and later appointed Cabinet Secretary for Education for the Archdiocese of Boston. In March, 2000 he was ordained Bishop and appointed Auxiliary Bishop, Archdiocese of Boston, South Region. Bishop Malone was installed as Bishop of Portland, Maine on March 31, 2004. He is a member and immediate past Chair of the Bishops Committee on Evangelization and Catechesis for the United states Conference of Catholic Bishops.
Thursday, March 8, 2012
Behold 2012
I'm looking forward to getting on a plane and heading out to Peoria, Illinois tomorrow for Behold, A Catholic Conference On The Dignity and Vocation of Women. I'm especially excited to celebrate the vocation of women in the wake of International Women's Day (today), during Women's History Month (March) and with Pope Benedict's March prayer intention in mind.
I'll be representing CatholicTV as a vendor, but I'll also be popping in and out of the great talks at the Conference, so keep an eye on the @CatholicTV twitter feed for live updates, and look for some blogging about the conference as well!
-Helen
I'll be representing CatholicTV as a vendor, but I'll also be popping in and out of the great talks at the Conference, so keep an eye on the @CatholicTV twitter feed for live updates, and look for some blogging about the conference as well!
-Helen
Tuesday, February 28, 2012
CatholicTV and Roku, Inc. Announce Partnership
Nation’s Premier Programmer of
Faith-Based Content Now Available Via Roku Streaming Network
WATERTOWN,
MA (February 29, 2012) -- The CatholicTV® Network and Roku announced that the two
companies have officially launched CatholicTV on the Roku streaming platform.
With CatholicTV on Roku, viewers across the nation will be able to instantly
access the CatholicTV LIVE video stream and many CatholicTV shows for free
beginning today.
CatholicTV
content can now be streamed to viewers’ televisions, computers, tablets and
mobile devices for convenient, on-demand viewing. Available on all Roku
streaming players, The CatholicTV Network will join Roku’s large and growing
collection of news and entertainment channels.
“For fifty-seven years, The CatholicTV Network has been a staple in millions of homes,” said CatholicTV President Father Robert Reed. “Beginning today, Roku customers across the world can stream CatholicTV LIVE along with some of our most endearing and exciting programming through their Roku players. Now our world-class network is more accessible than ever."
Roku is the leading streaming platform, delivering news and entertainment to more than two million customers in the U.S. The award-winning Roku players are renowned for their ease of use, value and selection of content. Roku players retail for as little as $49.00.
The CatholicTV
Network provides family-friendly religious news and educational programming 24
hours daily and offers the Daily Mass, The Rosary, ground-breaking special
programming such as Father Robert Barron’s series, Catholicism, Papal
programming from around the world, and Catholic talk shows and news including
This is the Day, and a new program for women and families, The Gist. Users will
also have access to CatholicTV’s on-demand library.
“The
CatholicTV Network continues use all forms of technology to expand our reach.
We are very excited about being added to the Roku channel lineup and look
forward to the possibilities this
technology presents us to continue to spread the message of CatholicTV,” said
Jay Fadden, Executive Vice President and General Manager.
For more information on CatholicTV visit www.CatholicTV.com
Visit www.Roku.com to learn more about the Roku streaming platform and the partnership with CatholicTV.
Visit www.Roku.com to learn more about the Roku streaming platform and the partnership with CatholicTV.
Contact: CatholicTV
Shannon
Muldoon
Public
Relations Coordinator
617-923-0220
About the
CatholicTV® Network:
Founded in 1955, CatholicTV Network is a national broadcast television network streaming a live feed 24 hours a day at CatholicTV.com. Heeding Pope Benedict XVI's call to greater utilize the power of television and new media, the CatholicTV Network features its cable TV station, Catholic web site, mobile apps and widget. Celebrate Mass online; pray The Rosary; enjoy programs on prayer, the saints, the Scriptures and the Catholic Church on America's Catholic Television Network.
Founded in 1955, CatholicTV Network is a national broadcast television network streaming a live feed 24 hours a day at CatholicTV.com. Heeding Pope Benedict XVI's call to greater utilize the power of television and new media, the CatholicTV Network features its cable TV station, Catholic web site, mobile apps and widget. Celebrate Mass online; pray The Rosary; enjoy programs on prayer, the saints, the Scriptures and the Catholic Church on America's Catholic Television Network.
Thursday, February 23, 2012
Special Ceremonies for Timothy Cardinal Dolan, Archbishop of New York
On
Saturday, February 25, 2012, the CatholicTV® Network will air two special
ceremonies at St. Patrick's Cathedral, New York, NY, to honor Timothy Cardinal
Dolan. The prayer service will air LIVE at 10:30 a.m., and at 4 p.m., Cardinal
Dolan will celebrate Mass which will also air LIVE on CatholicTV.
His
Eminence, Timothy Cardinal Dolan was named Archbishop of New York by Pope
Benedict XVI on February 23, 2009. He was installed as Archbishop of New York
on April 15, 2009.
He
had served as Archbishop of Milwaukee since he was named by Pope John Paul II
on June 25, 2002. He was installed as Milwaukee's 10th archbishop on August 28,
2002, at the Cathedral of St. John the Evangelist. Archbishop Gabriel Montalvo,
Papal Nuncio to the United States, installed Archbishop Dolan.
Cardinal
Dolan was ordained to the priesthood on June 19, 1976. He then served as
associate pastor at Immacolata Parish in Richmond Heights, Mo., until 1979 when
he began studies for a doctorate in American Church History at the Catholic
University of America. Before completing the doctorate, he spent a year
researching the late Archbishop Edwin O'Hara, a founder of the Catholic
Biblical Association. Archbishop O'Hara's life and ministry was the subject of
the Archbishop's doctoral dissertation.
On
his return to St. Louis, Cardinal Dolan served in parish ministry from 1983-87,
during which time he was also liaison for the late Archbishop John L. May in
the restructuring of the college and theology programs of the archdiocesan
seminary system.
In
1987, Cardinal Dolan was appointed to a five-year term as secretary to the
Apostolic Nunciature in Washington, D.C. When he returned to St. Louis in 1992,
he was appointed vice rector of Kenrick-Glennon Seminary, serving also as
director of Spiritual Formation and professor of Church History. He was also an
adjunct professor of theology at Saint Louis University.
In
1994, he was appointed rector of the Pontifical North American College in Rome
where he served until June 2001. While in Rome, he also served as a visiting
professor of Church History at the Pontifical Gregorian University and as a
faculty member in the Department of Ecumenical Theology at the Pontifical
University of St. Thomas Aquinas. The work of the Cardinal in the area of
seminary education has influenced the life and ministry of a great number of
priests of the new millennium.
On
June 19, 2001 – the 25th anniversary of his ordination to the priesthood – then
Fr. Dolan was named the Auxiliary Bishop of St. Louis by Pope John Paul II. The
new Bishop Dolan chose for his Episcopal motto the profession of faith of St.
Peter: Ad Quem Ibimus, "Lord To Whom Shall We Go?" (Jn 6:68).
Cardinal
Dolan served as chairman of Catholic Relief Services from January 2009 –
November 2010. He is currently a member of the Board of Trustees of The
Catholic University of America. He is also a member of the Pontifical Council
for Promoting New Evangelization and the Pontifical Council for Social
Communications.
On
June 29, 2009, Cardinal Dolan received the pallium, a symbol of his office as
an archbishop, from His Holiness, Pope Benedict XVI, at St. Peter's Basilica.
On
November 16, 2010, Cardinal Dolan was elected president of the United States
Conference of Catholic Bishops. He succeeds Cardinal Francis George of Chicago.
On
January 6, 2012, His Holiness Pope Benedict XVI announced that Cardinal Dolan
was to be appointed to the College of Cardinals. He was elevated in the
Consistory of February 18, 2012.
Tune
in to CatholicTV on February 25, 2012, or on www.CatholicTV.com.
About
the CatholicTV® Network:
Founded
in 1955, CatholicTV Network is a national broadcast television network
streaming a live feed 24 hours a day at CatholicTV.com. Heeding Pope Benedict
XVI's call to greater utilize the power of television and new media, the
CatholicTV Network features its cable TV station, Catholic web site, mobile
apps and widget. Celebrate Mass online; pray The Rosary; enjoy programs on
prayer, the saints, the Scriptures and the Catholic Church on America's
Catholic Television Network.
Twitter:
@CatholicTV
Contact:
CatholicTV
www.CatholicTV.com MA, 02472 US
Shannon
Muldoon- Public Relations Coordinator
617-923-0220
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