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The New Yorker magazine has managed to insult Christians and Jews alike with a cartoon depicting the Last Supper in an April issue, writes columnist Phyllis Zagano.
Angel Studios The King of Kings roared into theaters over the weekend with a projected 19 million domestic debut, setting a ...
Starting in 1973, thanks to The Jerusalem Post, Yaakov Kirschen, the “Mad” Zionist, applied that screwball approach to the ...
Oscar Isaac stars in an adaptation of the life and times of Jesus Christ, with computer animation that makes all your favorite Bible characters look like bobble-heads.
The new Disney+ documentary about the making of 'A Goofy Movie' is augmented with unique animated sequences that bring the ...
Believe it or not, the '90s were three decades ago now, so it's not surprising many of its animated classics are a little ...
Religion News Service on MSN6d
The New Yorker's tone-deaf Holy Week cartoon
The New Yorker magazine has just managed to insult Christians and Jews alike with a cartoon depicting the Last Supper. In the ...
The boy is obsessed with King Arthur. Dickens informs him and his siblings that the legend of King Arthur is, like so many ...
However, the wonder and fascination evident even in these cartoon representations of Egyptologists suggests ... s without nearby secrets even in the present day. After all, people in Egypt have found ...
During an excavation at a site believed to date back to the Greek-era near Alexandria, archaeologists uncovered a stunning ...
The Trump administration hasn’t yet delivered huge deportation numbers — but it is using the internet to provide regular ...
Against the backdrop of today’s ongoing conflicts and refugee crises in the Middle East, the book offers a deeply relevant ...