The story of the first millennial saint, dubbed "God’s Influencer" for his use of the internet to spread his faith, is spotlighted in the final installment of season two of Martin Scorsese's "The ...
Sitting outside a Catholic church on the French Riviera, Carlo Rovelli jutted his head forward and backward, imitating a pigeon trotting by. Pigeons bob their heads, he told me, not only to stabilize ...
Physics and Python stuff. Most of the videos here are either adapted from class lectures or solving physics problems. I really like to use numerical calculations without all the fancy programming ...
I looked over the colonnade of St. Peter’s Square and couldn’t believe my eyes. Eighty thousand people below erupted into applause as Pope Leo declared Pier Giorgio Frassati and Carlo Acutis to be ...
Pope Leo XIV on Sunday canonized the first two saints of his pontificate, including a 15-year-old who sought to use technology to spread his faith. Carlo Acutis, who died in 2006, is the first ...
Pope Leo XIV canonized 15-year-old Carlo Acutis as the first millennial saint who is nicknamed "God's influencer" for using technology to spread faith. The pontiff made the announcement at an open-air ...
Pope Leo XIV proclaimed a 15-year-old computer genius the Catholic Church’s first millennial saint, along with another popular Italian figure who spent his life spreading his faith before dying at a ...
Carlo, who died at 15, was canonized alongside Pier Giorgio Frassati, who also died young. The church is looking to the two saints to inspire new generations of Catholics. By Elisabetta Povoledo ...
Two new saints will be canonized on Sunday in Rome — including the first-ever millennial saint. The joint ceremony will be broadcast on Eternal Word Television Network [EWTN] and Vatican News channels ...
ASSISI, Italy — To his mom, he was “a normal kid,” but on Sunday, Carlo Acutis will become the first millennial saint at a solemn canonization Mass held by Pope Leo XIV in St. Peter’s Square outside ...
At a Catholic school in Pope Leo XIV’s hometown, fifth graders read comic books about Carlo Acutis’ life titled “Digital Disciple.” They draw pictures of what the teenage Italian computer whiz might ...