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All Catholic commentary from November 2024
What Hath Commonweal Wrought? Catholic Lay Opinion Journalism 100 Years Later
I know quite a few who, upon reaching adulthood, filled the gaps in their religious education by watching EWTN. For me, it was the Catholic magazines. This, again, was the 1990s—the decade before the internet destroyed everything. Even apart from the three dissident publications I just named—even among the orthodox publications—the diversity was amazing.
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Free eBook: Liturgical Year 2024-2025, Vol. 1 |
Make America Good Again
Never mind that the tablets of the Ten Commandments grace the Capitol Dome. Love for power replaces love for God.
Better prayer and faster growth in virtue: Two new books
For those who recognize their need for good spiritual habits, the difficulty becomes to repeat them mindfully. As I get older, I find it far easier to sit on the couch in the evening with my eyes closed in meditation only to have my wife tell me I’m snoring. Perhaps this is a holy way to fall asleep. But falling asleep is at least not always the goal.
Saving the world from democracy
The excesses of the Democratic administration reflected an understanding of American small-d democracy divorced from its essential republican character.
Correcting what “everybody knows” about President Trump
if voters nationwide picked democrat candidates to remedy the supposed ills of Democracy as identified by VP Kamala Harris and members of the Congressional Committee investigating the January 6, 2021 capitol civil disturbance, they chose exactly the wrong group of candidates to remedy the situation. Here’s why.
Celebrate, yes. But also steel yourself for the battles ahead.
But left-to-right converts today are still far left of the moral consensus that the earlier generation of conservative converts had hoped to restore. They are fine with the destruction of marriage and the killing of the unborn. They just want the Woke to at least stop performing genital mutilation on minors. Even if we are celebrating a victory, we need to temper our enthusiasmby maintaining a clear vision of today’ awkward reality.
All About the Money
Supporting the parish is a matter of justice. Like the widow's generosity, our contributions become charitable when they eat into the layer of our sustenance – or until it hurts, as Mother Teresa says.
Who’s behind the violent attacks on the Church?
So can we relax, reassured that there is not a worldwide, concerted attack on Catholic priests and the Catholic Church? Maybe not.
Synodality and the perversion of conscience
Too often “conscience” has been portrayed as that faculty which enables us to do what we want to do, ignoring the inner voice that tells us it is wrong.
Education must be controlled by a child’s parents
The Church must play an important role in education—not perhaps primarily through traditional parish and diocesan schools, but especially by providing spiritual and even material support to parents for home-schooling and what I call cooperative schooling. We also need new religious communities to embrace the very Catholic mission of supporting and enhancing home and cooperative school efforts, offering active involvement in these forms of education.
Pope Benedict XVI—Deus Caritas Est (God Is Love) | Part 1
“This is love in its most radical form. By contemplating the pierced side of Christ, we can understand the starting-point of this Encyclical Letter: 'God is love'. It is there that this truth can be contemplated. It is from there that our definition of love must begin. In this contemplation the Christian discovers the path along which his life and love must move.”
Egeria the Pilgrim and the Stations of the Cross
Egeria (or Etheria) was a woman who embarked on a three-year pilgrimage to the Holy Land, in the late fourth century. From her “pilgrimage diary” (actually fragments from her letters to her “sisters” back in Spain) we learn much about liturgy in Jerusalem. There we can see the beginnings of the lectionary, and the seeds of the Stations of the Cross. In this episode, Dr. Papandrea also talks about the history of the spiritual discipline of pilgrimage itself.
Advent-Christmas Ebook released for new liturgical year
Our free liturgical year ebooks offer a rich set of resources for families to use in living the liturgical year in the domestic church. Resources include biographies of the saints to match each feast day, histories of the various celebrations and devotions, descriptions of customs from around the world, prayers, activities and recipes.
Job and St. Augustine in one film: The Tree of Life (2011)
The Tree of Life may well be the greatest movie ever made, owing to its unmatched poetic power. Heavily inspired by the book of Job and St. Augustine's Confessions, director Terrence Malick gives profound spiritual and cosmic scope to the story of an ordinary family in 1950s Texas. Seen through the memory of a present-day narrator seeking the traces of God in his past, it offers archetypal yet vivid picture of family life and how we gain, lose, and recover our awareness of "love smiling through all things".
A must-read biography of Fr. Joseph Fessio
We are introduced to the tremendous vitality and surprising escapades of one of the great pioneers of Catholic renewal over the past sixty years. From the way Joe Fessio drove a car in his teens through the legendary walking retreats he led in Europe to his remarkable institutional achievements in the United States, Fr. Buckley’s biography captures the essence of a priest who managed to accomplish great things for God from within a religious order in serious decline.
The dangerous ‘spirit of synodality’
Pope Francis has made it clear from the outset that the real purpose of the Synod was to begin a process, to create a new understanding of what it means to be the Church, to usher in a new “synodal” approach to Catholicism.
Yes, Catholics should celebrate the Pilgrims’ Thanksgiving
Thanksgiving is one of my favorite holidays. Every September 8th my family and I gather together to commemorate America’s first thanksgiving, the Mass celebrated in Florida in 1565 expressing gratitude to almighty God that the Spanish crown claimed the future sunshine state for God and...
The Astonishing Promise of Jesus
The brevity of the Gospels allows the Church to hand down the words of Jesus throughout the centuries with ease but encourages endless theological reflection.
Lessons from Blessed Karl’s coronation
A ruler or lawmaker either acknowledges the source of his authority, performing his duties to the state as duties towards God, or he fails to acknowledge it, which is already to rebel against God and cut himself off from the source of his authority.
Scorsese’s The Saints: an admirable portrayal of St. Joan of Arc
Catholics have reason to distrust Scorsese based on some of his past work, but having watched the first episode on St. Joan of Arc, I can give it fairly high praise. The short version is that the dramatization of St. Joan making up the bulk of the episode is excellently done, but the epilogue panel discussion with a group of liberal Catholics is not good (though also not as bad as I feared).
Here’s why the ‘zero tolerance’ policy is going nowhere
Why is it still newsworthy, then, when a prominent Catholic calls for “zero tolerance” today? Answer: because for all the talk, for all the pledges, for all the touted policies and programs, the Vatican has not adopted a “zero tolerance” mentality regarding abuse.
Halos for two: Pier Giorgio Frassati and Carlo Acutis
Clearly one of the things that makes these two figures so widely popular is how far they had progressed along the path to holiness by the time they died at such young ages. For this reason, there has also been a significant effort to aim the books about them at comparatively young readers. But just because awareness of these two men is widespread does not mean that most of us know the outline of their lives.
The curious background of the Pope’s ‘fixer’
Personnel is policy. The Vatican’s professed desire for transparency and accountability count for little if the institutional secrets and the confidential finances are consigned to a prelate whose track record suggests that he sees no evil.
St. John Henry Newman—Reverence, a Belief in God’s Presence
"They are the class of feelings we should have—yes, have in an intense degree—if we literally had the sight of Almighty God; therefore they are the class of feelings which we shall have, if we realize His presence."
The Simplicity of Advent
How to keep Advent simply and intentionally, by carving out time for family and building one's family story in liturgical living.
Joseph Bottum’s An Anxious Age never got the Catholic attention it deserved
With the 2025 Jubilee almost upon us, I am remembering the Great Jubilee of 2000. What a time of excitement in our Church. Of hope for its future and for the future of the world. Looking back from the perspective of 25 years later, I can’t help but wonder: What the heck happened? All that hoopla about a “New Evangelization” of the West and how the Third Millennium would be a “New Springtime” of Faith. Where did it all go?
Fear all around me
That someone— or the software he had remotely installed on my car’s computer— thought I should know that winter weather was on its way. Thank you, my solicitous friend, but actually I knew that already
Anatomy of a Compromised Conscience
Did Pilate himself convert to the Catholic faith, as some traditions hold? We don’t know. But we remember Pontius Pilate by name every time we recite the Creed.
What to make of the ongoing preoccupation with Synodality
A true Christian constantly re-examines his or her habits. The goal is to never obscure Christ, ignore Christ or take Christ for granted. Bishops and pastors will have to take even “synodality” with a grain of salt, for no mere process assures good outcomes. When consultation and collaboration become ends in themselves, they will always be used by those who do not accept this or that Catholic teaching, and so will at times get in the way of decisive and effective action.
Who Was Pseudo-Dionysius the Areopagite?
Whenever you see “Pseudo-“ in front of a name like this, it means we don’t really know who the person was. This Church father wrote under the name of Dionysius the Areopagite, a convert of St. Paul mentioned in the book of Acts. But the documents attributed to him were written hundreds of years later. Nevertheless, this unknown pseudonymous author was hugely influential for some of the most important fathers and doctors of the Church.
Fr. Carlos Martins, Sir Alec Guinness, and what has been lost
Those are the two issues at which Fr. Martins is at the center this week. Where stands the Church, 22 years after the first wave of clergy sex abuse scandals. And what are we to make of celebrity exorcists (or at least, of this one). In this column, I will address the first of those two.
St. Henry Walpole—Upon the Death of M. Edmund Campion
"You thought perhaps when learned Campion dies, / His pen must cease, his sugared tongue be still; / But you forgot how loud his death it cries / How far beyond the sound of tongue and quill."
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