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All Catholic commentary from May 2025

China’s puzzling influence on the conclave

By announcing these “elections” just before the conclave, the CCP exposed the weakness of that secret Rome-Beijing accord, and thereby damaged Cardinal Parolin’s standing.

What outcome should we want from the papal election?

The current practice of synodality-as-democratized-input has become a demonstration of its own absurdity. There is a reason that Christ established the governance of the Church as a hierarchy. Any competent leader will know how to get the input he needs to govern well; but to turn the process of “inputting” into a central mechanism of governance is to completely misunderstand the fundamental nature of competent rule.

Seven questions for cardinal-electors

Why are you confident in this man? Because he is a good manager, or because he is a good man? Because he is clever, or because he is prayerful? Because he is a skillful diplomat, or because he is a loving pastor? Because he has good plans, or because he listens to the prompting of the Holy Spirit?

Preparing for a bad pope

We should pray and fast for a good pope out of love for the Church, but we should not look for the next pope to “save” us so that we will not have to suffer or convert personally. God's Providence governs all that occurs, and all authority comes from God. While God does not guarantee us a good pope, whatever pope we get is the one He wants us to have - even if it is for our chastisement. And while we sometimes get a better pope than we deserve, we never get a worse pope than we deserve.

Never let a papal death go to waste

No sir, not the least bit performative. Totally authentic!

Will cardinals reject a call for Church unity?

If any one of the cardinal-electors finds himself saying, “I could be comfortable with N as the Pope,” I hope he will see that as a reason NOT to vote for N.

We Watch for White Smoke

Review of "We Have a Pope!" by Katherine Bogner and illustrated by Kortney Senn, published by Emmaus Road Publishing. Includes coverage of the Papal conclave, cardinals, and Sistine Chapel.

A vision like no other: Rethinking what we consider “life”

Most of us tend to be locked into a flattened materialist vision of reality, a vision (or lack of vision) thrust upon us by centuries of dominance by the modern Western “scientific” worldview, which is generally focused on only one aspect of reality: How do material things work, and what can we gain from that knowledge before we die?

Rule of St. Benedict—Ep. 2 | Prayer and Community Life

"We believe that the divine presence is everywhere... But we should believe this especially without any doubt when we are assisting at the Work of God."

Pope Leo XIV faces a daunting challenge

The Catholic world rejoices at the election of a new Pope, even before getting to know him. The crowd in St. Peter’s Square applauds the announcement—Habemus papam!—without waiting to hear the new Pontiff’s name.

Religious Fads

The latest fads repackage the tired old heresies and objections to Church teaching and, like Madison Avenue executives, market worn-out heresies with persuasive advertising gimmicks.

Popes named Leo: The 13 predecessors

It is interesting to recall, however, that there were no fewer than thirteen popes who chose the name of Leo before the current pope. Of these, the Church considers five of them saints (though they were all canonized long before today's rigorous process was developed). Sanctity aside, however, perhaps the two greatest of the Leos were Leo the Great (the first) and Leo XIII. For some of those along the way, it is now difficult to discern their value.

The simple truth of how Leo XIV was elected

A papal election is not like a political contest. And whatever “inside” information we receive is tainted, in several different ways. So why not look at the election of Pope Leo XIV from the perspective of an interested observer with no top-secret sources?

5.10 St. Bernard of Clairvaux: The Mellifluous Doctor

St. Bernard of Claivaux (1090 - 1153AD) was born to be a knight, and grew up in a castle, but he chose to be a different kind of knight - a true prayer warrior - and he supported the invention of the Christian knight by endorsing the Knights Templar. He would be the founder of the Cistercians, a reform order of the Benedictines. He was a strong advocate of devotion to Our Lady, and of orthodox doctrine, and he would turn down the office of bishop in six different cities.

Fragmented sexuality in Malick’s To the Wonder, Knight of Cups, & Song to Song

In the "Weightless Trilogy", Terrence Malick reaches the height of his formal experimentation, and offers a prophetic lament over modern alienation and especially the harm done by sexual immorality - referencing faith as a solution and even proposing openness to children as one of the fundamental things missing in modern life. However, in handling the sensitive subject matter of sexual excess, Malick sometimes crosses moral lines in execution, however praiseworthy his thematic intentions.

Do social encyclicals advance the Church’s mission?

The Church’s voice must be primarily spiritual and moral. It seems to me that we sometimes forget that the Church has no expertise to offer concerning the best and most efficient mechanisms for promoting and balancing all the essential goods through the particular mechanisms of human government. Imagine, for example, what would happen to political efficiency if the world’s governments restructured themselves in accordance with the Church’s current operational model of synodality!

Rule of St. Benedict | Ep. 3—Work, Governance, and Conclusion

"Prefer nothing whatever to Christ. And may He bring us all together to life everlasting!"

Introducing: The Second Collection

Pope Francis stated, on numerous occasions, that war always represents a failure of policy and a loss for the nations involved. No reasonable person should argue the point; war is a terrible thing. But what if the war is fought for a just cause—that is, to redress a wrong that is even more terrible?

Eight reasons why I like Leo

Someone needs to give Cardinal Dolan a medal for his role in healing the universal Church after an awkward pontificate. Dolan told a Sunday morning talk show, just before the Conclave, that he wanted a Pope who would combine the outreach of Francis with the clarity of John Paul II and Benedict. That is what we now have in Pope Leo.

Imagine

You may say I’m a dreamer. But I’m not the only one. I hope someday you’ll join us—in the Land of the Ten Commandments.

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