Friday, December 12, 2025

Three U.S. bishops: Racially profiling migrants (and Americans) is a betrayal of the Gospel

Three U.S. bishops: Racially profiling migrants (and Americans) is a betrayal of the Gospel

Protesters in Washington on Aug. 28, 2020, during the "Get Your Knee Off Our Necks" Commitment March on Washington 2020 in support of racial justice. Credit: CNS photo/Tom Brenner, Reuters.

In the Gospel of Luke, a scholar of the law poses a question to Jesus that continues to echo in our hearts today: “And who is my neighbor?” (10:29). It is a question that reveals both the yearning and the resistance found within the human spirit—a desire to do what is right and yet a temptation to draw artificial boundaries around our compassion.

The latest decision on women deacons won’t help stop the exodus of young women from the Church

 

Lost Generations

The latest decision on women deacons won’t help stop the exodus of young women from the Church
A pilgrim carries a crucifix in Rome near the Vatican’s St. Peter’s Square, December 4, 2025 (OSV News photo/Guglielmo Mangiapane, Reuters).

After the release of a Vatican report opposing the restoration of women deacons last week, the advocacy group Discerning Deacons quickly put together two online prayer and reflection gatherings that attracted more than one hundred people. Many of the attendees were women who have felt called to the diaconate for much of their lives and have been engaging with the synod process in the hopes of seeing some positive change on the issue. They were disappointed with the latest setback.

Archdiocese of Boston mishandles the Nativity scene controversy

 

Archdiocese of Boston mishandles the Nativity scene controversy

Archdiocese of Boston mishandles the Nativity scene controversy

 

A sign reading "ICE Was Here" stands in the outdoor Nativity at St. Susanna Catholic Church in Dedham, Massachusetts, Dec. 8, 2025. (OSV News/Reuters/Brian Snyder)

Archdiocese of Boston mishandles the Nativity scene controversy

Thursday, December 11, 2025

My forty years of friendship with Thomas Merton

 

My forty years of friendship with Thomas Merton

A photo from 1968 of the author and monk Thomas Merton in Alaska
Thomas Merton in Alaska, Sept. 1, 1968 Credit: Thomas Merton Center / Bellarmine University

Nothing among human things has such power to keep our gaze fixed ever more intensely upon God, than friendship for the friends of God.

—Simone Weil, “Waiting for God”

Friendship is the first and most important thing, and is the true cement of the Church built by Christ.

—Thomas Merton, “Striving Towards Being”

Can we have friends among the dead? Is it possible to have a friendship with someone you have never met? Can you be friends with a person who never knew you even existed?

If the answer to these questions is yes, then I am friends with Thomas Merton—and you may well be, too.

I met Merton the way most of us have: through his writing. Our friendship began in a most accidental way, when a photocopy of his poem “Elegy for a Monastery Barn” drifted off the bookshelf in my English Department office I shared with a colleague. As a young literature professor and a practicing poet, I was, and still am, ever on the lookout for voices, poems and poets who are new to me. 

Christianity still ‘loses far more people’ than it gains in the US

 

While 43 per cent of the oldest Americans say they attend religious services at least once a month, only 26 per cent of young adults claim to do so.

Alamy

A study found that 12 per cent of the youngest American adults have left the Catholic Church, while only 1 per cent of adults aged 18 to 24 have converted to Catholicism.

A survey carried out by the Pew Research Centre found that levels of religiousness have been relatively stable in the United States over the past five years, with no clear evidence of a religious revival among young adults.

The report from the nonpartisan “fact tank”, which conducts public opinion polling and demographic research, said the percentages of Americans who say they pray every day, that religion is very important in their lives, and that they regularly attend religious services have remained steady since 2020, which suggests that the prolonged religious decline seen in previous decades has plateaued.

Confronting abuse cases in Dallas, survivors and Jesuits take path of reconciliation

 

Women's role in the church remains a hot potato the Vatican can't seem to handle

 

Women's role in the church remains a hot potato the Vatican can't seem to handle