Commentaries

The weight of carrying a regret

Having regrets can be positive in that they humble us. But being able to move on from regrets is the work of saints, and everyone, thanks to God's grace, writes Father Eugene Hemrick.

The power and beauty of analog human compassion

Medical technologies "are wonderful products of a God-given human creativity," but they are no substitute for the loving, human care of nurses, which Brett Robinson saw recently in a hospital.

After pandemic, to what ‘normal’ are we returning?

COVID revealed extraordinary goodness and serious dysfunctions in society and the church, realities that we must reckon with, writes Hosffman Ospino. Catholics must rethink the meaning of normalcy.

Supporting women in the transition to motherhood

Before the birth of her second child, Elise Italiano Ureneck is thinking of the ways the church can build a "motherhood movement" in which "reproductive rights" means strengthening women contemplating motherhood.

Reckoning with the church’s constellation of unmarked graves

The church will not be able to facilitate racial justice and peace until all Catholic faithful acknowledge the truth that the American church's early leaders were slavers and segregationists, writes Shannen Dee Williams.

More than a social agency, the church lives out teachings of Christ

The Supreme Court's decision allowing the Philadelphia Archdiocese to work without an undue burden from the government reminds all that the church isn't an NGO, but is expressing Jesus' commands of the Sermon on the Mount, writes Father Eric Banecker.

Trust restored by child’s innocence, ‘the Father’s blood’

Augustinian Father Paul Morrissey tells how his chance encounter with a little girl helped him rediscover the sense of trust that was lost in the clergy abuse scandal.

The seven ways St. Joseph models fatherhood

During this year of St. Joseph, Sarah Hanley takes the time ahead of Father's Day to remember the saint's strength and wisdom, and how today's fathers can follow his lead.

Learn the whole story, good and bad, of race in America

Two historical events -- Juneteenth and the Tulsa massacre -- were unknown to Greg Erlandson growing up. But those stories and new ones of bravery, of wrongs overcome and success achieved, make us wiser for knowing and sharing them.

From the Vine: New growth in Catholic media, thanks to you

Ten years after it began, CatholicPhilly.com keeps growing, reports editor Matthew Gambino. It's nourished by today's readers and the legacy of the former Catholic Standard and Times.