Commentaries

Unalienable rights still exist, and must be protected

Richard Doerflinger sees in the core documents of the U.S. and U.N. clear calls to safeguard human rights, which a new State Department commission aims to do. And none too soon.

Church would be poorer without priestly celibacy

Ordaining married men might seem like a gain, but it isn't, writes Father Carter Griffin. The most important question is not what might be gained by modifying the practice of celibacy, but rather, what would be lost?

Tomorrow’s children on the world we leave behind

Edith Avila Olea is having a baby, so she is thinking about the future and earth's climate crisis. She is confident that generations together will rebuild the earth, and that God's work isn't done here.

When teens think suicide, there’s much we can do

Suicide among teens and young adults (ages 15-24) is high and rising, writes Maureen Pratt. Adults' experience with hard times and willingness to talk with teens can help them see life is worth living.

Congressman Cummings reminded us of integrity

Carole Norris Greene remembers the late Baltimore-area U.S. representative who died Oct. 17 as a man who moved among his constituents and asked their opinions -- offering a legacy to emulate.

Greta Thunberg spoke, and Catholic reaction fell flat

Catholics' taunts during the teen environmental activist's recent U.S. visit were a "poor witness in the public square," writes Elise Italiano Ureneck. An rising number of faithful youth see what their elders do not.

Safe injection sites fail the medical ethics ‘sniff test’

Philadelphia's plan to create a legally sanctioned drug consumption facility violates common morality principles that guide medicine, writes bioethicist Steven Bozza. In the process, the sites sacrifice human dignity to an agenda of expedience and profit.

When a crying baby on a flight brings out our best

As Katie Prejean McGrady witnessed people stepping up to help a mother and her fidgety baby, she saw that it takes small acts of hard work to care for the people around us. That is the little way of love.

Don’t let Halloween scare you

Dispense with the hand-wringing over ghouls and goblins, and see the "holy day" for what it is: a yearly community festival for young and old to greet their neighbors, advises Greg Erlandson.

We should all aspire to John Henry Newman’s intellectual honesty

The 19-century British convert and cardinal, who will be canonized on Oct. 13, paved the way for the Second Vatican Council through his authentic and humble embrace of the Catholic faith in the modern world.