Commentaries

Letter to an angry friend

The latest clerical abuse scandals mark a call for purification and renewal in the church, writes Greg Erlandson. That task requires true saints, not spin doctors and CEOs.

Something must be done, and careful discernment is needed

There is a need for conversion among certain church leaders who failed in responding to the sexual abuse crisis, and among ourselves, writes Father Eric Banecker. He suggests a way out of our spiritual depths.

Bishops looked into the mirror and saw ‘moral failures’

The U.S. Catholic bishops last week confirmed, according to Matthew Gambino, what most Catholics have long believed: the bishops failed to hold themselves accountable for the sexual abuse scandal.

No more turning away

Sexual abuse survivor Gina Christian reflects on several reasons why people fail to report suspected molestation and harassment.

McCarrick scandal shows the harm clericalism has done

Commentator Russell Shaw was hopping mad 25 years ago, and he still is, over the damage from the "ecclesiastical old boys network." He offers ideas for three reforms, marked by accountability and transparency.

Keep holy the commute and the car pool

A cluttered minivan full of kids headed to soccer practice can be an authentic encounter with God, writes Laura Kelly Fanucci. In the chaos of family life, much of it spent in transit, grace transforms us.

A church of sinners, clerical and lay alike

Ongoing clerical scandals, including the resignation of Archbishop Theodore McCarrick, can wrongly divide the church, writes Richard Doerflinger. The body of Christ as a whole struggles with sexual sin, and all are called to repentance and rebuilding.

Renewed betrayal

As further revelations emerge in the case of Cardinal Theodore E. McCarrick's alleged sexual abuse, not only of a minor but allegedly of numerous young seminarians and even priests subordinate to him, the church in the United States once again has been shaken to the core.

Are we listening? Are we ready to love?

It's not the fault of the ever-breaking news cycle or our cell phones when we only half listen to people who need our whole presence in conversation, writes Effie Caldarola. We must prioritize loving in the present.

Another painful revelation of sexual abuse in the Catholic Church

The church can't guarantee its members won't sin, only that sins of sexual harassment will be dealt with transparently -- whatever the cost and for however long, writes Greg Erlandson.