Commentaries
Help youth to know, and do, the faith
Young people's view of God as the Divine Butler points to the deficiency of our collective work in faith formation, writes Carolyn Woo. A solution may lie in works of service.
The good life and how to get there
Faith is a map guiding you into the future, Father William Byron advises young people. The Scriptures, God's inspired word, can be an enormous help in mapping out a path toward the good life.
Advocate because you care, not for political votes
The prayerful unity marking last week's meeting in Washington of the heads of the Eastern churches in the Middle East was shattered by partisan politics that is suffocating our nation today. The complexities of the region were exposed in minutes.
Never forget!
There are days that will be remembered, detail for detail, in our minds. And for many of us, Sept. 11, 2001, is undoubtedly one of those days.
We want to stop ISIS, but how?
Columnist Steve Kent calls for a clearly defined plan for civilized action against the Islamic State's brutal terrorists, one that shuns a primal thrust for revenge. He offers the lesson of the atomic bombings of Japan in 1945.
St. Peter Claver: Pioneering fighter for human rights
Father Gus Puleo writes of the heroic “apostle to the slaves” who by identifying himself with the black slaves of his time showed their human dignity to the world.
Hispanics and the future of the Catholic Church
As the nation observes Hispanic Heritage Month, which begins Sept. 15, the church has much to celebrate. Alone among major Christian denominations in the U.S., the Catholic Church continues to grow and most of that increase is Hispanic or Latino. Yet, they have not always been welcomed.
Dad avoids caring for his special son
In their Marriage Matters column, Deacon Paul and Helen McBlain probe the feelings of a husband struggling to deal with his special-needs child – and the emotional toll on the couple’s marriage.
How it feels to be left out, without an ice bucket
When nobody nominated her for the ice bucket challenge, Karen Osborne felt again like she was picked last for kickball -- pretty lousy. She has advice for dealing creatively with the feeling.
A new GI Bill could save colleges and serve youth
Jesuit Father William Byron believes that if today's drifting and unfocused youth had a GI Bill-type incentive to serve the nation, they could get themselves into gear without getting into crippling debt from college costs.