Commentaries
Too few voters are showing up on Election Day
Jesuit Father William Byron thinks we are nearing a crisis in America in our refusal to participate by voting in local, state and national elections. We are paying for it in the poor quality of candidates, in political gridlock and in ineffective governance at all levels. He looks to Catholic social teaching and the underappreciated principle of participation.
Solution to climate change lies more in selflessness than science
Carolyn Woo of Catholic Relief Services sees Exhibit A of what the pope calls "the globalization of indifference:" Poor countries grapple with the effects of global warming, and most Americans shrug.
Young people inspire by example and word, if we listen
The story of an autistic boy and a formerly homeless young man dispel the old adage that children should seen but not heard, writes Erick Rommel. They tell the wisdom of their experience, sometimes using words.
From death to life: How recovery can help many
Columnist Father John Catoir reflects on the lessons of forgiveness, humility and the joy of being alive, courtesy of the 12-step addiction recovery process.
A preferential option for diplomacy
Negotiating with terrorists, or rather their agents, has gotten columnist Steve Kent's goat. But he does believe that bringing financial and other pressure -- banks, not bullets -- is better than war.
When words can hurt for years
Today's bullies use their words and their thoughts to cause significant damage in person and online. Columnist Karen Osborne knows the experience all too well.
Now that school’s out, what’s in?
No youngster has more hours or days in a summer week than any other, and all can engage in volunteer or community service, writes Jesuit Father William Byron. Boredom is not an option for those who have a pulse and even a modest measure of ambition.
How domestic abuse starts
Deacon Paul and Helen McBlain pose the issue of a husband who starts to control his wife’s finances, then her job prospects, then her relationships. They advise counseling and looking at the behavior for what it really is.
Helping to find the gateways out of poverty
Amy Hill of the Pennsylvania Catholic Conference describes an initiative in the state legislature that seeks to go “upstream” to the source of poverty and find solutions to the persistent problem, despite the billions spent on easing it.
Natural law and same-sex marriage
Columnist Steve Kent echoes the U.S. Catholic bishops by saying that government should adhere to natural law by promoting the common good and upholding authentic marriage. If doing so is ruled unconstitutional, as in recent court decisions, then change the Constitution, he writes.