Commentaries

Women are a driving force in charitable giving

Through empathy, their own wealth and household decision making, women are doing much -- and more than men -- to support their sisters and brothers in need, writes Sarah Hanley.

Mobile eucharistic procession brings Christ to the people

Kim Griffin tells how a parishioner and priest of Our Lady of Mount Carmel in Doylestown visited more than 500 homes in Bucks County last Sunday. And a little girl's cry summed up the day: "Jesus is here!"

In time without Mass, let’s be ready when it returns

When we ease back into parish life, it will be more important than ever to reach out to people, writes Sarah Albanese, who offers ways we can prepare to build stronger parishes.

Celebrating our modern-day saint, and his legacy of supporting the church

St. John Paul II recognized the need for a perpetual source of funding that would serve the priorities of the Vatican around the world and strengthen ties with American Catholics, writes Eustace Mita of the Papal Foundation.

Abuse survivor’s spiritual growth shows the church can heal, too

Michael McDonnell of SNAP had a transformative talk with Archbishop Nelson Perez, and an encounter with forgiveness. Cleaning up the wreckage of the past isn't easy, but the archdiocese has the right bishop for the task.

Agree or not, but be charitable in all things

We can disagree about the pandemic, writes Scott Hahn. What we must not do is have contempt for one another. This deadly poison will kill love — in our homes, our parishes, our dioceses — if we let it get near us.

Coronavirus gives newlyweds time to focus on sacrament

Couples choosing to marry even amidst the pandemic are for Elise Italiano Ureneck a sign of just how radical Christian hope is. They are promising to be faithful in good times and in bad, for richer or poorer.

The human costs of solitary confinement

For John Garvey, stay-at-home started out like a weeklong retreat. But as time has gone by, the isolation has felt more like cruel punishment. It's bad for human health because we need one another.

Consider the common good, and wear your mask

We have a right to disagree peacefully, but we also have the duty to serve the common good, writes Effie Caldarola. Wearing a face masks sends the message that we’re in this crisis together.

Acts of bravery are the pandemic’s grace notes

Today's heroes are all about us, staffing emergency medical services and grocery stores, maintaining supply chains, doing medical research, even burying the forgotten dead. These are the stories of our church, writes Greg Erlandson.