May 30, 2019

Column: You Must Read 1984!

Truth is a writer’s first responsibility. To conquer the lie, Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn said.
May 27, 2019

Column: What Will Memorial Day Make of Us?

What are we to make of Memorial Day?
May 22, 2019

Column: A Girl’s Love of Baseball

Maggie Whitfield interviews Melanie Newman of the Salem Red Sox…
May 8, 2019

Preaching and Obedience

Whose Catholicism is it? Whose Catholic Church?
May 6, 2019

Column: Loving Uncertainty

My uncle took my father’s place when my parents divorced.
April 22, 2019

Column: Notre Dame reminds us we’re more spiritual than we think

It is hard to describe the loss of Notre Dame. When the poet Rainer Maria Rilke lived in Paris, each evening on his way home, he stopped as he crossed the Siene on the Île de la Cité to watch the sun set over Notre Dame. The darkening ancient towers silent against the new, awakening, electric […]
May 30, 2019

Column: You Must Read 1984!

Truth is a writer’s first responsibility. To conquer the lie, Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn said.
June 1, 2019

Ascension Praise and Prayer

Today much of the Church celebrates the Ascension of Jesus. Appearing among the disciples and others after the resurrection, Jesus ascended to the right hand of the Father in heaven.
June 7, 2019

Fruits of the Pentecost Spirit

Last week we celebrated the Ascension of Jesus. This week we celebrate the descent of the Holy Spirit at Pentecost. And the Spirit knows no ascension. The Spirit is still upon us, dwelling within the Church, within us.
June 7, 2019

Essay: A Priest for James Carroll

Graham Greene’s novel The Power and the Glory begins with the protagonist, the “whiskey priest,” waiting for a boat on the banks of the Grijalva River, contemplating his escape.
June 8, 2019

Homily: Pentecost and Weird Christians (Jn 21:20-25)

I always think of Saint Philip Neri around Pentecost. You might’ve not heard of him; he’s less popular these days than he used to be.
June 15, 2019

The Simple Significance of the Trinity

This weekend we celebrate the Trinity. That is, we celebrate the Catholic faith in substance, what the Catechism calls the “central mystery,” the dogma without which we are nothing, without which there is no salvation—our faith that there is “only one God, the almighty Father, his only Son, and the Holy Spirit.”