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In All Things
James Martin, S.J.
What do you get when you cross a nbsp top-flight theologian with one of the summer s hottest movies nbsp This provocative review of the sci-fi hit District 9 by Fr Robert Barron now on our online Culture section nbsp The new movie about a ragtag band of lost malnourished aliens nbsp who in
In All Things
Michael Sean Winters
George Will has a provocative article in this morning rsquo s Washington Post in which he says it is time to get out of Afghanistan The article is a response to the arrival in Washington of a report from Gen Stanley McChrystal sent to Afghanistan by President Obama to assess the situation and mak
In All Things
Austen Ivereigh
Relations between the Church and the disgraced Italian premier Silvio Berlusconi are fast dropping below zero Scheduled talks with Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone -- the Pope s number two -- have been cancelled following extraordinary attacks by Il Giornale owned by Berlusconi s brother Paolo on the ed
In All Things
James Martin, S.J.
Tired of controversy nbsp How about something as Monty Python used to say completely different nbsp Here goes Webster Bull runs a company called Memoirs Unlimited which helps authors write personal and private family memoirs nbsp In 1988 he and his wife started a company called Commonweal
In All Things
Austen Ivereigh
Troubling scenes in a northern Spanish village on the route to Santiago de Compostela whose 46 inhabitants have driven out Benedictine monks following a dispute over the restoration of the village church The ABC newspaper has the story The details of the saga -- the monks want to make nbsp chang
In All Things
James Martin, S.J.
From the Associated Press story on Bishop Martino s resignation this morning at a news conference where he was accompanied by Cardinal Justin Rigali the archbishop of Philadelphia nbsp and Bishop John Doherty Martino s auxiliary For some time now there has not been a clear consensus among th
The Good Word
John W. Martens
Years ago as a teenager I used to listen to the music of Larry Norman perhaps the first of the Jesus rockers Norman now deceased has been the source of much controversy in the Christian rock world including an unflattering portrait in a recent documentary film One thing that could not be sai
In All Things
Michael Sean Winters
The Church is always her best at a funeral a priest once said to me and those true words echoed in my memory as I watched the funeral of Sen Ted Kennedy The Catholic funeral Mass is so beautiful not least because it is so familiar not really different from other Masses In the face of grief
Signs Of the Times

The Catholic theologian Miguel Díaz was confirmed by the U.S. Senate on Aug. 4 as the ninth U.S. ambassador to the Vatican.

Film
Robert Barron

'District 9' looks at a problem that has concerned philosophers from Hegel to Levinas.

Books
David Cloutier
Approaching John Paul II's Theology of the Body
Editorials
The Editors
Once largely in favor of health care reform, the public is now skeptical. What happened?
The chairman of the University of Notre Dame's board of trustees, Richard C. Notebart, and university registrar Harold L. Pace present U.S. President Barack Obama with an academic stole signifying the honorary degree he received during the commencement c eremony at the university in Notre Dame, Ind., in late May. (CNS photo/Christopher Smith)
Politics & Society
John R. Quinn
Lessons from the storm in South Bend
The Word
Barbara E. Reid
Twenty-third Sunday in Ordinary Time (B), Sept. 6, 2009
Anthony Shonis

For me creativity and frustration are two sides of the same coin. And one of the most frustrating times for me as a priest was when I was appointed a pastor at the age of 55. I had spent my entire priest life as a teacher--high school, seminary and university. I had not worked one day in a parish and now I was a pastor of a church with a large Hispanic population. What do pastors do? Well I began an activity that proved so fruitful that I have continued it for nine years. I began visiting parishioners at their workplace.

Now on the Labor Day weekend I offer the parishioners of whatever church I am stationed at (I have long since ceased to be a pastor and am now a parochial vicar) to sign up for a workplace visit. And in the last nine years I have visited about 250 parishioners.

It works like this: On Labor Day I preach at all the Masses on the spirituality of work, or the dignity of labor or on the church and unions. Then I invite the congregation to sign up for a workplace visit. I tell them it will only last 10 minutes, and that I am not seeking a tour of their plant or office. I simply want to talk with them briefly at their workbench about their job.

Often I will begin with the two questions that Studs Terkel asked people in his book Working. “What you do?” and “How do you feel about what you do?” After we talk about their work, I give them a copy of a workers' prayer by Cardinal John Henry Newman. I then write up the visit for next Sunday's bulletin. At the end of the semester, (I still think as a college teacher) I mail each of the workers I visited an invitation to meet with me for a one-hour group discussion on the relationship between faith and work. At the end of that session I give them a copy of Gregory F. Augustine Pierce's book, The Mass is Never Ended, which seeks to connect the Sunday liturgy with the work week that follows; and a complimentary subscription to "Initiatives," a newsletter published by the National Center of the Laity that addresses workplace spirituality.

Signs Of the Times

The native populations of Peru, Bolivia and Ecuador face endemic poverty, illiteracy, ill health and government neglect.

Signs Of the Times

The question of whether the wage increase will help or hurt the economy remains to be seen.

Theater
John A. Coleman

“Equivocation” lures viewers into deeper considerations about politics and religion, truth-telling and family relations.