Trusting Hispanic leaders to be at the helm of major ministerial efforts makes a major difference.
Hosffman Ospino
Hosffman Ospino is an associate professor of Hispanic ministry and religious education at Boston College, School of Theology and Ministry; email: ospinoho@bc.edu.
3 reasons Catholic schools need more Hispanic teachers
Any Hispanic student should be able to say, “One day I want to be a teacher—or a leader—like my Hispanic teacher.”
Hispanic educators are key to the long-term survival of Catholic schools
Hispanic educators bring powerful and necessary voices and gifts that are essential to sustain the mission of Catholic schools in the United States.
How Latin America influenced the entire Catholic Church
Medellín would be the first and perhaps one of the most successful exercises of appropriation of the Second Vatican Council at the continental level.
What does it mean to be a neighbor in a polarized America?
About two-thirds of people born in the United States live in their own homes. Immigrants also have a strong record of homeownership: About half of the 42.3 million foreign-born people in our nation live in their own homes.
10 ways Hispanics are redefining American Catholicism in the 21st century
Rapid demographic changes and the fear of the unknown may explain the anxiety of many U.S. Catholics.
