

Welcoming the Roman Missal: An opportunity for liturgical renewal
To change means that one is alive. This applies to people, institutions and languages. Change is a natural development even when it meets resistance from those who have become comfortable with old, familiar ways. The challenge of change faces Catholics now, as the church in the United States and the
Haiti’s Resilient Faith
As I grieved over the recent earthquake victims in Haiti, many friends who know of my close personal ties to that country sought to console me. Those ties began in 2001, when as an idealistic graduate student of sociology I undertook a dissertation project that compared how the Catholic Church assis
Welcoming the Roman Missal: The full text of Bishop Serratelli’s essay
To change indicates that one is alive. This applies to people, institutions and even language. It is a natural development even when it meets resistance, because we can become comfortable in old and familiar ways. The challenge of change is before Catholics now as the church in the United States and
Of Many Things
Of Many Things
These days I look to children to remind me about enthusiasm.
Letters
Letters
Trillions for Defense Re “Weakened by Defense” (Editorial, 1/18): I don’t know whether I should smile or cry when I hear the word trillion used so glibly in the media today. How much is a trillion dollars? No human being has ever been able to count to a trillion for the simple re
Editorials
A Debt to the Future
Politicians need to hear from the American people that they are willing to make sacrifices for the future of the nation.
Faith in Focus
Ward Healer: The spiritual exercises of a hospital chaplain
The spiritual exercises of a hospital chaplain
The Quiet Space: Reading between the lines of the Our Father
Reading between the lines of the Our Father
Ideas
Pardon Is the Word: Shakespeare, Edmund Campion and the grace of forgiveness
Shakespeare, Edmund Campion and the grace of forgiveness.
Books
After Peter
In his latest book, John W. O'Malley, S.J., serves up a hard-nosed history of so many saints and sinners.
Friendship, Rivalry, Redemption
Gail Godwin writes with the shrewdness and wit of Muriel Spark and a tender, fetching, Southern voice.
Imaginary Friends
‘Summertime’ is a meandering series of interviews with relatives and former lovers of ‘John Coetzee.’
Poetry
Homage to St. Seamus
I rhyme to see myself, to set the darkness echoing.” Seamus Heaney
For years I’ve knelt at your holy wells
The Word
I Am Who Am
Third Sunday of Lent (C), March 7, 2010
Columns
Prison Breakout
Prison policy needs to allow for the possibility of redemption.
Current Comment
Current Comment
The Age of the E-Reader; Aid and Corruption in Haiti; Arctic Contemplatives
Portfolio
Lenten Mysteries: Perspectives on the Passion in contemporary art
The exhibit “Good Friday” explores the enduring power of the image of the suffering Christ for contemporary artists.
Signs Of the Times
Recession Drives Surge Of Poverty in Suburbs
Homelessness appears to be making a comeback, but not in the urban and rural communities where it persisted in past decades.
Bishops Urge New Strategy In War Against Drug Cartels
Mexico has been involved in a crackdown on narcotics trafficking cartels that have been fighting turf wars over smuggling routes into the U.S.
Irish-Vatican Summit On Sex-Abuse Ends
A Vatican statement said that church leaders recognized the sense of “pain and anger, betrayal, scandal and shame” that the crisis provoked.
Cellphone Justice
Metals found in such everyday electronic items as mobile phones are helping to fund a bloody conflict in Congo.
Haiti’s Status: Grim
More than 1.2 million people are in settlements, and close to 500,000 people have left Port-au-Prince for outlying regions.
News Briefs
Catholic Relief Services’ anti-hunger programs during 2008 helped an estimated 49.3 million people.






