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FaithFeatures
Lea Karen Kivi
Is the Catholic Church doing enough to prevent the abuse of women by clergy?
Cardinal Daniel N. DiNardo of Galveston-Houston, center, leads the opening prayer Nov. 12 during the fall general assembly of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops in Baltimore. Also pictured are Archbishop Jose H. Gomez of Los Angeles, vice president of the USCCB, and Msgr. J. Brian Bransfield, general secretary. (CNS photo/Bob Roller)
FaithFeatures
Stephen J. Fichter, Thomas P. Gaunt, Catherine Hoegeman and Paul M. Perl
U.S. bishops tell the authors of a groundbreaking new book that they feel a duty to speak out on issues of the day, but they must tread carefully with a secular press and fallout from the sexual abuse crisis.
The 8th Engineer Support Battalion in Amariyah-Ferris - photo by Phil Klay
Politics & SocietyFeatures
Phil Klay
War experience, and trauma more generally, can be an assault not only on one’s physical sense of safety, but on one’s social, moral, and spiritual conception of the world.
Photo: America/iStock
Politics & SocietyFeatures
Monika Rice
For almost 20 years Polish scholars have been at the cutting edge of Holocaust research. But a law proposed this year threatened to change all that.
(iStock)
Politics & SocietyFeatures
John W. Miller
As Facebook, Apple and Google pour billions into artificial intelligence, ethicists and moral philosophers are racing to keep up, and Catholic thinkers are looking ahead to the possible harms to humanity.
Politics & SocietyFeatures
Ronald E. Osborn
President Trump’s triumph has revealed in stark relief how few authentic conservatives are left in our expressivist land.