Good news in the mission field

By Meinrad Scherer-Emunds| Print this pagePrint | Email this pageShare
Article Social Justice

Over the past half-century the Catholic approach to mission has shifted dramatically. Today's Catholic missionaries continue to proclaim the Good News, but most do so in a far more open and respectful encounter and dialogue with the cultures and people they engage. Their witness invites people to a more subtle-and at the same time more profound-"conversion."


What would a democratic church look like?

U.S. Catholic| Print this pagePrint | Email this pageShare
Article Scripture and Theology

The  20TH Century, punctuated by the reforms of Vatican II, has offered hope to the Catholics who would like to see the church renew it's democratic spirit.  But what would "a democratic Catholicism" look like? It would not, could not, look like our modern political process. And not just anyone could run for office. But why not?


Picturing the perfect priest

By Heather Grennan Gary| Print this pagePrint | Email this pageShare
Article Parish Life
Our readers have some strong ideas about how to build a better clergy--from training to ordination requirements to personal traits that make a priest great.

 

All you Priests, Seminanians, and those considering the ordained life out there may want to sit down, put your feet up, and take a deep breath before you read any further. The results of our special survey, "What do you want in a priest?" are in. More than 800 readers and other Catholics weighed in with their opinions, and many of their wish lists make the Easter Vigil look short in comparison.


Do this in memory of me, but do it well

By A U.S. Catholic interview| Print this pagePrint | Email this pageShare
Article Prayer and Sacraments
In an interview with U.S. Catholic, Bishop Kenneth Edward Untener shared his vision of a nourishing liturgy and united church.

You've written about the busyness in parishes these days. How is that a problem?


Faithful departures: How Catholics face the end of life

By Robert J. McClory| Print this pagePrint | Email this pageShare
Article Prayer and Sacraments Spirituality

In these latter years of the 20th century, matters related to "letting go" or not letting go have attained great prominence. The slogans can be as confusing as they are diverse: right to life; right to privacy; death with dignity; physician-assisted suicide; euthanasia; palliative care. Scarcely a week goes by without some development in the debate over what must be done or not done for the dying.


Five prayers Catholics can take to heart

By Bishop Robert F. Morneau| Print this pagePrint | Email this pageShare
Article Prayer and Sacraments

The issue of prayer is not prayer; the issue of prayer is God. One cannot pray unless he has faith in his own ability to accost the infinite, merciful, eternal God.-Jewish Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel, Man's Quest for God (Hudson River, 1981)


How to build a better priest

By Father Robert Barron| Print this pagePrint | Email this pageShare
Article Parish Life Scripture and Theology

"For too long we've had a preferential option for mediocrity in the priesthood," laments Father Robert Barron, assistant professor of systematic theology at Mundelein Seminary in Mundelein, Illinois. "Teilhard de Chardin said the priest calls down fire on the earth," says Barron. That's a far cry from "organizer of ministries," which is one of the dull-as-dishwater descriptions Barron remembers from his seminarian days. "Who's going to be lit on fire by a term like that?" he fumes.


Huddled masses: The history of our immigrant church

By Moises Sandoval| Print this pagePrint | Email this pageShare
Article Immigration

One night in 1967, Marcelino Ramos entered the United States illegally in the trunk of a car. Crammed with him as the smuggler's car crossed the border without incident from Tijuana, Mexico were his wife, María, his 7-year-old son, Humberto, and his 5-year-old daughter, Rosa. It is the heat that Humberto, now the assistant director of Hispanic ministry for the Archdiocese of Los Angeles, most remembers.

"I always tell people that I am a wetback, not from swimming the river but because I was wet with sweat."


It's fun to be Catholic

By Father Andrew Greeley| Print this pagePrint | Email this pageShare
Article Spirituality

In its best moments Catholicism is the happiest of the major world religions. It is permeated by the reverent joy of Christmas night, the exultant joy of Easter morn, the gentle joy of First Communion, the satisfied joy of grammar school graduation, the hopeful joy of a funeral Mass, the confident joy of a May crowning. Catholicism is shaped by the happiness of hymns like "O Come, O Come, Emmanuel," "Adeste Fideles," the "Exultet," and "Bring Flowers of the Fairest."

 


Let's stick up for our imperfect church

By Kevin Doyle| Print this pagePrint | Email this pageShare
Article Spirituality

This is a test. Please concentrate. What name pops up when you think: Catholic Church and science? OK, try another. The Catholic Church and literature; what's your first association? The church and women's equality; what's the topic? Think about the church and trials; what institution springs to mind?

 


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