Month: September 2019

September 28th, 2019

Amazon Action

I seem to be compiling a daisy chain of blogs. “Last week I wrote about” was the way I began the last one, and the way I am going to begin today. That’s because I want to focus again on the Amazon Synod. Last week I wrote about the implications for all women of the…
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September 24th, 2019

Out of Fashion

Maybe we’re too American for the Catholic Church. Maybe that’s been our problem all along.   I was reading an article about fashion, of all things, and thought about how the new, particularly American, movements in that industry might inform us in our own struggle. Apparently, some of the elder “statesmen” (author Vanessa Friedman’s word…
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September 21st, 2019

Schism or Synod?

Last week I wrote about the Pope’s comments on the plane about schism. I imagine he’s wishing he hadn’t opened that can of worms – because everybody’s talking about it. The latest to reach in is Villanova’s Massimo Faggioli, dealing with what a schism actually is and when they’ve actually happened. I had the feeling…
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September 17th, 2019

The “Likability Trap” and Us

If you are reading this and are female, you will know exactly what the “likability trap” is and probably have been at some point been at its mercy. I sure have and sometimes, I shudder to think, may still be. It’s a snare that entraps women who want to use their power to effect change…
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September 14th, 2019

O America

I expect more from the Jesuits. I admit that I idealize the intellectual tradition I have always believed they embody. So I cannot understand why America magazine has begun publishing Pia de Solenni, who recently ended her tenure as Chancellor of the Diocese of Orange in California. Her first article in May is “What the…
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September 10th, 2019

If Our Church Could Only Be Like This Church…Only More So

In October of 2017, Reverend Mary H. Lee-Clark, minister at the Second Congregational Church, United Church of Christ in Bennington, Vermont, wrote a piece called, If You Came to My Church…You wouldn’t have to say the Creed. After I recovered from my envy that her congregation had a female minister, and the longing it produced,…
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September 7th, 2019

The Banal Evil of Clericalism

Are our bishops men with poor, even malicious intentions? Is that why abuse and corruption have flourished? Not quite. Acknowledging this reality does not excuse their countless moral and, at times, criminal failings. But to solve a problem, it must be accurately diagnosed. The philosopher Hannah Arendt’s concept of the “banality of evil” seems fitting:…
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September 3rd, 2019

Transforming Our Spaces

“It was painting, he said, that brought him to theology.” The “he” is Brother Emmaus O’Herlihy, an Irish Benedictine monk, whose liturgical paintings fit so beautifully in a ‘new church for a new day’ or even for revitalizing an old one hobbling along in its entrenchment. I’m so glad I save articles that I’m too…
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