May 28th, 2022
Is that what Archbishop Salvatore Cordileone is doing by refusing communion to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi? I thought that debate was over for good, that something between the words of the Pope and ordinary common sense must have prevailed among the bishops to avoid further public ridicule. It’s reported that Pelosi received communion last week…
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May 14th, 2022
David Gibson says all I wanted to say this week. He is better informed than I could ever be because he’s a journalist and I’m a blogger. Nevertheless, I will forge ahead. I still have questions after his excellent article and everything else I have read on the US Bishops’ closing of the Catholic News…
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May 7th, 2022
I wasn’t, for the leak of a first draft of the Supreme Court decision on the Mississippi abortion case. Late June, early July was a long time away, and I was counting on two panels to be sponsored by Catholic Organizations for Renewal (COR) on May 18 and 25 for more information. But flipping through…
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April 30th, 2022
No sooner had Pope Francis issued his curial reform which opened important Vatican positions to lay women and men, did Phyllis Zagano raise the question of women Cardinals. You probably know Zagano as a member of the first papal commission considering the question of women deacons. I assume that her persistent advocacy helped that commission…
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April 23rd, 2022
What occurs to you in looking at this collage of recently-appointed presidents at Jesuit colleges? Only in the fourth paragraph does author Michael J. O’Loughlin move beyond his characterization of these leaders as “laypeople” by noting Pope Francis’ appointment of more women to top Vatican positions. Far be it from me to do a gender…
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April 9th, 2022
The blue suit said it all. When Sr. Nathalie Becquart addressed the vast audience gathered by New Ways Ministry, she wore a blue suit. Immediately, there was no clerical barrier confronting those who might be less receptive yet who had decided to participate. When she spoke to Global Sisters Report, she was more casually dressed,…
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April 2nd, 2022
There is only so much room in a single blog, so that’s why I am focusing on three women among the excellent articles that have arrived on my desk this week: Soline Humbert, Joan Chittister, and Christine Schenk. First, Soline Humbert. If you attended the wonderful WOW liturgy last Sunday and hung around for the…
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March 19th, 2022
After rejoicing last week about women’s leadership, I must write about my response to the Pew report issued this week analyzing Black Catholics in the US. Pew has an outsize influence on American religious conversation because they have data, careful data. All religious groups come under their scrutiny, not just Catholics, though Catholics, even Bishops,…
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March 12th, 2022
Women’s history month often invites us to look at women in the past, a valuable exercise that increases our knowledge and perspective. What strikes me about stories I am seeing this year about Catholic women is that they are living – and doing their work – now. Jeannine Gramick reflects for Lent on the desert…
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March 1st, 2022
“A static Church is a museum church,” Pope Francis told students from Catholic universities in North, South, and Central America and the Caribbean as he and some of their student representatives conversed via YouTube on February 24 as hundreds of us listened in. When we go to a museum, he continued, we knock on a…
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