Thursday, December 4, 2025

Catholic military archbishop calls ‘intentional killing of noncombatants’ illegal and immoral

 

Catholic military archbishop calls ‘intentional killing of noncombatants’ illegal and immoral

Why President Trump is treating illegal immigration as sacrilege


Why President Trump is treating illegal immigration as sacrilege

During the end of November and beginning of December, two significant news stories involving crime and immigration got even more attention than they would have received under normal circumstances because of President Trump’s response to them.

On Nov. 26, an Afghan man shot two soldiers from the West Virginia National Guard who were deployed in Washington, D.C. One of the soldiers, Sarah Beckstrom, died of her wounds; the other, Andrew Wolfe, is still fighting for his life as of this writing and is listed in serious condition. The man who shot them had been admitted to the United States as a refugee in 2021 after serving alongside U.S. intelligence and military personnel during the war in Afghanistan.

Pope Leo XIV's distinctiveness begins to show

 

Pope Leo XIV's distinctiveness begins to show

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After 900-mile trek, Chicago priest urges action and empathy on deportations

After 900-mile trek, Chicago priest urges action and empathy on deportations

 

When Catholic colleges cut theology majors, what happens to Catholic identity?

 

When Catholic colleges cut theology majors, what happens to Catholic identity?

Wednesday, December 3, 2025

Pope Leo on what he was thinking inside the conclave

 


Pope Leo on what he was thinking inside the conclave

Pope Leo XIV answers a question from a journalist aboard his flight back to Rome from Lebanon, Dec. 2, 2025. Credit: CNS photo/Lola Gomez

In a short press conference on the flight from Beirut to Rome at the conclusion of his weeklong visit to Turkey and Lebanon, Pope Leo answered questions on several topics: about the possibility of lasting peace in Lebanon and in Ukraine; on President Trump’s ultimatum to remove Venezuela’s president Nicolás Maduro with the use of force; what Leo’s next trips could be; how he felt at the conclave when he saw he could be elected; on the fear of Islam by some in Europe; and on the German synodal way.

James M. O’Toole traces the collapse of confession in America

 

The Ghost Sacrament

James M. O’Toole traces the collapse of confession in America

A confessional is seen at the Memorial Church of the Holy Sepulcher on the grounds of the Franciscan Monastery in Washington (OSV News photo/Nancy Phelan Wiechec).

“Seldom does history offer an example of a practice undertaken for so long by so many that collapsed so quickly,” writes James O’Toole of confession. “The question is why.” For I Have Sinned is his eloquent, thoroughly researched answer.

From the beginning of the twentieth century into the 1950s, regular confession was what O’Toole, a distinguished historian who taught for many years at Boston College, calls a “defining characteristic” of American Catholic religious life. If Sunday was for Communion, Saturday was for confession, and most Catholics were reluctant to take Communion if they had not gone to confession.