Friday, June 26, 2026

AI has no place in the parish bulletin

 

Person handing out fliers

Linwood’s Last Hurrah: A beloved retreat house closes its doors

 

The front entrance to Linwood Spiritual Center Credit: Brigid McCabe

It was a Monday in November, and I was making s’mores with Sister Mary Dolan. Despite the group of teenage girls chatting and laughing around her, Sister Mary, as she was known to the students, looked as serene as always while standing in front of the firepit’s glow. When she stepped back and turned toward me, the marshmallows she was roasting were perfectly golden.

“The trick is patience,” she told me as we admired her handiwork. “You can’t get impatient.”

I recognized a familiar sentiment behind her advice: Do every little thing well, so the big things have strong foundations. This was how things were done at Notre Dame School of Manhattan, my high school alma mater, and the place where I first met Sister Mary and her fellow sisters of the Society of St. Ursula, the congregation that had founded the school.

SSPX stands firm against Vatican II in open letter to Pope Leo

 

News

SSPX stands firm against Vatican II in open letter to Pope Leo

Cardinal Víctor Manuel Fernández, prefect of the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith, and Father Davide Pagliarani, superior general of the traditionalist Society of St. Pius X, are pictured in a combination photo. In a statement released June 24, 2026, SSPX issued an open letter to Pope Leo XIV and the College of Cardinals asserting its adherence to Catholic tradition while proceeding with plans to consecrate four new bishops without a papal mandate. (OSV News photo/Pablo Esparza, CNS/Jean-Matthieu Gautier, KNA via CPP)

(OSV News) — The traditionalist Society of St. Pius X issued an open letter to Pope Leo XIV and the College of Cardinals asserting its adherence to Catholic tradition while proceeding with plans to consecrate four new bishops without a papal mandate.

In a statement that included a 28-page “Profession of Faith” published June 24, the traditionalist society, commonly known as SSPX, said the Catholic Church is facing pressures from within and without that “push her in every possible direction, except—it seems to us—the right one.”

Why we can't toss aside just war theory

 

Why we can't toss aside just war theory

Pope Leo urges outward-looking church at meeting of world's cardinals

 

Pope Leo XIV attends the annual session of the World Food Program's executive board during his visit to the agency's Rome headquarters June 22, 2026. (CNS photo/Lola Gomez)

Pope Leo urges outward-looking church at meeting of world's cardinals

Thursday, June 25, 2026

Lay groups in Germany push back after Vatican denies request for right to preach at Mass

 

News

Lay groups in Germany push back after Vatican denies request for right to preach at Mass

Bishops enter Würzburg Cathedral for the opening Mass of the spring plenary assembly of the German Bishops' Conference Feb. 23, 2026. Credit: OSV News photo/courtesy German bishops' conference

(OSV News) — Lay groups in Germany involved in the local Church’s controversial Synodal Way say they will continue demanding the right to preach at Mass, defying a recent rejection by the Vatican of the proposal.

In a press release published June 23, the Dicastery for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments announced that it had denied a request by the German bishops’ conference to allow “in exceptional circumstances, a duly commissioned lay member of the faithful to preach in place of the homily during the celebration of the Eucharist.”

The new know-nothings? Anti-Catholic political rhetoric is making a comeback


The new know-nothings? Anti-Catholic political rhetoric is making a comeback

U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth attends the National Prayer Breakfast in Washington Feb. 5, 2026. (OSV News photo/Al Drago, Reuters)
U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, seen here at the National Prayer Breakfast in Washington on Feb. 5, invited Rev. Doug Wilson to lead a prayer service at the Pentagon, despite the latter’s history of anti-Catholic statements. Credit: OSV News photo/Al Drago, Reuters

President Abraham Lincoln once said of the Know-Nothing Party, founded in 1844 and dissolved in 1860: “If the Know-Nothings get control, [the Declaration of Independence] will read all men are created equal, except negroes, foreigners and Catholics.”

The Know-Nothing Party dissolved in 1860, but its mix of nativism and white supremacy remained strong, and many of their proponents did not consider Catholics to be “white.” In fact, the Klu Klux Klan targeted my Catholic immigrant ancestors in the panhandle of Texas by burning crosses in their yards. My husband’s maternal grandmother in the same town told us of how her priest was tarred and feathered when she was a little girl. “He was never the same,” she said.

We need to get offline and get in person this summer

 

Person bowls.

We need to get offline and get in person this summer