Saturday, July 18, 2026

Christian masculinity and the spiritual power of silence

  Angel visits a sleeping St. Joseph

A Catholic classicist on Christopher Nolan’s ‘The Odyssey’

A Catholic classicist on Christopher Nolan’s ‘The Odyssey’
This image released by Universal Pictures shows Matt Damon as Odysseus, left, and Zendaya as Athena, in a scene from "The Odyssey."
Matt Damon as Odysseus, left, and Zendaya as Athena, in a scene from "The Odyssey." Credit: Melinda Sue Gordon/Universal Pictures via AP

In his video review of Christopher Nolan’s “The Odyssey, the Canadian artist and philosopher of myth Jonathan Pageau expressed what a lot of us who are committed to the old books have been feeling for over a year: a trepidation that our favorite director might fail to capture the magic of our favorite book (well, second-favorite for me). After disasters like “Troy, I had sworn off all Hollywood adaptations of ancient classics. If you spend hours every day, every week, for years just trying to get to the point where you can hear a little bit of the magic of the literature of the deep past, then you worry about those who might try to turn your beloved stories into old-fashioned summer action flicks and thus “taint” them, to use Pageau’s term. 

Can civil religion make a comeback?

 

Can civil religion make a comeback?

NCR VoiceMichael Sean Winters

Sixteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time

 

Wheat plants photographed against a partly cloudy sky (Unsplash/Katja Ano)

July 19, 2026: Sixteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time

In new documentary, Mario Cuomo is a stark contrast to today's Catholic politicians

In the upcoming documentary "Mario," the faith and politics of former New York Governor Mario Cuomo are a stark contrast against today's Catholic politicians. (Life Stories)

In new documentary, Mario Cuomo is a stark contrast to today's Catholic politicians

 

Friday, July 17, 2026

Meet Britain’s first Catholic prime minister in 500 years


Meet Britain’s first Catholic prime minister in 500 years

Andy Burnham, a British member of Parliament for Makerfield, England, delivers a speech at the People's History Museum in Manchester June 29, 2026. Burnham will likely become prime minister of the United Kingdom later in July and would be the first ever to identify publicly as a Catholic. Credit: OSV News

Britain is about to get its first Catholic prime minister in more than 500 years. No Roman Catholic has occupied the role of chief minister to the English crown since the 1550s, when Queen Mary I attempted to reverse the English Reformation that had begun during the reign of her father, Henry VIII. That is set to change with the elevation of Andy Burnham on July 20.

Virgil Michel’s vision of the liturgy and social justice remains urgent.

 

Virgil Michel (St. John School of Theology and Seminary)

One of the most fascinating bits of liturgical history in the United States concerns how the liturgical movement and the Catholic Worker movement interacted during the first part of the twentieth century. At the heart of that story is a friendship between Virgil Michel, OSB, and Dorothy Day. Yet this was more than a personal friendship. The trends that they represented together exemplified a way of “reading” the liturgy that placed the prayer of the Church at the heart of the project of social reconstruction—a project that remains necessary in our own time.

Michel (1890–1938), a monk of St. John’s Abbey in Collegeville, Minnesota, was one of the pioneers of the liturgical movement. He founded Liturgical Press, began the periodical Orate Fratres (later renamed Worship), taught at St. John’s University, and promoted Catholic Church renewal far and wide. But he is best remembered as a strong advocate of the belief that social justice is not something added onto the liturgy; it is integral to it. 

AI will make war worse, Pope Leo warns

 

A Ukrainian serviceman of Khartia brigade launches an interceptor drone in Kharkiv region, Ukraine, June 26, 2026. (RNS/AP/Andrii Marienko)

AI will make war worse, Pope Leo warns