Welcome to the CORPUS Blog.
CORPUS is a faith community affirming and rooted in a revitalized church including an inclusive priestly ministry.
Please visit our web site: www.corpus.org Our Blog will be a portal to news, articles and resources enabling you to keep up-to-date in the Catholic Reform process.
Can we approach our work with clarity and humility, a willingness to listen and learn from those who disagree, while remaining true to the vision entrusted to us?
On April 25, lay leaders from congregations across the diocese gathered for a learning day focused on their spiritual well-being. What follows is an edited version of a plenary session I offered.
The exterior of St. Patrick's Cathedral in New
York City is seen in a nighttime file photo. In a May 1, 2026,
statement, Archbishop Ronald A. Hicks of New York announced the
archdiocese has proposed an $800 million settlement to resolve some
1,300 abuse claims involving clergy and staff brought under lookback
laws in that state. Credit: OSV News photo/Gregory A. Shemitz
The Archdiocese of New York has proposed an $800 million settlement
to resolve some 1,300 abuse claims involving clergy and staff brought
under lookback laws in that state.
Federal
immigration agents listen to Vice President J. D. Vance speak in
Minneapolis, January 22, 2026 (OSV News photoJim Watson, pool via
Reuters).
In
1899, Pope Leo XIII sent a letter to the Catholic bishops of the United
States condemning the errors of what he called “Americanism”—a
temptation, he warned, to embrace pluralism, religious liberty, and freedom of expression
and other dangerously “Protestant” ideas in an effort to help Catholics
assimilate to the surrounding culture. Not only did the Catholic Church
eventually embrace most of the concepts that Leo deplored, but even at
the time, the American bishops assured him that his objections were
unfounded. In their view, Catholics in their country could be both good
Americans and good Catholics. The bishops were right, and what became
known as “the phantom heresy” of Americanism was largely forgotten.
On
June 9, America Media’s team of experts hosted an exclusive,
subscriber-only event to answer your specific questions about Pope Leo
XIV, the conclave and this historic time in our church.
Nicholas
DeRosa is baptized by Father Patrick Riegger, pastor of St. John the
Evangelist Church in Center Moriches, N.Y., during the Easter Vigil on
April 8, 2023. Credit: OSV News photo/Gregory A. Shemitz
Did the Catholic Church in the United States experience a surge in
adults entering the faith in 2026? Unfortunately, there will be no
precise and official word from the church about what happened with new
entrants this Easter for more than a year. But we have a glimpse of what
we might eventually see from the most comprehensive research available,
conducted by Stephen Spiewak, a director of marketing for the Hallow
prayer app. According to Hallow, “The average American diocese is seeing 38 percent more people joining the church in 2026 compared to 2025.”