Sunday, February 15, 2026

IMAGINING A BETTER WORLD THIS YEAR

 


IMAGINING A BETTER WORLD THIS YEAR

We don’t need to stumble around and die in darkness. For God entered onto the human stage to show us that He is the light of the world. For as the prophet Isaiah predicted, “The people who walked in darkness have seen a great light.” With humble and trusting hearts, we can be the very people who walk out of the darkness into the light of Christ Jesus.


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RICHARD ROHR AND THE UNIVERSAL CHRIST

 

RICHARD ROHR AND THE UNIVERSAL CHRIST

In his book, Richard Rohr introduces the topic in this way: The Universal Christ is “the Christ Mystery, the indwelling of the Divine Presence in everyone and everything since the beginning of time as we know it.” Watch this interview with Fr. Jim Martin's Podcast, "The Spiritual Life."


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Trump is destroying America — he must be stopped

 

Trump is destroying America — he must be stopped

Guest Voices   ncr

Catholic congressional Dems rebuke Mike Johnson's biblical defense of ICE

 

U.S. Rep. Rosa DeLauro, Democrat of Connecticut, led a group of Catholic Democrats in publishing a statement explaining how their faith influences their views on immigration as Congress debates reforming U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. (RNS/AP/J. Scott Applewhite, file)

Catholic congressional Dems rebuke Mike Johnson's biblical defense of ICE

Feb. 15, 2026: Sixth Sunday in Ordinary Time

 

"Jesus preaches at the sea" (1925) by Hans Lietzmann (Artvee)

Feb. 15, 2026: Sixth Sunday in Ordinary Time

Saturday, February 14, 2026

How was Pope Leo’s first year?

 

Everyone we love will be forgotten. The communion of saints is our reason for hope.

 

Faith in Focus

Everyone we love will be forgotten. The communion of saints is our reason for hope.

grave marker
The grave marker of a couple is illuminated with a candle as a full moon shines through clouds in this undated file photo. Credit: OSV News photo/Lisa Johnston, St. Louis Review

After his father died, my friend said he had been struck by “the finality of forgetting,” the way people disappear when the last person who knew them passes away. He tried to tell his children about their great-grandparents, but could only give them a sense of their ancestors’ lives during the Depression, not who these elders were as people.

He and I shared the sadness of not being able to give people we love our memories of other people we had loved, in the hope they would love them too. “It’s as if earlier generations die a second death when the last generation to know them forgets about them,” my friend said. I knew what he meant. It’s a part of growing older I didn’t expect, the fading out of a past I’d thought I could pass on into the future.

Jeannie Gaffigan: Why I’m producing a show about sex abuse now

Jeannie Gaffigan: Why I’m producing a show about sex abuse now
Screen grab from the official trailer of “Fox Chase Boy”

I never expected to be producing a show that stares straight at the Catholic Church’s crisis of sexual abuse and cover-up, but right now it feels necessary in a way I cannot ignore.

This piece is for anyone who has ever felt silenced, shamed or pressured to look away from something they knew was wrong. It is for Catholics, non-Catholics, ex-Catholics, people who are allergic to religion, people who have never stepped inside a church and people who have. Because the thing I am talking about is not “a Catholic issue.” It is a human one.