Monday, July 13, 2026

The editors: The unfinished work that remains for the United States of America

 

The editors: The unfinished work that remains for the United States of America

Americans should reject the false choice between an uncritical celebration and a despair that is blind to the country’s virtues.

America needs better progressive candidates

Democratic congressional candidate Darializa Avila Chevalier speaks during a Get Out The Vote rally ahead of New York's primary election June 18, 2026, in the Brooklyn borough of New York. (AP/Ryan Murphy)

America needs better progressive candidates

 

Ministry offers food, supplies and connections to Boston's unhoused

 

Lay chaplain Gary Riccio (left), Capuchin Franciscan Br. Paul Fesefeldt and a volunteer stand by the Capuchin Mobile Ministries van in Cambridge, Massachusetts, in mid-June. "It's like a mobile coffee hour," said Fesefeldt, founder and director of the ministry. (Greta Gaffin)

Ministry offers food, supplies and connections to Boston's unhoused

Mercy Enures Forever

 

 
A photo of a raindrop on a leaf.
 

The Beatitudes: Week Two

Mercy Endures Forever

Monday, July 13, 2026

 

Blessed are the merciful: They shall have mercy shown them.
—Matthew 5:7

Father Richard teaches that mercy is the essence of who God is:

Mercy is like the mystery of forgiveness. By definition, mercy and forgiveness are unearned, undeserved, and not owed. If it isn’t all those three, it won’t be experienced as mercy. If we think mercy is mandatory, or that it must be earned, we lose the mystery of both mercy and forgiveness. I believe with all my heart that mercy and forgiveness are the whole gospel.

Podcast: Theologian Ronald Rolheiser talks about a spirituality for our wisdom years

 

Podcast: Theologian Ronald Rolheiser talks about a spirituality for our wisdom years

Saturday, July 11, 2026

What the Eucharist asks of us in a broken world

 Religion

What the Eucharist asks of us in a broken world

Flourishing Through Limits


Pope Leo XIV speaks with Anthropic cofounder Christopher Olah at the Vatican’s Synod Hall, May 25, 2026 (CNS photo/Lola Gomez).

Pope Leo XIV’s Magnifica humanitas has fostered immediate and widespread engagement. Not since Laudato si’ has an encyclical been so widely discussed in legacy media, online, and in specialist forums. The eager response to the encyclical speaks to a hunger for discussion about what precisely the AI being pressed upon us is designed to do and whose interests it is furthering. 

The encyclical lands at a critical moment. Spring graduates loudly and repeatedly booed commencement speakers’ blithe invocations of the inevitability of the AI future. Surveys consistently show that a majority of the public think AI will have a negative impact on their lives, and resistance to the frenzied buildout of data centers has emerged as a rare point of bipartisan consensus.