Former Attorney General Bill Barr: U.S Military Action Against Iran Meets Criteria for ‘Just War’
Pope Leo XIV and U.S. bishops have said the war fails just‑war criteria, warning it lacks proportionality, last resort, and a clear moral end.
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Pope Leo XIV and U.S. bishops have said the war fails just‑war criteria, warning it lacks proportionality, last resort, and a clear moral end.
In the intense, partisan, polarized climate of our society, many people of faith are persuaded that topics deemed “political” are best avoided. It’s an understandable impulse, yet such avoidance only plays into the hands of those who benefit from our withdrawal from public discourse. In such times, we do well to remember the richer and more accurate understanding of politics: our collective moral and civic responsibility for tending to our common life for the common good.
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For priests, ‘smelling like the sheep’ is not optional
Nothing captured Pope Francis’ vision for ordained ministry better than his invitation to priests to “be shepherds with the odor of the sheep.” First expressed in his homily at the Chrism Mass on Holy Thursday in 2013, the vivid image was used by the late pope to challenge clericalism, which he often described as a serious disease. Recently, reading Pope Leo XIV’s apostolic letter “Una Fedelta,” issued in 2025 on the 60th anniversary of the Second Vatican Council’s decrees “Optatum Totius” and “Presbyterorum Ordinis,” led me to a deeper insight into what it means to smell like the sheep.
In the war of words between Pope Leo and President Donald Trump last week, the two U.S.-born world leaders seemed to agree on only one thing: that the pope is not a politician. In the rambling Truth Social post that started the ruckus, Trump accused Leo of supporting crime, a nuclear Iran, and Venezuelan drug dealers, while also taking credit for the pope’s election and getting in a dig that he prefers Leo’s MAGA brother. But he concluded the rant by advising Leo to “get his act together as Pope, use Common Sense, stop catering to the Radical Left, and focus on being a Great Pope, not a Politician.”