Sunday, June 7, 2026

A though provoking reflection from Joe Sankovich, resigned priest in Tucson, AZ

 A though provoking reflection from Joe Sankovich, resigned priest in Tucson, AZ...Pat Callahan Seattle, WA


First Weekend of June

06/07 June in 2026

Virtues Applied to Daily Living/4

 

Our focus last week was patience.  We spent a few moments laying a foundation and identifying situations where patience calls for action, yet also requires a measured response to circumstances and to the individuals involved.  For me that realization came to life last Sunday morning as I sat listening to a homily on love, comparing, almost involuntarily, the love of Divinity with the ways in which human beings express and demonstrate love.

 

The more I listened, the more irritated and frustrated I became, feeling challenged to express a contrary message about love in a meaningful way.  In some ways I was still living with my fifty year perception that I was, and perhaps still could be, a better homilist than the one to whom I was listening.  And then two things happened.  First, I recalled my own writing on patience and spent a few minutes thinking about how I needed to put my own words into practice.  Second, I realized that if I could develop a response grounded in patience, I might be able to share my thinking in a positive way and thus make a small homiletic contribution.  And that is exactly what happened.

A Cure for Clerical Loneliness: 8 Diocesan Priests Find Brotherhood Under One Roof


A Cure for Clerical Loneliness: 8 Diocesan Priests Find Brotherhood Under One Roof

‘It has been wonderful to live in community,’ says Father Joshua Votruba, adding that ‘the brotherhood’ has been a tremendous support.

L to R: Msgr. Patrick Gaalaas and seminarian Max Williams face off in a friendly game of chess on May 26, 2026, at the Holy Family Cathedral rectory in Tulsa, Oklahoma.
L to R: Msgr. Patrick Gaalaas and seminarian Max Williams face off in a friendly game of chess on May 26, 2026, at the Holy Family Cathedral rectory in Tulsa, Oklahoma. (photo: Daniel McCay/Diocese of Tulsa)

At the rectory at Holy Family Cathedral in downtown Tulsa, Oklahoma, eight active diocesan priests share a home, pitch in to help with chores, and frequently get together to watch a ball game together at the end of the day. 

It’s an arrangement that is so uncommon, it may be the largest community of diocesan priests in the United States. 

For these Tulsa priests, who range in age from early 30s to a priest in his late 70s, living together is preferable to living alone, as many diocesan priests do. 

Oligarchs can’t ruin the World Cup

 

Ideas

Oligarchs can’t ruin the World Cup 

Credit: William Gualtier/AP/FiFA/Wikimedia Commons

It has been another four years. The World Cup is a ritual that begets rituals. The anticipation of another one unlocks memories of those that have come before. In my case, the return of the World Cup means yet again brooding over how the Netherlands stole Mexico’s path to the semifinal in 2014, with a faked dive and an unjust penalty. It means suddenly developing an aptitude for statistics and mathematical probabilities. It means more time with my dad. It means more than I can possibly express. 

In Spain, Pope Leo denounces polarization and hails commitment to multilateralism

In Spain, Pope Leo denounces polarization and hails commitment to multilateralism
Pope Leo stands outdoors, waving and smiling, between the king and queen of Spain. Soldiers in dress uniform stand guard in the background
Pope Leo XIV waves as he stands with Spain's King Felipe VI and Queen Letizia during a welcoming ceremony at the Royal Palace of Madrid June 6, 2026, after his arrival at Adolfo Suarez Madrid-Barajas International Airport to begin his apostolic journey. (OSV News/Elisabetta Trevisan, Vatican Media)

“Today, the temptation to gain popularity by fanning the flames of polarization seems to have grown rather than diminished, and human dignity continues to be violated,” Pope Leo said in his first speech soon after arriving in Spain, a majority Catholic country of 50 million people.  

With these words, Leo went to the heart of the polarized situation in Spain today. He highlighted this in his address at the Royal Palace in Madrid, in the presence of King Felipe VI and his wife Queen Letizia, to an audience of some 300 people that included the state authorities, religious leaders, representatives of civil society and the diplomatic corps.

OU CAN TELL A LOT ABOUT A CULTURE BY HOW IT TREATS MINORITIES

 

OU CAN TELL A LOT ABOUT A CULTURE BY HOW IT TREATS MINORITIES

When we learn from and listen to another, and recognize each other's dignity, we become the church that the world desperately needs.



SYNODALITY MUST BECOME OUR DAILY PRACTICE

 

SYNODALITY MUST BECOME OUR DAILY PRACTICE

Australia’s synodal consultations demonstrated that the People of God are capable of engaging synodally — and that they hunger for fundamental changes. We should not wait for synodality to "trickle down," instead it should be cultivated at the parish level and expanded to our homes and daily practice.


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Saturday, June 6, 2026

What realistic nonviolence looks like in an age of war

What realistic nonviolence looks like in an age of war

Leo’s new encyclical is remarkably candid about the Church and slavery.

 

Pope Leo XIV prays before a statue of Mary and Jesus in Equatorial Guinea on April 23, 2026 (Photo OSV News/Matteo Pernaselci, Vatican Media).

While John Brown sat in the Jefferson County Jail awaiting his execution in 1859 after his failed attempt to spark an uprising at Harpers Ferry, a local Catholic priest visited him. The priest tried to persuade Brown of slavery’s legitimacy. After all, he told Brown, in St. Paul’s letter to Philemon, “we are informed that [St. Paul] sent back the fugitive slave Onesimus from Rome to his master.”