Thursday, March 31, 2011
Wednesday Liturgy: Follow-up: Stamping the Faithful With Ashes
Monday, March 28, 2011
The Spirit of the Liturgy: The Use of Missals and Missalettes During Mass
Thursday, March 24, 2011
Article: Savior Siblings: At What Moral Cost?
Wednesday, March 23, 2011
Anecdote: An Airport Encounter
ARCHBISHOP TIMOTHY DOLAN
As I was waiting for the electronic train to take me to the terminal, a man, maybe in his mid-forties, came closer to me. "I was raised a Catholic," he said, "and now as a father of two boys, I can't look at you or any other priest without thinking of a sexual abuser."
Archbishop Timothy Michael Dolan |
Other priests tell me it has happened to them a lot more.
Three is enough. Each time has left me so shaken I was near nausea.
It happened last Friday . . .
I had just arrived at the Denver Airport, there to speak at their popular annual "Living Our Catholic Faith" conference.
As I was waiting with the others for the electronic train to take me to the terminal, a man, maybe in his mid-forties, waiting as well, came closer to me.
"Are you a Catholic priest?" he kindly asked.
"Sure am. Nice to meet you," says I, as I offered my hand.
He ignored it. "I was raised a Catholic," he replied, almost always a hint of a cut to come, but I was not prepared for the razor sharpness of the stiletto, as he went on, "and now, as a father of two boys, I can't look at you or any other priest without thinking of a sexual abuser."
What to respond? Yell at him? Cuss him out? Apologize? Deck him? Express understanding? I must admit all such reactions came to mind as I staggered with shame and anger from the damage of the wound he had inflicted with those stinging words.
"Well," I recovered enough to remark, "I'm sure sorry you feel that way. But, let me ask you, do you automatically presume a sexual abuser when you see a Rabbi or Protestant minister?"
"Not at all," he came back through gritted teeth as we both boarded the train.
"How about when you see a coach, or a boy scout leader, or a foster parent, or a counsellor, or physician?" I continued.
"Of course not!" he came back. "What's all that got to do with it?"
"A lot," I stayed with him, "because each of those professions have as high a percentage of sexual abuse, if not even higher, than that of priests."
"Well, that may be," he retorted. "But the Church is the only group that knew it was going on, did nothing about it, and kept transferring the perverts around."
"You obviously never heard the stats on public school teachers," I observed. "In my home town of New York City alone, experts say the rate of sexual abuse among public school teachers is ten times higher than that of priests, and these abusers just get transferred around." (Had I known at that time the news in in last Sunday's New York Times about the high rate of abuse of the most helpless in state supervised homes, with reported abusers simply transferred to another home, I would have mentioned that, too.)
To that he said nothing, so I went in for a further charge.
Notwithstanding the happy ending, I was still trembling . . . and almost felt like I needed an exorcism to expel my shattered soul, as I had to confront again the horror this whole mess has been to victims and their families, our Catholic people like the man I had just met . . . and to us priests. |
"Pardon me for being so blunt, but you sure were with me, so, let me ask: when you look at yourself in a mirror, do you see a sex abuser?"
Now he was as taken aback as I had been two-minutes before. "What the hell are you talking about?"
"Sadly," I answered, "studies tell us that most children sexually abused are victims of their own fathers or other family members."
Enough of the debate, I concluded, as I saw him dazed. So I tried to calm it down.
"So, I tell you what: when I look at you, I won't see a sex abuser, and I would appreciate the same consideration from you."
The train had arrived at baggage claim, and we both exited together.
"Well then, why do we only hear this garbage about you priests," he inquired, as he got a bit more pensive.
"We priests wonder the same thing. I've got a few reasons if you're interested."
He nodded his head as we slowly walked to the carousel.
"For one," I continued, "we priests deserve the more intense scrutiny, because people trust us more as we dare claim to represent God, so, when on of us do it – even if only a tiny minority of us ever have – it is more disgusting."
"Two, I'm afraid there are many out there who have no love for the Church, and are itching to ruin us. This is the issue they love to endlessly scourge us with."
"And, three, I hate to say it," as I wrapped it up, "there's a lot of money to be made in suing the Catholic Church, while it's hardly worth suing any of the other groups I mentioned before."
We both by then had our luggage, and headed for the door. He then put his hand out, the hand he had not extended five minutes earlier when I had put mine out to him. We shook.
"Thanks. Glad I met you."
He halted a minute. "You know, I think of the great priests I knew when I was a kid. And now, because I work in IT at Regis University, I know some devoted Jesuits. Shouldn't judge all you guys because of the horrible sins of a few."
"Thanks!," I smiled.
I guess things were patched-up, because, as he walked away, he added, "At least I owe you a joke: What happens when you can't pay your exorcist?"
"Got me," I answered.
"You get 're-possessed'!"
We both laughed and separated.
Notwithstanding the happy ending, I was still trembling . . . and almost felt like I needed an exorcism to expel my shattered soul, as I had to confront again the horror this whole mess has been to victims and their families, our Catholic people like the man I had just met . . . and to us priests.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
Archbishop Timothy Michael Dolan. "An Airport Encounter." The Gospel In The Digital Age (March 18, 2011).
Reprinted by permission of the media office of the Archdiocese of New York. The Gospel In The Digital Age is Archbishop Dolan's blog.
THE AUTHOR
Archbishop Timothy Michael Dolan was named Archbishop of New York by Pope Benedict XVI on February 23, 2009. Born February 6, 1950, Archbishop Dolan was ordained to the priesthood on June 19, 1976. He completed his priestly formation at the Pontifical North American College in Rome where he earned a License in Sacred Theology at the Pontifical University of St. Thomas. In 1994, he was appointed rector of the Pontifical North American College in Rome where he served until June 2001. While in Rome, he also served as a visiting professor of Church History at the Pontifical Gregorian University and as a faculty member in the Department of Ecumenical Theology at the Pontifical University of St. Thomas Aquinas. The work of the Archbishop in the area of seminary education has influenced the life and ministry of a great number of priests of the new millennium. Archbishop Dolan is the author of Doers of the Word: Putting Your Faith Into Practice, To Whom Shall We Go?, and Advent Reflections: Come, Lord Jesus!.
Copyright © 2011 Archbishop Timothy Michael Dolan
Article: Is Free Will an Illusion?
DONALD DEMARCO
Do we have free will? Are we truly responsible for our actions? Or, on the other hand, are we merely passive pawns who are completely at the mercy of impersonal or alien forces?
The young teenager had been afflicted with round-the-clock hiccups for over a month. These hiccups assailed her as often as 50 times per minute. Was it the hiccups that contributed to her distraught condition that led to the crime? And to what extent? Jennifer’s mother puts the blame squarely on the "curse of the hiccups."
The so-called "hiccup defense" brings to mind other imaginative ways of exculpating a person from a crime. One may recall the celebrated "Twinkie defense" (too much sugar), "I was programmed by my genes," "temporary insanity" or that old chestnut: "The devil made me do it."
The court will decide whether Mee is guilty as charged, though we know that the judicial process does not enjoy infallibility. The "hiccup girl," as media reports describe her, does raise an age-old question, one that is a good topic for discussions around the water cooler: Do we have free will? Are we truly responsible for our actions? Or, on the other hand, are we merely passive pawns who are completely at the mercy of impersonal or alien forces?
The wrong way of going about trying to answer this question is to begin with a particular case, such as the one that Jennifer Mee is embroiled in, and then try to reach some universal conclusion.
If we begin with something confusing, we remain immersed in confusion. The way to deal with the issue of free will is to start from a position that is clear and indubitable, namely from the nature of the human being.
We are rational beings. This means first and foremost that we possess reason. Now, this simple statement is devoid of controversy. No one asks, "Is there such a thing as reason?" The omnipresence of the computer is sufficient proof that human beings both possess and employ reason. But people often ask the question, "Is there such a thing as free will?"
There is an easy and direct way of answering this question in the affirmative, one that is essentially the way Aristotle and Aquinas answered it.
We are free precisely because we are rational. Reason and freedom are profoundly interrelated. And just as there is no doubt that we are rational, there is also no doubt that we are free.
Because we are rational, we are able to survey an array of possible choices.
Let us say that I want to watch TV. I use my reason to explore something that might be informative, edifying and entertaining. I am not compelled, mindlessly, to watch one program or another (such a compulsion would be the gist of a horror story). But the mere recognition that I have all the reasons I need to watch a particular program is not enough.
I need to choose to watch the program. Therefore, this additional faculty, called "free will," is needed so that I can complement my act of reason with an act of free choice and actually watch the program.
Reason and will are both spiritual faculties. As such, they are personal expressions of our nature as human beings. There is good reason why St. Thomas Aquinas refers to the will as the "rational appetite."
It is because the will is a desire (or inclination) that follows and is congruent with reason. In other words, our capacity for free choice is set up for us by reason.
Reason locates the good and then the will chooses it. We are free precisely because we are rational. And since no one disputes whether we are rational, no one should dispute whether we are free.
Reason and will are both spiritual faculties. As such, they are personal expressions of our nature as human beings. There is good reason why St. Thomas Aquinas refers to the will as the "rational appetite." |
There are problems, to be sure. The clear water can be muddied by the addition of extraneous factors. Reason may be mistaken about what it takes to be good. There may be forces that overpower our ability to choose reasonably. We are not creatures of perfect integrity. But such problems belong more to the domain of psychology and jurisprudence than to that of philosophy.
We are, by nature, spiritual beings who are both rational and free. We should strive to be true to our nature and live a life of dynamic integrity in which we freely choose what our reason rightly identifies as good. It is most important for us to know this. We need not be distracted or confused by bizarre cases.
Concerning Jennifer Mee, the court will render a verdict. One hopes that it will be fair and just. We ourselves need not decide whether she acted freely with respect to the crime for which she has been charged. But we can take charge of our own lives and recognize that it is our nature to be free and that our freedom is grounded in our reason.
Thus, reason is the formal and unifying principle of ethics, not freedom. Reason comes first, and freedom follows. When people put reason aside in the mistaken hope of enlarging their freedom, they fail to preserve either. We preserve our freedom by maintaining its spiritual affinity with reason. And this is exactly what John Paul II meant by "becoming a person."
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
This article is reprinted with permission from National Catholic Register. To subscribe to the National Catholic Register call 1-800-421-3230.
THE AUTHOR
Copyright © 2011 National Catholic Register
Article: The iPhone App and the Return to Confession
FATHER ROBERT BARRON
The practice of sacramental confession in the Catholic Church dropped off precipitously and practically overnight about forty years ago.
Prior to the Second Vatican Council, Catholics came regularly and in great numbers to confess their sins to a priest, but then, just like that, they stopped coming. Analysts have proposed a variety of reasons for this sharp decline – a greater stress on God's love, a desire to move away from a fussy preoccupation with sexual peccadilloes, the sense that confession is not necessary for salvation, etc. – but whatever the cause or causes, the practice has certainly fallen into desuetude.
Fr. Andrew Greeley, the well-known priest-sociologist, once formulated the principle that whatever Catholics drop, someone else inevitably picks up. So, for example, we Catholics, after the Council, stopped talking about the soul, out of fear that the category would encourage dualistic thinking – and then we discovered, in the secular culture, a plethora of books on the care of the soul, including a wildly popular series on "chicken soup for the soul." Similarly, the Catholic Church became reluctant to speak of angels and devils – and then we witnessed, in the wider society, an explosion of books and films about these fascinating spiritual creatures.
Well, a very good example of the Greeley principle is way in which the practice of sacramental confession – largely extinct in the church – pops up in somewhat distorted form all over the extra-ecclesial world. What do we witness on the daytime talk shows – Oprah, Jerry Springer, Montel, Maury, etc. – but a series of people coming forward to confess their sins, usually of a sexual nature? And what do we see on the numerous "judgment" shows – Judge Judy, Judge Mathis, American Idol, Dr. Phil, Dancing With the Stars, etc. – but people being forced to accept a kind of punishment for their bad or inadequate behavior? What this demonstrates, I would argue, is that the need to confess our sins and to receive some sort of judgment and/or word of comfort is hard-wired into our spirits. When we don't have the opportunity to deal with our sin in the proper ecclesiastical context, we will desperately cast about for a substitute.
All of this came to mind when I read just recently about an iPhone application called "Confession: A Roman Catholic App" which is designed, not to forgive sins (you still need to see a priest for that!) but to prepare people for reconciliation. The app includes an examination of conscience, a step-by-step guide to the celebration of the sacrament, and other prayers. Official Vatican spokesman Fr. Federico Lombardi weighed in yesterday to clarify that this program is not a substitute for actual confession to a priest, but he also noted that it might be a very helpful aid, especially for those who have been away from the sacrament for a long time as well as for young people who are attuned to the digital world.
I can honestly say that some of the best and most spiritually rewarding moments of my twenty-five years of priesthood have been in the context of hearing confessions. And I can't tell you the number of people who have said to me over the years some version of "Father, I'm so grateful that I came to confession after all this time." |
I think that, on balance, this iPhone app is a good thing, for I strongly believe that whatever helps Catholics experience the beauty and power of confession is of great value. Many Catholics of a certain age can tell you horror stories about psychological abuse in the confessional by priests who were hung up on sexual sins, or all too eager to threaten eternal damnation, or perhaps just cranky from sitting in a box for hours. And many priests (including myself) could tell you tales of people coming to confession for trivial reasons or out of obsessive-compulsive neurosis. But as the Romans said long ago, abusus non tollit usum (just because something can be abused, doesn't mean that we should get rid of it).
I can honestly say that some of the best and most spiritually rewarding moments of my twenty-five years of priesthood have been in the context of hearing confessions. And I can't tell you the number of people who have said to me over the years some version of "Father, I'm so grateful that I came to confession after all this time."
Not long ago, I was with a group of priests and we were discussing the issue of general absolution, and a number of my colleagues were suggesting that it would be a legitimate means to bring people back to the sacrament. But then one priest spoke up: "Don't all of you go to a priest and confess your sins and receive individual absolution?" We all agreed. And then he said, "And don't you all find it to be a powerful experience?" We all concurred. "Then why," he continued, "do you want something less for lay people?" It was a very good question.
So I would say to my fellow Catholics – especially to those who have been away from Confession for a long time – try this app. It can't hurt – and it might prove to be a way to encounter the Christ who came to forgive our sins.
Perhaps we might consider all of the judges whom we obviously love to watch to be minor icons of the Judge in whose light we ought to live.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
Father Robert Barron, "The iPhone App and the Return to Confession." Our Sunday Visitor(February 20, 2011).
Reprinted with permission of Father Robert Barron.
THE AUTHOR
Fr. Robert Barron was ordained a priest for the Archdiocese of Chicago in 1986. He has a Masters degree in Philosophy from the Catholic University of America and a Doctorate in Sacred Theology from the Institute Catholique de Paris. He is currently professor of systematic theology at the University of St. Mary of the Lake, Mundelein Seminary. Fr. Barron is the author of, And Now I See: A Theology of Transformation, Thomas Aquinas: Spiritual Master, Heaven in Stone and Glass: Experiencing the Spirituality of the Great Cathedrals, Eucharist (Catholic Spirituality for Adults),Priority of Christ, The: Toward a Postliberal Catholicism, and Word on File: Proclaiming the Power of Christ. He also gives frequent talks, retreats and workshops on issues of theology and spirituality.
Father Barron uses his YouTube channel to reach out to people and bring valuable lessons of faith alive by pointing out things that can be learned by watching popular characters of movies and television shows.
Copyright © 2011 Father Robert Barron
Wednesday Liturgy: Confession Before Baptism
Wednesday Liturgy: Follow-up: "Sunday Mass" on Mondays
Wednesday, March 16, 2011
Article: Theology of the Body and ‘Mature Purity’
JANET SMITH
It is important to remember that the theology of the body was not written to provide a program for teaching chastity.
John Paul II wrote it to establish a biblically based anthropology adequate to defend the teaching of Humanae Vitae. That is, he tried to show how Scripture could provide us with an understanding of the human person that would help us understand why the Church condemns contraception. This led him to meditate deeply on the meaning of the human body as a means of revealing the truth about God and man.
John Paul II establishes that our bodies reveal that we are meant to make gifts of ourselves to others and receive others as gifts. John Paul II explains that Adam and Eve were able to be naked and without shame because they were without sin; they understood and lived the "spousal meaning" of the body. They respected each other as persons and were not capable of using each other. Sin brought disordered passions, fig leaves, and the ever ready possibility of sexual misuse.
John Paul II, like Jesus, was not interested only in our external behavior, but even more so in our "subjectivity" or the quality of our interior life. He wrote chapters on Christ's words, "Whoever looks upon a woman lustfully has already committed adultery with her in his heart" (Matthew 5:27-8). John Paul II viewed the source of sin as being in the "heart" rather than in the body: in our thoughts, emotions and commitments. Sin comes from the inside of man and moves outward.
John Paul II teaches that Christ was not so much accusing human beings of wrongdoing but making an appeal to us to live in the spirit of the redeemed body. Christ came to bring us the graces to enable us to live morally upright lives, not only in respect to our external behavior, but also in respect to the interior movements of our heart.
John Paul believes that we still have, in the deepest layer of our being, a potency to live in accord with the spousal meaning of the body (49:6). He implored us not to hold our hearts under constant suspicion, but to have confidence that the redemptive graces of Christ can restore purity to our hearts: "In mature purity, man enjoys the fruits of victory over concupiscence" (58:6). Without purity we will "use" those we wish to love: "Purity is a requirement of love. It is the dimension of the inner truth of love in man's 'heart'" (49:7).
In order to achieve chastity or purity, two things are necessary: 1) a proper understanding of the meaning and purpose of sexuality, and 2) the ordering of the passions in accord with that understanding. In the theology of the body, John Paul II is primarily establishing the right understanding of sexuality; he says very little about what needs to be done to achieve "mature purity." His description of it as "a combination of the virtue of temperance and of piety, a gift of the Holy Spirit" provides guidance. Acquiring virtue is largely a matter of habituation; those who would achieve "mature purity" must avoid the occasion of sin; for instance, they must avoid looking at or listening to entertainment that leads to impure thoughts and actions. Acquiring the gift of reverence (and here John Paul II means "reverence" for the gift of one's sexuality and the gift of another person) is largely a matter of growing in love of the Lord, which one does through praying with Scripture, receiving the sacraments, and engaging in any activity that promotes spiritual growth.
John Paul II, however, focuses on how proper understanding of sexuality can be of enormous assistance in achieving mature purity. Many who were quite enslaved to sexual sin report that once they came to understand the vision of sexuality that John Paul II spells out in the theology of the body, they were rather quickly freed from immoral sexual behavior and thoughts. Many people, of course, will not experience an easy transformation, but will eventually find a new way of thinking and behaving sexually.
"Purity is a requirement of love. It is the dimension of the inner truth of love in man's 'heart'" (49:7). |
John Paul II explains that married couples who practice the abstinence required by natural family planning are highly likely to achieve "mature purity," for they are ordering their sexual lives to the proper goods of sexuality. Indeed, I know many married couples who practice their Catholic faith devoutly, who understand and live the spousal meaning of the body, and who, in fact, have achieved a very high level of "mature purity." Their love for their spouses has led them to discipline the movements of their "hearts" and "thoughts" so that they no longer experience any serious attraction to anyone but their spouses. They, in fact, are experiencing the "redemption of the body" that Christ promised to those who follow him.
Any chastity program based on the theology of the body would provide extended instruction on the state of man before the Fall, the challenges faced by fallen man, and the hope we have for mature purity in the light of redemption. It would need also to lay out a program for growing in the virtue of temperance and the gift of reverence. The promise that those who come to possess "mature purity" will become God-like and able to truly love their spouses and others should provide marvelous motivation for living out the spousal meaning of the body.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
This article is reprinted with permission from National Catholic Register. To subscribe to the National Catholic Register call 1-800-421-3230.
THE AUTHOR
Janet E. Smith holds the Father Michael J. McGivney Chair of Life Ethics at Sacred Heart Major Seminary in Detroit. She is the author of Life Issues, Medical Choices: Questions and Answers for Catholics, The Right to Privacy (Bioethics & Culture), Humanae Vitae: A Generation Laterand the editor of Why Humanae Vitae Was Right. She has published many articles on ethical and bioethics issues. She has taught at the University of Notre Dame and the University of Dallas. Prof. Smith has received the Haggar Teaching Award from the University of Dallas, the Prolife Person of the Year from the Diocese of Dallas, and the Cardinal Wright Award from the Fellowship of Catholic Scholars. She is serving a second term as a consultor to the Pontifical Council on the Family. Over a million copies of her talk, "Contraception: Why Not" have been distributed. Visit Janet Smith's web page here. See Janet Smith's audio tapes and writing here. Janet Smith is on the Advisory Board of the Catholic Education Resource Center.
Copyright © 2011 National Catholic Register
Article: The Lenten Thing
DAVID G. BONAGURA, JR.
A renewal in Lenten practices can be a powerful catalyst in rebuilding Catholic identity.
Her question reveals the prevailing notion of Catholic Lent: give up something we like, and hang on until Easter. Otherwise, we should just go about our daily business, with the treats and delicacies that we have come to see as par for the daily course. But if Lent is to have any real meaning and impact on our souls, it has to be more than a single repeated act of self-denial, as important as that act may be. The Church gives us a full season to accomplish the singular aim of Lent, and of the whole of Christian existence: conversion. Conversion requires self-denial, to be sure, but it also requires that everything we do and every aspect of our being conform to Christ. This is why Lent is a season – forty days, evenings, nights – spent in the desert with the Lord.
Living in the desert day and night is a cultural change for all of us with modern conveniences and busy social calendars. Weakened as we are by original sin, we are inclined to offer God a sacrifice of our choosing – sweets, alcohol, television, or some other non-essential item – but we do not even think to offer luxuries that have become normal to us: dinner or a movie out with our spouse and friends, purchasing new clothing or other items, morning coffee from Starbucks rather than the office kitchen. Rather than go the extra mile, we all tend to negotiate with God on our terms rather than His, for He demands too much of us.
But for conversion, for the true metanoia that is at the heart of Jesus' ministry to take place, we have to allow God into all aspects of our lives, morning, noon, and night. In Lent, we are called to live differently, to "sacrifice" even what is dear to us, according to the original meaning of the word: "to make holy." And when we make something holy we give it to God, removing it from human use.
The fasting regulations in force before 1966 were a powerful reminder of this: forty days with two half meals and one full meal, with abstinence from meat on Fridays. Of course, prayer and other devotions were (and still are) encouraged to orient fasting toward its ultimate goal: to die to self and to "put on the Lord Jesus Christ" (Romans 13:14). When lived with the proper spirit, one could not help but think about Lent: the Passion of our Lord, the sorrows of our own wounded pride, and the glory to come with the Resurrection.
Relaxing this fast to two days (Ash Wednesday and Good Friday) and allowing Catholics to choose their own penances has blunted the true force and character of Lent, which, to judge by the way we Catholics live today, is virtually indistinguishable from the rest of the year. We have traded the desert for the perpetual feast, and in doing so we forgot what the real Feast is all about.
The discipline of Lent – in addition to its spiritual benefits – also once served as a bulwark of Catholic identity in Protestant America as well. Now, bowing to the demands of secular religion, Lent has been reduced to a private, personal matter that cannot be seen in public. The weakening of our collective Lenten observances has coincided with the withering of our Catholic identity. And as our spiritual lives go, so go our public lives.
Lent may well be the most difficult aspect of Catholic life to recover. The desert is never a choice destination. |
A renewal in Lenten practices can be a powerful catalyst in rebuilding Catholic identity. Pope John Paul II recognized the connection between identity and Catholic practice inChristifideles Laici, which Pope Benedict XVI recently quoted in own call to evangelization: "Without doubt a mending of the Christian fabric of society is urgently needed in all parts of the world. But for this to come about what is needed is to first remake the Christian fabric of the ecclesial community itselfpresent in these countries and nations." (emphasis in original)
Lent may well be the most difficult aspect of Catholic life to recover. The desert is never a choice destination. But just as the blood of the martyrs was the seed of the Church, our sacrifice of prayers, fasting, and almsgiving for a full forty days, evenings, and nights can re-grow our Catholic identity, even though this fine wheat will be surrounded by chaff. The donuts, the movies, the restaurants, and the credit cards cannot – and should not – follow us into the desert. But if we can leave them behind, we will not only enjoy the real Feast more deeply, but also learn the proper perspective on the earthly feasts the Lord has given us.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
David G. Bonagura, Jr. "The Lenten Thing." The Catholic Thing (March 9, 2011).
Reprinted with permission from The Catholic Thing. All rights reserved. For reprint rights, write to: info@thecatholicthing.org.
The Catholic thing – the concrete historical reality of Catholicism – is the richest cultural tradition in the world. That is the deep background to The Catholic Thing which bring you an original column every day that provides fresh and penetrating insight into the current situation along with other commentary, news, analysis, and – yes – even humor. Our writers include some of the most seasoned and insightful Catholic minds in America: Michael Novak, Ralph McInerny, Hadley Arkes, Michael Uhlmann, Mary Eberstadt, Austin Ruse, George Marlin, William Saunders, and many others.
THE AUTHOR
David G. Bonagura, Jr. is Adjunct Professor of Theology at the Seminary of the Immaculate Conception, Huntington, NY and an associate editor of The University Bookman.Copyright © 2011 The Catholic Thing