Summer Is a Time For Family Memories

by Bill Dodds I’M NOT SURPRISED that this summer is bringing back many memories of times when our three children were younger. This is the first one since their mom, my wife Monica, died last winter. What surprises me, but shouldn’t, was how wise she was about making family memories. She was the one who […]

Pope Distributes First Communion and Gives Catechism Lesson

by Francis X. Rocca VATICAN CITY (CNS) – Visiting an ordinary Rome parish for the first time as the city’s bishop, Pope Francis gave a group of children their first Communion and a catechism lesson on the meaning of the Trinity. The pope celebrated Mass May 26, the feast of the Most Holy Trinity, outside […]

St. Dorothy of Brooklyn – Potential Saint Has Connections to the Diocese

by Deacon Don Zirkel Dorothy Day, whose cause for canonization is underway, has at least six important ties to the Brooklyn Diocese: her birth and earliest years; service as a nurse; significant retreat; volunteer co-workers; Catholic Worker house in Park Slope; and many references in the pages of the diocesan newspaper. The most influential woman […]

Radical Conversion Ordered to Mission

by George Weigel It was a brief greeting to former colleagues. But if you read Pope Francis’s April 18 letter to the Argentine bishops’ conference closely, you get a glimpse of the man, his convictions and his vision. First, the man: Jorge Mario Bergoglio has remained very much himself, rather than adopting what some might […]

Reaching the Un-churched

by Father Robert Lauder ANYONE WHO READS this column regularly may recall that last year I did a series of columns on a book that I very much like, Jesuit Father Michael Paul Gallagher’s Faith Maps: Ten Religious Explorers from Newman to Joseph Ratzinger (New York: Paulist Press, 2010, 158 pages, $16.95). Father Gallagher provides […]

Experiencing the Power of Christ’s Risen Life

by Father Robert Lauder As Lent drew to a close, I decided that I wanted to write a column about the resurrection of the Lord and our participation in Christ’s resurrection.  The mystery of Christ’s resurrection had been on my mind either explicitly or implicitly every time I thought about the meaning of Lent. While […]

Small Sacrifices, Big Impact at St. Pancras School

The students from Walter Stark’s sixth-grade class at St. Pancras School, Glendale, took it upon themselves to make this Christmas season a festive one. They spent Advent collecting money by making small sacrifices. Foregoing treats for themselvess, students pooled their money for a donation fund. Their generosity inspired their parents to also contribute. Before school […]

Spreading Christmas Cheer

Students around the diocese spent Advent getting themselves ready for Christmas and helping others do the same. In Middle Village, the school community of Christ the King got into the spirit of the season at its annual Christmas tree lighting ceremony. More than 200 people joined in the festivities. Santa was on hand for pictures, […]

Angels of Newtown – Pope Prays Over ‘Senseless Violence’

by Cindy Wooden VATICAN CITY (CNS) – After 20 children and six adults were shot dead in Connecticut, Pope Benedict XVI offered his condolences and prayers, urging all to dedicate themselves to acts of peace in the face of such “senseless violence.” After reciting the Angelus Dec. 17, the pope, speaking in English, said he […]