Inside Catholic

Vatican assumes control of the Legionaries of Christ

Rome will be taking control of the Legionaries of Christ, at least for the time being: In a statement on Saturday, the Vatican said that Benedict would appoint a special delegate to govern the Legionaries, an influential worldwide order that has been an important source of new priests in a church that has struggled with … Read more

Renaud Hallée’s Unusual Music

For this afternoon, yet another in the seemingly endless array of “YouTube Videos That Demonstrate Absurd Levels of Imagination.” Unlike the video I was originally planning to feature this Friday — HP Office Orchestra, (which seems too good to be true) — I think this one might actually be real. It’s called Gravité, and was created by Renaud Hallée, a … Read more

“Illegal is not a race, it’s a crime.”

By now, it seems that pretty much everyone has heard about Arizona’s controversial new immigration law. Protests are springing up around the country, threats of boycotts and lawsuits are coming from various groups, and politicians from across the spectrum (including notable figures like Arnold Schwarzenegger and Jeb Bush ) are condemning the legislation. And as … Read more

Flannery Friday

We are overdue for a little Flannery around here so here’s an excerpt from her letter to Janet McKane on June 30, 1963, found in Letters of Flannery O’Connor: The Habit of Being: I guess what you say about suffering being a shared experience with Christ is true, but then it should also be true … Read more

Friday Free-for-All

A few links to get things rolling this morning:  The Church of the ‘Times’: Kenneth Woodward makes a convincing argument that the New York Times is “an institution with the soul of a church,” complete with its own secular magisterium. ‘An exercise in moral botox’: Mary Eberstadt eviscerates You Don’t Know Jack, HBO’s paean to … Read more

Behind the burkha, we’re all equal.

What can you say when the U.N. elects Iran to its Commission on Women’s Rights, elevating a backwards theocracy that made international news last week when one of its “respected clerics” claimed that immodestly dressed women cause earthquakes?  Iran as a nation has a well-documented history of gender inequality and is an oppressive environment for women … Read more

‘All Your Body Are Belong To Us’

Every time my inner paranoid thinks it can take a little break, something like this comes along: New York State Assemblyman Richard Brodsky nearly lost his daughter, Willie, at 4 years old when she needed a kidney transplant, and again 10 years later when her second kidney failed. “We have 10,000 New Yorkers on the … Read more

How a father of three helped change the Church.

During the height of the sex-abuse scandal, how many parents wished they had the ear of their bishops — to express their frustration, to demand reform? One Belleville, IL, man did: David Spotanski was the chancellor to Bishop Wilton Gregory while the bishop was president of the USCCB, and a ten-page memo that he wrote … Read more

The Vatican’s crisis response strategy needs help…

Yesterday concluded a three-day media communications conference at Santa Croce in Rome. Wall Street Journal reporter Stacey Meichtry has a mostly fair assessment of the challenge the Church faces in responding to the crisis. Meichtry makes some important points — namely, that the church’s response to the crisis is bound to be decentralized. Bishops cannot … Read more

Remembering Pope John Paul II

I loved Pope John Paul II. In fact, I’m not sure I’d be Catholic today without his writing, example, and leadership. No matter how his papacy is measured in the long run, to me he reigns supreme as a man who combined personal holiness with brilliance. While his administrative failures related to the sex abuse … Read more

LC Visitation is Drawing to a Close

At Catholic Advocate, I argue the White House and the Congress are empowering Catholic dissidents, and, as a result, the Church is paying the price.   For those who say we must wait for the Church to exert its influence over politics, I say the Church in presently too weak.  The vectors of influence can … Read more

At Catholic Advocate, I argue the White House and the Congress are empowering Catholic dissidents, and, as a result, the Church is paying the price.   For those who say we must wait for the Church to exert its influence over politics, I say the Church in presently too weak.  The vectors of influence can … Read more

The White House Empowers Catholic Dissidents

At Catholic Advocate, I argue the White House and the Congress are empowering Catholic dissidents, and, as a result, the Church is paying the price.   For those who say we must wait for the Church to exert its influence over politics, I say the Church in presently too weak.  The vectors of influence can … Read more

Has The Giant Killer Finally Arrived?

For the last several years, I have been nearly endlessly fascinated by the film industry’s attempts to duplicate the astonishing success of Pixar’s animated offerings. In fact, so obsessed have I become that I used a significant portion of my “Predictions for 2010” entry to discuss the remote change that someone might finally topple the 800lb gorilla … Read more

Noah’s Ark Found?

Fox News reported yesterday that a group of explorers claim to have found the remains of Noah’s Ark on Mount Ararat in Turkey. The explorers are Chinese and Turkish evangelicals from a research team of Noah’s Ark Ministries: The group claims that carbon dating proves the relics are 4,800 years old, meaning they date to … Read more

Bishop Slattery on Suffering

Bishop Slattery of Oklahoma was the principal celebrant of a pontifical mass at the national basilica in Washington, D.C., over the weekend, in honor of Benedict’s fifth anniversary as pope. His homily on suffering from that mass has been making the rounds; if you haven’t had a chance to read it yet, take a minute … Read more

Con Espressivo

I can think of few 20th century classical performers as well-documented (or as deserving of documentation) as the mad Canadian keyboard genius, Glenn Gould. This YouTube clip from his earlier days demonstrates much of what made him fascinating to countless classical music lovers: the incessant humming punctuated by occasional bellowing, the absurd posture, the uncanny ability to stop-and-start at … Read more

The Unusual Suspect

I can think of few 20th century classical performers as well-documented (or as deserving of documentation) as the mad Canadian keyboard genius, Glenn Gould. This YouTube clip from his earlier days demonstrates much of what made him fascinating to countless classical music lovers: the incessant humming punctuated by occasional bellowing, the absurd posture, the uncanny ability to stop-and-start at … Read more

Warning: Genius At Work

I can think of few 20th century classical performers as well-documented (or as deserving of documentation) as the mad Canadian keyboard genius, Glenn Gould. This YouTube clip from his earlier days demonstrates much of what made him fascinating to countless classical music lovers: the incessant humming punctuated by occasional bellowing, the absurd posture, the uncanny ability to stop-and-start at … Read more

Ratzinger vs. the Vatican

A New York Times story today sheds more positive light on Benedict’s track record against abuse than we’ve seen in that paper of late. The article describes how then-Cardinal Ratzinger attempts to investigate abuse allegations made against an Austrian cardinal were often stymied by political factors inside the Vatican: In 1995, a victim came forward, … Read more

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