We are Catholic

safrica-catholicJohn Allen, Boston Globe, writing about “Catholicism growing in the heart of Muslim World,” has insight that is essential to North Americans taking on the broader vision of what it means to be Catholic

“The typical Christian in the world today isn’t a middle-class white male in Dubuque pulling up to church in his Lincoln Continental. She is an impoverished black mother of four in Nigeria, or a Dalit grandmother in India, or an exploited Filipina maid in Saudi Arabia. They often face hardships that are hard for most American Christians, accustomed to material comfort and lacking any real experience of religious persecution, to fathom. Until you get that, you won’t see the full story of Christianity in this era.”

People are asking me…

…about the recent announcement from the Vatican concerning the Leadership Conference of Women Religious (LCWR). For my part, I continue to read, but I thought I would at least share some the commentary that is out there on the net.
  • from my local ordinary, Bishop Robert Lynch of St Petersburg – the first episcopal blogger – For His Friends
  • from John Allen, undoubtedly the most experienced of Vatican reporters in the English language: Notes on the LCWR Overhaul. He makes the point that this Vatican action is not the same apostolic visit to women’s religious congregations which occurred last year.
  • E.J. Dionne, Jr, of the Washington Post, Are Catholic sisters being bullied.
  • There are a host of other web sites, blogs, etc – but many seem to be reacting rather than offer well honed analysis – I will leave those to you to search out.
  • …and of course, you should read the original document itself