We say: Everyone has a moral obligation to get vaccinated against COVID-19 unless they have a legitimate medical condition prohibiting them from doing so. Requiring the vaccine should be part of the church's pro-life witness.
We say: As Senate Republicans deploy the filibuster in order to frustrate President Joe Biden's agenda on a host of issues, it is time to reacquaint ourselves with a few basic moral lessons we all learned as kids.
We say: Bishops may be the leaders of our church, but it's not their church. It belongs to God, if it belongs to anyone, and the entire people of God have a claim on it.
We say: As the Catholic Theological Society of America marks its 75th anniversary, we would like to thank all Catholic theologians who analyze, explore, research, write and share their thinking about God.
We say: The issue of immigration into the U.S. is both simple as a moral issue and complex in terms of policy and politics. We fear the Biden administration is allowing that complexity to overwhelm the simplicity.
We say: Just do it. Use this virtual meeting and ram through a document that will forever brand the church in the U.S. for the out-of-touch, cultural warrior-obsessed organization it has become.
We say: The pandemic put enormous strain on the U.S. Catholic Church, but the Gospel endures. Perhaps all of us in the Anglophone church need to listen more to the faith-filled confidence of our Latino brothers and sisters.
We say: The most basic and universal way that nearly everyone or at least the largest possible number of Americans can participate in public life — as Gaudium et Spes says is necessary — is by voting. Why try to reduce participation?
We say: We must no longer ignore the trauma experienced by citizens of Asian descent throughout U.S. history. We must learn to uplift the Asian experience, from our Catholic schools to our parishes to our media.
Your thoughts: NCR readers respond to our editorial saying that Pope Francis' decision to approve the CDF decree on not offering same-sex couples a blessing is strikingly out of character.
We say: The pope's decision to approve the March 15 decree from the Vatican's Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith instructing Catholic priests not to offer blessings for same-sex couples seems strikingly out of character.
We say: It's a complicated moral universe, so it's frustrating to see bishops and others sowing doubts about vaccines and relief that promote the common good.
We say: Pope Francis could not heal the wounds in Iraq, but he could and did demonstrate solidarity with the victims. But, despite assurances, the trip was not held in a way to minimize the possibility of the spread of coronavirus among Iraqis.
We say: Texas has proved to be the "perfect storm" for assessing a future in which a deregulated and underspending government fails to respond to catastrophic events, especially those caused by climate change.
We say: Catholic tradition clearly supports paying workers a fair, living wage for their labor: multiple references in Scripture, the preferential option for the poor in Catholic social teaching, the words of Rerum Novarum and recent comments from Pope Francis.
We say: Returning to some version of the pre-Trump era is a minimal start. Justice requires a much deeper commitment to seeking the truth about our history in order to accomplish comprehensive immigration reform.
We say: The work of Catholic News Service, which has covered every significant event in the life of church or country for the past 100 years, remains a real service, in the truest sense of the word.
We say: The past four years have revealed that the U.S. bishops' conference is a group unable to represent the full range of Catholic teaching and unfit to act in the name of American Catholics.
We say: In his inaugural address Jan. 20, President Joe Biden declared that democracy had prevailed, asserting that "disagreement must not lead to disunion" and calling for Americans to "start afresh."