Friday, September 26, 2025
107 Days
Wednesday, September 24, 2025
Mussolini: Just a Century Ago
Monday, September 22, 2025
The Church in New York Celebrates Its Immigrant Past and Present
Yesterday at the main Mass, New York's famous Saint Patrick's Cathedral dedicated a major new addition to the cathedral's interior, the largest artwork commissioned in the cathedral’s 146-year history and the first since the massive bronze doors were installed at the cathedral's Fifth Avenue entrance in 1949. It is a 21-feet high, multi-panel mural by artist Adam Cvijanovic, titled What's So Funny About Peace, Love and Understanding, which celebrates the history of immigration in New York City and the role of the Church in the city's development. It recalls the 1879 Apparition of the Blessed Virgin Mary at Knock, Ireland, which occurred in the same year as the original dedication of the cathedral. The mural depicts the succession of 19th and 20th-century immigrants to New York, more contemporary immigrants, and other prominent New York figures like St. Kateri Tekakwitha, Pierre Toussaint, Dorothy Day, Al Smith, and Archbishop John Hughes.
“I want people to be able to see themselves in it,” the artist Adam Cvijanovic has said. Looking at it yesterday for the first time, I did see a lot of myself iand many others in it - in its depiction of generations of immigrants who found refuge in this city and a spiritual home in our Church.
Sunday, September 21, 2025
True Stewardship
Among fictional New Testament characters, the steward in the parable we just heard [Luke 16:1-13] has always been particularly popular. “To did I am not able, to beg I am ashamed,” he used to say in the nicer translation with which those of my generation were once familiar. He is commonly called “the unjust steward,” but his master commended him for how he acted. Jesus seems to propose him as a model for the disciples – presumably not for squandering his master’s property, but for his prudence, for what in classical philosophical language would be called his practical wisdom.
Jesus’ point seems to be that, faced with the greatest crisis of his life, the steward focused on the clear goal of guaranteeing his long-term security and acted accordingly, forgoing the commission that he might have received as steward, in order to ingratiate himself with those who could guarantee him such security. He is a model for having his priorities in order and focusing single-mindedly on his mission, and for his readiness to sacrifice short-term gains for long-term security. Jesus clearly expects no less of us!
Jesus’ parable suggests that negotiating our way through the ongoing challenges of ordinary life requires intelligent practical judgments. These in turn require the virtue that is always listed first among the classical cardinal virtues – prudence.
On the one hand, one of the most radical challenges of Christianity, humanly speaking, is the notion that one cannot serve both God and mammon. Our ultimate commitment must be to God’s kingdom, to which all other claims – family, friends, career, country – must be subordinate. On the other hand, even if my family, friends, career, country, etc. are all transitory, still they describe where I am right now, - living, growing, and becoming, for better or for worse, the person I will remain for all eternity.
And so, already in the 1st century, St. Paul - in his 1st letter to Timothy [1 Timothy 2:1-8] – connected the earthly and eternal dimensions of our lives, forever after forcing us to do the same. I ask, Paul wrote to Timothy, that supplications, prayers, petitions, and thanksgivings be offered for everyone, for kings and for all in authority, that we may lead a quiet and tranquil life in all devotion and dignity.
How utopian that sounds in our troubled present time - a quiet and tranquil life in all devotion and dignity
Of course, even without Saint Paul, the ordinary experience of life itself forces us to figure out how to relate the transitory and the eternal. In the words of one early Christian writer [Tertullian, Apologeticus, 31]: When the Empire is shaken, all of its parts are shaken also, hence even though we stand outside its tumults, we are caught in its misfortunes. Not much has changed since then. We live in a world full of tumults and misfortunes! Hence, he too promoted prayer for Emperors, their ministers, for the condition of the world, for peace everywhere, and for the delaying of the end [39]. And so too must we! If a fully human life requires social commitment and political participation, then our prayer and worship must somehow acknowledge this.
In the Old Testament, when Israel was exiled in a foreign land, God gave his people this advice through the prophet Jeremiah: Thus says the Lord of hosts, the God of Israel, to all the exiles whom I exiled from Jerusalem to Babylon: Build houses to dwell in; plant gardens and eat their fruits. … Promote the welfare of the city to which I have exiled you; pray for it to the Lord, for upon its welfare depends your own [Jeremiah 29:4-7].
What Jeremiah calls the welfare of the city – peace, prosperity, security, justice, in short what we call the common good– all that is the purpose of social and political life. That in turn requires citizens – engaged participants, who are not passive spectators in the story of our national life, living as if life were just some short ferry boat ride, not noticing or caring how the boat is being steered and whether or not all the passengers are adequately equipped with life jackets. On the contrary, how the boat is being steered and whether all the passengers are adequately equipped must be among our preeminent priorities.
In a society which has witnessed a dramatic decline in civic community life in recent years, as Americans have become increasingly isolated and mutually suspicious, we are challenged today to rediscover the basic human task to step beyond our private space, to take responsibility for more than just ourselves, and to be accountable for and to one another. Then we may hope, as Saint Paul did, to lead a quiet and tranquil life in all devotion and dignity.
Homily for the 25th Sunday in Ordinary time, Saint Paul the Apostle Church, NY, September 21, 2025.
Friday, September 19, 2025
Task
Wednesday, September 17, 2025
Wanted (Maybe): A Democratic Republic
"A republic, if you can keep it," was what Benjamin Franklin supposedly said to Elizabeth Willing Powel to describe the form of government produced by the Constitutional Convention, which concluded on this day, Sepetember 17, in 1787 - 238 years ago today.
A "republic" was a recognizable political concept, and it certainly did not mean a "democracy," although it could include some democratic features. To the founders - rich men of property, fearful of the majority gaining power - "democracy" was a problematic concept. As a practical matter, while a New England Town Meeting maybe could function as a direct "democracy," that was obviously not possible on the continental scale that the new nation would encompass. As a philosophical matter, "democracy" had long been maligned - at least since Plato and Aristotle - as a degenerate form of government. What attracted the founders was some version of the classical idea of a "mixed constitution," as theorized by Aristotle and Polybius and as was exemplified, more or less, in the ancient Roman Republic.
Since then, as the idea of "democracy" has become more attractive to larger segments of American society - however incompatible with capitalism and limited by liberalism - a sporadic struggle has been undertaken over the centuries to come closer to "democracy," understood as a society in which the governed have increased agency in their government. America in the Jacksonian era, with its widening suffrage, was more democratic (if not necessarily better governed) than it had been before. The post-Civil War United States was more democratic than its pre-Civil War version. The 20th century saw several leaps toward greater democracy - the 17th Amendment, the 19th Amendment, the Civil Rights and Voting Rights Acts of 1964 and 1965.
The 21st century, starting with the Supreme Court's usurpation of the election of 2000 and its subsequent attacks on the Voting Rights Act has seen a growing democratic deficit. There is no likelihood of any major changes in constitutional structure any time soon. But what would it mean for the U.S. to become more democratic? To become truly a "democratic republic" at last? As Tocqueville and others have always understood, "democracy" and some degree of equality go together. What does that mean for American capitalism, which has become more, not less, rapacious in this century? And what of other constraining American ideologies - like liberalism, the point of which is to set certain limits to what a democratic government may legally do?
Obviously, a large modern country can only be a "democracy" in a representational manner. so one obvious line of inquiry is: What current representational structures are fit for democratic purpose, and which are not? A larger (and much less gerrymandered) House of Representatives might be a good start. As for the absurdity that is the Senate, many of the founders themselves recognized the representational anomaly and undesirability of the Senate, but accepted it as a necessary compromise to get the smaller states to join the Union - just as they compromised on slavery to keep the southern states in the new country. As The Federalist 62 acknowledged: "it is superfluous to try, by the standard of theory, a part of the Constitution which is allowed on all hands to be the result, not of theory, but 'of a spirit of amity, and that mutual deference and concession which the peculiarity of our political situation rendered indispensable'.'' Eventually, of course, the U.S. got rid of slavery, but we are still stuck with the Senate, which, with our larger modern population, is even more unfortunately absurd now than it was then.
One way to approach the issue of representation is to look at the example of other countries that are or aspire to be democratic, which would include almost all the modern European countries. The most successful at "democracy" are also monarchies, "mixed constitutions" in the best sense. (The survival of their monarchical institutions is in most cases a reflection of their being on the winning side of 20th-century wars and conflicts.) But even those that have lost their monarchies have mostly successfully developed institutions which enhance both stability and democracy. Apart from the anomalous and complicated case of Fifth Republic France, they are all parliamentary systems, which have proven more effective at representing their nations' diverse constituencies than our 18th-century presidential model. Many of them also employ some form of proportional representation, which typically produces a less distorted representation of competing parties and interests than our antiquated first-past-the post single-member district system does.
In any modern society, it is the executive power that undoubtedly matters most, that, to a large extent, sets the agenda and implements it. This is one of the anti-political (and, hence, anti-republican) consequences of modernity. Personally, I have no doubt that parliamentary systems, with their traditional ethos of "responsible government," that is, an executive that is accountable to the people through the legislature, is a far better system than our presidential model. For better or for worse, however, the U.S is stuck with a president-centered system.
That said, the founders feared most the ascent of a populist demagogue, a Caesar. Unlike some of our contemporaries who worry about the real and imagined excesses of "woke" professors, the founders feared not professors but the very real danger of despotism associated with executive power. Hence, they insulated the election of the president as much as possible from popular participation. Inevitably, this proved unworkable and, by the Jacksonian era, the electoral college had become a filter which reflected the popular vote, albeit in a very distorted way. Those distortions can claim credit for the character of our two-party system and the style of modern presidential campaigns. Those distortions have also - tragically twice in this century - resulted in the election of a president whose electoral opponent had won more popular votes than he did. The founders might not have minded, but most modern citizens find such a situation increasingly unacceptable. If we must have a presidential system (which we must assume), then the only viable option for a serious democratic republic would be to replace the present electoral college with a more modern, more honestly representational electoral system.
None of that, of course, can serve as a guarantee against despotism, which ironically the original conception of the electoral college was meant to protect us from. To protect against despotism, "democracy" must be constrained by liberalism, the ideology of limitations on government. Liberalism does not prescribe a weak government, but it limits government by taking certain subjects - such as speech, religion, and the rule of law - off the table and out of the political arena. Unfortunately, this is an area where the constitutional system exhibits such great weakness and fragility, since it depends so much on the mores of the demos.
All of which, of course, brings us back to our old friend Alexis de Tocqueville (1805-1859), the great 19th-century observer and theorist of American democracy. Tocqueville worried about populist despotism and famously highlighted the important part played by American religion in holding society together. He also famously praised American associationism which, while quite characteristic of 19th-century American society, has since much diminished - as has religion. The result is now an American people who are more individualistic, isolated, and mutually suspicious, characteristics which Tocqueville and subsequent theorists have recognized as more conducive to populist despotism than to republican "democracy."
To Be Continued.
Sunday, September 14, 2025
Behold, the Wood of the Cross
Twenty-four years ago today, this church was filled to overflowing, following the terrorist attack which we had experienced in this city just three days before. That was the only time when I have ever seen this great church so completely full, filled to capacity, filled as it was originally designed to be. But, on that unforgettable September Friday, when we assembled that day for Mass, we did what the Church always does on September 14. We celebrated the Exaltation of the Holy Cross, the symbol of our salvation. As our first pastor Servant of God Isaac Hecker expressed it, The only bridge to heaven is over the cross. The gates of paradise are only opened with the key of the cross.
Historically, this feast commemorates the dedication, on September 13, 335, of the Basilica of the Holy Sepulcher in Jerusalem – built by the Roman Emperor Constantine over the traditionally recognized sites of Christ’s crucifixion and of his burial and resurrection. The next day, the relic of the True Cross (which had been discovered by Constantine’s mother, the Empress Saint Helena in 320) was publicly venerated in the new basilica. Eventually, September 14 became the feast celebrated today throughout the Universal Church.
On one level, this feast was a celebration of Christianity’s triumph over Roman paganism. The date for the dedication of the Jerusalem Basilica may have been chosen to counteract the anniversary of the dedication of the Temple of Jupiter in Rome - ironically now the site of united Italy’s 1911 monument to King Victor Emmanuel II, a monument to the triumph of modern secularism over religion and the power of the Church. Such short-term triumphs come and go, part of our perennial political noise and our overwhelming obsession with power, domination, and control.
In contrast, however, what we celebrate today is Christ’s triumph over our sad history of cosmic evil and human sinfulness – now transformed, once and for all, through the triumph of Christ’s cross.
Evil and sin do not happen simply by accident – and neither did the cross. It didn’t just happen to Jesus one day, like some inexplicable misfortune – like various sufferings and setbacks, which, when they happen in our own lives, we sometimes all too glibly refer to as “crosses.” Christ’s cross was a direct consequence of his confrontation with worldly power, domination, and control and became the means by which he overcame cosmic evil and human sin.
In Jesus, the cross has become our doorway to salvation. A dreaded instrument of disgraceful death, the cross is now, thanks to Jesus, our gateway to freedom and new life, a triumphant sign of glory. And that is why we celebrate the Cross. As Saint Augustine said in a sermon somewhere around the year 400, You’re a Christian, you carry on your forehead the cross of Christ [Sermon 302, 3].
In the familiar story we just heard, [Numbers 21:4b-9], God punished his perpetually complaining people with serpents, which bit the people so that many of them died. But, when Moses interceded on the people’s behalf, he was instructed to make an image of a serpent, mounted on a pole, and whenever anyone who had been bitten by a serpent looked at it, he lived.
Like the people in the desert, we experience all sorts of sufferings and setbacks and are prone to discouragement. But the mystery of the cross invites us to see our situation differently. It invites us to turn away from our obsessive, dead-end focus on ourselves, and to turn instead to Christ – to delight, as Saint Augustine said in that same sermon, not in the sign of the wood, but in the sign of the one hanging on it.
The mystery of the cross invites us to turn away once and for all from our obsessive, dead-end focus on ourselves – from both our constant competition for power, wealth, status, and whatever else seems to excite us, and from the seemingly endless sufferings and setbacks that continue to break our hearts - and to turn instead to Christ, so that we may journey through the desert of this treacherous life with hope instead of fear, under the sign of the cross, which alone can conquer in our conflict-ridden, war-torn, terrorized, and religiously and politically polarized world.
Homily for the feast of the Exaltation of the Holy Cross, Saint Paul the Apostle Church, NY, September 14, 2025.
Photo: Crucifix which was originally over the altar of the chapel of the Paulist Novitiate, Oak Ridge, NJ.
Friday, September 12, 2025
Downton Abbey - The End
Tuesday, September 9, 2025
Tudor Princess, Stewart Queen
Sunday, September 7, 2025
Two New Young Saints
Before canonizing today's two new saints, Pier Giorgio Frassati (1901-1925) and Carlo Acutis (1991-2006), Pope Leo XIV described this day as "a wonderful feast for all fo Italy, for the whole Church, for the whole world."
Any canonization is a great event for the Church. What event in the Church's life is more insoiring than the celebration of the triumph of God's grace demonstrated in the lives of our brothers and sisters, now saints? As the Church prays in the first Preface of the Saints, God is praised in the company of his saints and (citing Saint Augustine) in crowing the saints' merits, God crowns his own gifts.
The "merits" of today's two new saints speak specifically to the situation of our time and especially to the concerns of younger generations. A century ago, in an Italy which was losing its way in a fascist fantasy of pretended roman greatness, Saint Pier Giorgio Frassati (in Pope Leo's words) "encountered the Lord through school and church groups - Catholic Action, theConferences of Saint Vincent [de Paul], the FUCI (Italian Catholic University Federation), the Dominican Third Order. - and he bore witness to God with his joy of living and of being a Christian in prayer, friendship and charity. ... For him, faith was not a private devotion, but it was driven by the power of the Gospel and his membership in ecclesial associations." Likewise, at the turn of this century, Saint Carlo Acutis "grew up naturally integrating prayer, sport, study and charity into his days as a child and young man." What life stories of sanctity could be more apt in our contemporary world of loneliness and lost sociability and false and deceptive models of leadership!

.png)










