Holy Week is the daily life of millions of people around the world who suffer because their consciences tell them to live and work in ways that political and religious authorities find objectionable.
After I sent a lawyer an analysis on how advances in artificial intelligence could revolutionize the legal profession, he got even by asking ChatGPT to write "a column on AI, written in the style of Thomas Reese, SJ."
These books changed my life. They can change yours, too — though I hope the fact that they are being recommended by the second-worst Jesuit in the U.S. does not mean that they will now be banned from seminary libraries.
The recent threats to the banking system show that libertarian capitalists are hypocrites. They hate government regulations — until they are in trouble and expect the government to bail them out.
Francis has changed the style of being pope, attacked clericalism, empowered the laity, opened the church to conversation and debate and changed the pastoral and public priorities of the church.
A Virginia office of the FBI is apparently concerned that racially or ethnically motivated violent extremists are seeking alliances with radical-traditionalist Catholics, according to a leaked memo dated Jan. 23.
Churches, with their large parking lots that often sit empty during the week, could help provide a solution to the growing demand for electric vehicle charging stations.
It is not easy to be a follower of Jesus. Anyone who thinks it is, is simply not listening to him. Leviticus asks us to be holy like God; Jesus asks us to love like God, who lets the sun shine on the good and the bad.
A blog post from a senior fellow from the Council on Foreign Relations attacking the pope's diagnosis of the causes of African underdevelopment doesn't tell the whole story says Jesuit Fr. Thomas Reese.
Antarctica may be the most secular continent in the world, filled with scientists on missions of discovery. But for those who are looking for spirituality, there is a lot to be discovered there, too.
Most Catholics see the eucharistic prayer as centered on the consecration of the bread and wine into the body and blood of Christ. But the eucharistic prayer is addressed in thanks and praise to the Father, not to Jesus.
The Eucharist is not to make Jesus present so we can worship him, says Jesuit Fr. Thomas Reese. If you want to adore Christ in the Eucharist, go to Benediction, not to Mass.
Rain is beautiful and nourishing, to be appreciated and celebrated. Rain can also be inconvenient and destructive in our climate-challenged world. What is it that enables some people to see the same phenomenon as something to endure, while others see it as something to celebrate?