question corner CommentaryQuestion Corner Question Corner: What is the point of the Mass reading about the genealogy of Jesus? Jenna Marie CooperDecember 18, 20244 min read God uses the lowly, the humble and the unexpected to achieve his purposes. It perfectly sets the stage for the greatest “surprise” of all, that the King of Kings should come to us in humble circumstances, born of a virgin and laid in a manger. CommentaryQuestion Corner Question Corner: Could Jesus sin? If not, was he truly human and free? Jenna Marie CooperDecember 11, 20244 min read If we consider sin as a turning away from God or breaking God’s commandments, then it would seem to be a logical impossibility for Jesus to sin. Jesus, as God, cannot turn away from or betray himself. And we know that Jesus never did sin in actual fact. CommentaryQuestion CornerWorship & Sacraments Question Corner: Can my son be baptized? Jenna Marie CooperDecember 4, 20244 min read In a beautiful way, the church’s law in this area echoes the words of Jesus himself: “Let the children come to me, and do not prevent them; for the kingdom of heaven belongs to such as these” (Mt 19:14). CommentaryMarriage & Family LifeQuestion Corner Question Corner: Does marriage transcend death? Jenna Marie CooperNovember 26, 20244 min read As our Catholic funeral liturgy reminds us, for God’s faithful “life is changed, not ended” with bodily death; and by analogy we can also conclude that although the love of spouses may be changed into something different from specifically married love, this does not mean that this love no longer exists. CommentaryQuestion CornerWorship & Sacraments Question Corner: Is Dec. 9 a holy day of obligation this year? Jenna Marie CooperNovember 20, 20244 min read The solution for competing solemnities is to transfer the liturgical celebration of the non-Sunday holy day to the first subsequent available date. Thus, in the year 2024, the solemnity of the Immaculate Conception is celebrated in our liturgy on Monday, Dec. 9. CommentaryQuestion CornerUncategorized Question Corner: What’s the scriptural basis for praying for dead and venerating relics? Jenna Marie CooperNovember 13, 20244 min read The Catholic customs of praying for the souls of the dead, praying to the saints who have gone before us in earthly life, and of venerating relics are based primarily in the church’s long-standing tradition and theology rather than explicit scriptural “prooftexts.” However, the Bible does indeed allude to these practices. CommentaryQuestion Corner Question Corner: What is an indulgence? Jenna Marie CooperNovember 6, 20244 min read Indulgences are deeply rooted in several key Catholic theological concepts, such as the nature of purgatory, the church’s authority, the spiritual power of prayer and sacrifice and the communion of saints. CommentaryQuestion Corner Question Corner: Do most people make it to heaven? Jenna Marie CooperOctober 31, 20244 min read Jesus was trying to explain the goal and some possible pitfalls to avoid. He never suggests that he was giving us a breakdown of who attains salvation in terms of percentages. CommentaryQuestion Corner Question Corner: What is church’s teaching on transgender issues? Jenna Marie CooperOctober 23, 20244 min read The church is against any “gender ideology” that would separate the concept of psychological gender from biological sex; or which would propose that one’s sex could be changed through medical or surgical means; or which would hold that one’s bodily sex could be somehow wrong or mistaken in light of one’s self-perception of one’s gender. CommentaryQuestion Corner Question Corner: If most of us go to purgatory at death, are Catholics ‘saved?’ Jenna Marie CooperOctober 16, 20244 min read Although purgatory is not exactly a “punishment” in the way we would tend to use the term today, traditionally purgatory has been understood to involve a degree of suffering. Previous 1 … 1 2 3 … 20 Next