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The Association of U.S. Catholic Priests is an organization founded fifteen years ago to create a bond and unity among U.S. priests and to support the implementation of the documents from the Second Vatican Council sixty years ago. This year the conference is in St. Louis and six priests from Louisville are attending.




The theme for World Refugee Day 2026 is “Until Everyone Is Safe.” The United Nations and the UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR) selected this theme to underscore that no community is truly secure while people forced to flee are denied protection, dignity, and a chance to rebuild their lives.

Some excerpts from an article by Kelly Brown Douglas, Stephanie Spellers, and Winnie Varghese in Religious News Service (June 18, 2026):
At the time of Juneteenth in 1865, “Neither the Emancipation Proclamation nor General Order No. 3 [announcing slaves were free] was yet true. Both ushered in a new reality of “unfreedom.” Both expressed the enduring tension within the American freedom experiment itself: the gap between our proclaimed ideals and our lived realities.”
In our experience today, “The story of freedom is unfinished in a nation that pledges “liberty and justice for all,” while it systematically advances policies, practices and ideologies that diminish human dignity.”
“Here is what we know: Freedom is not an achievement to be declared and celebrated once and for all. The work of freedom is perpetually unfinished because the forces that threaten it continually take new forms, as we see today in restrictions on voting rights, challenges to citizenship and the denial of due process to immigrants.”

It’s weird being the same age as old people.


Today the Clifton Community Council held a quarterly public meeting and it was quite a demonstration of nitty-gritty grassroots neighborhood community organizing. Fr. Roy Stiles and I attended and Nazareth Home Clifton’s new director was there also.



Today Pope Leo revealed the theme for the 10th World Day of the Poor to be observed November 15, 2026. He started with the opening line of Psalm 14: “The Lord is the refuge of the poor,” noting that those words were written in a dramatic period of Israel’s history when the Temple in Jerusalem was destroyed. They “felt deprived of God’s presence and experienced unprecedented material and moral misery.” Pope Leo then suggested the poor in our time experience the same feelings.

