Bulletins, Newsletters, and Flocknotes

We want to stay connected. 

You need the most up-to-date information, and we want to give it to you. 

If you attended Mass elsewhere and need a Bulletin, you can easily find it here organized by date. If you changed your email address and didn't get a Flocknote or a newsletter, you can find what you missed here.

Vatican News

Subscribe to Vatican News feed

Parish Flocknote

  • Weekly Update

    May 15, 2026 - 2:01pm
    Schedule for May 16-17 Saturday, May 16 7:00 am Cathedral Open for Private Prayer and Devotion 8:00 am Mass  11:00 am Wedding 1:30 pm Wedding 3:30 - 4:15 pm Holy Hour - concluding with Evening Prayer and Benediction 3:30 pm –...
  • Weekly Update

    April 18, 2026 - 8:07am
    Schedule for April 18-19 Saturday, April 18 7:00 am Cathedral Open for Private Prayer and Devotion 8:00 am Mass  11:00 am Wedding 1:30 pm Wedding 3:30 - 4:15 pm Holy Hour - concluding with Evening Prayer and Benediction 3:30 pm...
  • Sprituality Class

    April 14, 2026 - 2:01pm
    Signup: Preaching the Gospel: Dominican Spirituality for the Whole Church Join us at the Cathedral Basilica for an evening of prayer and reflection with Brother Benedict Gregory Johnson, OP , a Dominican friar. Brother Benedict...
  • Weekly Update

    April 10, 2026 - 2:01pm
    Schedule for April 11-12 Saturday, April 11 7:00 am Cathedral Open for Private Prayer and Devotion 8:00 am Mass  10:00 am Confirmation 1:30 pm Confirmation 3:30 - 4:15 pm Holy Hour - concluding with Evening Prayer and...
  • Divine Mercy Sunday

    April 8, 2026 - 2:01pm
    On Sunday, April 12, 2026, we celebrate the Feast of Divine Mercy, a feast day added to the liturgical calendar by St. John Paul II to celebrate the overwhelming mercy of Jesus Christ. In recognition of this very special day, the...
Subscribe to Parish Flocknote feed

National Catholic Register

Subscribe to National Catholic Register feed

First Things

  • Ralph Lauren, American Patriot

    January 21, 2025 - 5:00am

    On January 4 , President Joe Biden honored nineteen individuals with the Medal of Freedom, the highest civilian honor. While one could argue that some were less deserving of the award than others, I believe that one honoree deserved it without question: Ralph Lauren, a living embodiment of the American dream who in turn made America his muse. His designs pay homage to the cowboy, the soldier, the Ivy Leaguer. For Lauren, no aspect of the American character isn’t worth celebrating—a welcome contrast to the self-loathing that usually pervades the upper echelons of society.  

    Continue Reading »

  • Begging Your Pardon

    January 20, 2025 - 5:00am

    Who attempts to overthrow a government without weapons? Why would the alleged leader of an insurrection authorize military force to protect the government, and why would the alleged insurrection victims countermand that authorization? How do people who listen to speeches about democratic procedures and election integrity in one location transform into enemies of the Constitution after walking a mile and a half to the east? Who believes that interrupting a vote would overturn a government? If there was an attempted insurrection, why would a notoriously creative and aggressive prosecutor fail to find any basis for filing insurrection charges?

    Continue Reading »

  • To Hell With Notre Dame?

    January 20, 2025 - 5:00am

    I first visited the University of Notre Dame du Lac (to use its proper inflated style) in 2017 as a guest of some friends in the law school. By then I had already hated the place for more or less my entire life. For me, Notre Dame was synonymous with the Roman Catholic Church as I had known her in childhood: dated folk art aesthetics (has anyone ever written about how ugly the buildings are?), the Breaking Bread missalette, the so-called “Celtic” Alleluia, the thought (though not the actual writings) of Fr. Richard McBrien, jolly fat Knights of Columbus in their blue satin jackets, avuncular permanent deacons named Tom, Pat, or, occasionally, Dave. At the age of twenty-seven, I expected to find preserved something of the religious atmosphere of the middle years of John Paul II’s papacy: the quiet half-acknowledged sense of desperation, the all-pervading horror of unbelief that could never be allowed formally to take shape among the grandchildren of European immigrants who had done well for themselves in the professions—perhaps too well.

    Continue Reading »

  • The Mercurial Bob Dylan

    January 17, 2025 - 5:00am

    There’s a version of Bob Dylan for everyone: small-town boy from Duluth, Minnesota; scrappy folk troubadour of Greenwich Village; electric rock poet who defied expectations at Newport; introspective born-again Christian; Nobel Laureate. As any journalist who has interviewed him will attest, Dylan is an enigma. Capturing the whole man is harder than making a bead of mercury sit still in one’s palm. 

    Continue Reading »

  • The Theology of Music

    January 17, 2025 - 5:00am

    É lisabeth-Paule Labat (1897–1975) was an accomplished pianist and composer when she entered the abbey of Saint-Michel de Kergonan in her early twenties. She devoted her later years to writing theology and an “Essay on the Mystery of Music,” published a decade ago as The Song That I Am , translated by Erik Varden . It’s a brilliant and beautiful essay, but what sets it apart from most explorations of music is its deeply theological character.

    Continue Reading »

Subscribe to First Things feed

Vatican Daily Bulletin

  • Audience with Management and Employees of several Italian Banking Institutes

    May 16, 2026 - 6:22am
    This morning, in the Vatican Apostolic Palace, the Holy Father Leo XIV received in audience the management of employees of various Italian banking institutes.

    The following is the address delivered by the Pope to those present during the meeting:

     

    Address of the Holy Father

    In the name of the Father, of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit.

    Peace be with you!

    Dear brothers and sisters, welcome.

    I extend a warm greeting to His Excellency and to all of you. I am very pleased to have this meeting, which gives us the opportunity to reflect together on the role of banks and credit unions in our society.

    The institutions you represent have varied origins, united by the need to support entrepreneurship and public and private finance at different times and in different contexts throughout Italian history. Their beginnings, characterized by courage and creativity, bear witness to the complementarity between saving and investment, private and public, for the realization of the common good and for sound economic growth.

    Indeed, your financial institutions have promoted, in various ways, a just sharing and redistribution of wealth among individuals, businesses and institutions, making its benefits more accessible to all and valuing the contribution of each. This is a social function that fits well within the mission entrusted by God to humanity to be stewards of creation, whereby “every human activity … is called to bear fruit, to use generously and equitably the gifts that God provides to all, and to nourish with lively confidence the seeds of goodness implanted in the whole of creation as a promise of abundance” (Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith – Dicastery for Promoting Integral Human Development, Oeconomicae et pecuniariae quaestiones , 6 January 2018, 4).

    Precisely by virtue of this constructive capacity, the banking system has, over the centuries, found itself at the centre of major processes of economic and social development, becoming an increasingly complex and multifaceted entity capable of influencing people’s lives. The concentration of capital and the availability of skilled expertise have provided it with vast economic resources, with the consequent dual possibility of becoming a promoter of equitable sharing for the general good or, conversely, a proponent of selfish accumulation, a source of inequality and misery.

    Withinthis broader context, your history bears witness to how those involved in the financial market can not only do good by acting righteously, but also by informing and educating the people and communities in which they operate regarding the prudent and morally appropriate use of resources—where sensitivity, intelligence, honesty and charity are combined—and by promoting “humanistic standards … [in which] profit and solidarity are no longer antagonists” ( ibid . 11). It also shows how this way of acting ensures, over time, the healthy and lasting growth of structures, social models and relationships.

    The spirit of your foundations serves as a reminder to all, in particular, that it is not capital that enters a bank in the first instance, but people, and that behind the numbers there are men and women, families in need of help. For this reason, in a context where the high level of computerization of tools imposes increasingly elaborate and artificial intermediaries in interpersonal relationships, you, as heirs to a great tradition of human care, are called upon to ensure that those who access your services do not feel abandoned to the coldness of algorithmic systems – however efficient and mathematically precise they may be – but that, behind the technical tools, they perceive, today as in the past, the presence of people ready to listen and keen to do good.

    Banks can hold a great deal of influence over the structural evolution of a society, and also its cultural development. Therefore your presence is valuable: to remind those who all too easily retreat into purely material values, confusing ends and means in life, that even in financial matters we must always place the person at the centre, and “on that pillar build the alternative social structures we need” (cf. Francis, Address to participants in the World Meeting of Popular Movements , 28 October 2014; cf. Encyclical Letter Laudato si’ , 24 May 2015, 189).

    Your commitment in this regard is vibrant and relevant, as evidenced by the numerous humanitarian and cultural projects you promote. I encourage you to continue to work in this way, keeping alive your vocation as mutual support organizations and always directing your commitment towards an ethic of solidarity. It is the seed from which you were born and the solid, deep root – hidden though it may often be – thanks to which the tree of your organizations continues to grow and flourish.

    Faithful to your origins, never forget charity; on the contrary, make it increasingly the guiding principle of your strategic choices! Thank you for what you do. I remember you in my prayers and, entrusting you to Mary’s intercession, I bless you from my heart. Thank you.

  • Rescriptum ex Audientia Sanctissimi regarding the establishment of the Inter-Dicasterial Commission on Artificial Intelligence

    May 16, 2026 - 5:10am
    Rescriptum ex Audientia Sanctissimi

    The Supreme Pontiff Leo XIV, in the Audience granted to the undersigned Cardinal Prefect of the Dicastery for Promoting Integral Human Development on 3 May 2026, with regard to

    - the development in recent decades of the phenomenon of Artificial Intelligence and the most recent acceleration in its widespread use;

    - its potential effects on human beings and on humanity as a whole;

    - the concern of the Church for the dignity of every human being, especially in relation to their integral development;

    has approved the establishment of the

    Inter-Dicasterial Commission on Artificial Intelligence , established by the undersigned Cardinal Prefect of the Dicastery for Promoting Integral Human Development pursuant to Art. 28 § 5 of the Apostolic Constitution Praedicate Evangelium .

    In this regard, he has established the following:

    1.   The Commission is composed of representatives from the Dicastery for Promoting Integral Human Development, the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith, the Dicastery for Culture and Education, the Dicastery for Communication, the Pontifical Academy for Life, the Pontifical Academy of Sciences and the Pontifical Academy of Social Sciences.

    2.   Any changes to the composition of the Commission shall be submitted to the Holy Father for approval.

    3.   The Head of each listed institution shall appoint a representative to the Commission.

    4.   The coordination of the Commission shall be entrusted, for a period of one year, renewable if necessary, to the Dicastery for Promoting Integral Human Development. Thereafter, the Roman Pontiff shall entrust the coordination to one of the participating institutions, again for a period of one year.

    5.   It is the responsibility of the coordinating institution to facilitate collaboration and the exchange of information amongst the members of the group regarding activities and projects concerning Artificial Intelligence, including policies on its use within the Holy See, promoting dialogue, communion and participation.

    From the Vatican, 12 May 2026

               Michael Card. Czerny, S.J. Prefect of the Dicastery for Promoting Integral Human Development

  • Declaration of the Director of the Holy See Press Office, Matteo Bruni

    May 16, 2026 - 5:09am
    Announcement of Apostolic Journey to France

    In response to the invitation extended by the Head of State and ecclesiastical authorities of the country, and by the Director General of UNESCO, the Holy Father Leo XIV will undertake an Apostolic Journey to France from 25 to 28 September 2026, and will visit the headquarters of the aforementioned Organization.

  • Holy See Press Release: Visit to the Holy Father of His Holiness Aram I, Catholicos of the Armenian Apostolic Church – See of Cilicia

    May 16, 2026 - 5:08am
    On Monday 18 May 2026, His Holiness Aram I, Catholicos of the Armenian Apostolic Church – See of Cilicia will pay a visit to the Holy Father. It will be the first official visit of the Catholicos to Pope Leo XIV.

    The private meeting will be followed by a moment of prayer in the Urban VIII Chapel of the Apostolic Palace.

    His Holiness Aram I will also visit the Dicastery for Promoting Christian Unity and other Dicasteries of the Roman Curia.

    On 19 May, at the Pontifical Oriental Institute, the Catholicos will give a public lecture on the challenges faced by Churches in the Middle East.

  • Audiences

    May 16, 2026 - 5:07am
    This morning, the Holy Father received in audience:

    - Candidates for Confirmation from the metropolitan archdiocese of Genoa;

    - Archbishop Filippo Iannone, O. Carm., prefect of the Dicastery for Bishops;

    - His Eminence Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone, S.D.B., Secretary of State emeritus;

    - Fr. Diego Martín Peñas, superior general of the “Association of the Priests of Prado” Secular Institute;

    - Archbishop Luís Gonzaga Silva Pepeu, O.F.M. Cap., bishop of Baturité, Brazil;

    - Archbishop Joseph Spiteri, titular of Serta, apostolic nuncio in Mexico;

    - Management and employees of various Italian Banks.

Subscribe to Vatican Daily Bulletin feed
Designed & Powered by On Fire Media |