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
Pope Leo meets with victims of clerical abuse from Belgium
November 8, 2025 - 1:47pmPope Leo meets with a group of survivors of clerical abuse in Belgium in a climate of “closeness, deep listening, and painful dialogue”, which concluded with a moment of prayer.
Pope to young people: be bridge builders in a world marked by division
November 8, 2025 - 1:00pmPope Leo XIV sends a videomessage to the young people gathered the Cathedral of Košice in Slovakia and encourages them to bring the light of Christ to their families, schools, workplaces and more.
Lord's Day Reflection: Anger issues? Try a little holy zeal
November 8, 2025 - 9:11amAs the Church celebrates the feast of the Dedication of the Lateran Basilica in Rome, Jenny Kraska offers her thoughts on the day's Gospel reading, which tells how Jesus cast the money-changers out of the Temple.
Six months with Pope Leo XIV: A united and open Church, a sign of peace for a world wounded by hatred
November 8, 2025 - 8:38amThere is a common thread running through the magisterium of the new Pope: he has proposed a model of Christian community, missionary in nature, where communion is lived, and which is therefore capable of serving all, starting with the least; a community committed to fostering dialogue and peace. A Church that does not “lean” on the powerful nor confuse mission with religious marketing, but knows how to be leaven because it reflects the light of Another.
Cardinal Parolin at COP30: Greater political will needed to address climate change
November 8, 2025 - 8:33amIn Belém, Brazil, at the meeting of world leaders that preceded the United Nations Climate Change Conference to be held from November 10 to 21, the Cardinal Secretary of State spoke about the Paris Agreement, which marks its tenth anniversary.
Parish Flocknote
Veterans Day
November 8, 2025 - 2:06pmFood Drive
November 8, 2025 - 10:01amFood Drive On the Weekends of November 1-2 and 8-9 the Archbishop has asked every parish to host a food drive to suppot food pantries in St. Louis. The intent is to support the estimated 292,000 families in the Archdiocese of...Weekly Update
November 7, 2025 - 6:47pmSchedule for November 8-9 Saturday, November 8 7:00 am Cathedral Open for Private Prayer and Devotion 8:00 am Mass 11:00 am Wedding 1:30 pm Wedding 3:30 - 4:30 pm Holy Hour - concluding with Evening Prayer and Benediction 3:30...Weekly Update
October 31, 2025 - 2:03pmSchedule for November 1-2 Saturday, November 1- All Saints 7:00 am Cathedral Open for Private Prayer and Devotion 8:00 am Mass 3:30 - 4:30 pm Holy Hour - concluding with Evening Prayer and Benediction 3:30 pm – 5:00 pm...All Saints Day
October 31, 2025 - 10:01amRelics on Display All Saints' Day is a solemn holy day of the Catholic Church celebrated annually on November 1. The day is dedicated to the saints of the Church, that is, all those who have attained heaven. As our attention...
National Catholic Register
Cardinal Orlando Quevedo: Mindanao’s ‘Man of Peace’ and His Lifelong Mission of Unity
November 8, 2025 - 12:52pm
Santosh Digal
Cardinal Orlando Beltran Quevedo blesses Catholics after celebrating a Mass in Cotabato on Oct. 11, 2024.
Now in its fourth year, the award recognizes leaders and institutions whose dedication to fostering mutual understanding, interfaith dialogue, and solidarity is bringing the nation closer to its vision of justice and lasting peace.
Calling All Relic Hunters: World’s First Map of Relics Unveiled by Anthony Di Mauro
November 8, 2025 - 5:00am
Courtesy photo
Discovery of relics in the former Carthusian Monastery, Florence.
A new apostolate brings the ‘saints back into the heart of the Church’s life' on the feast of the Veneration of the Holy Relics.
Pope Leo XIV Warns About New Digital Addictions: Online Pornography and Internet Abuse
November 7, 2025 - 6:17pm
The digital age has given rise to new addictions, the Holy Father said.
Pope Leo XIV on Friday warned about the dire consequences of addictions related to internet use.
Will Italy’s Synodal Path Bring Renewal or Rupture?
November 7, 2025 - 5:06pm
Dimitar Dilkoff
Cardinal Matteo Maria Zuppi (r), president of the Italian Episcopal Conference, attends Mass in St Peter's Basilica on May 7, 2025.
ANALYSIS: Italy’s latest synodal document exposes the tension between pastoral innovation and fidelity to Catholic teaching.
The Pope’s New Knights: Bringing Faith to the Tech Frontier
November 7, 2025 - 4:15pm
Ozrimoz
Kluz envisions a new kind of knighthood: a trusted circle of Christian entrepreneurs, men and women, who would stand as moral sentinels at the frontier of technology, advising the pope and defending human dignity.
As artificial intelligence algorithms increasingly shape people’s lives, businessman Artur Kluz is calling on lay Christian innovators to become guardians of humanity in the digital age.
First Things
Ralph Lauren, American Patriot
January 21, 2025 - 5:00amOn 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.
Begging Your Pardon
January 20, 2025 - 5:00amWho 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?
To Hell With Notre Dame?
January 20, 2025 - 5:00amI 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.
The Mercurial Bob Dylan
January 17, 2025 - 5:00amThere’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.
The Theology of Music
January 17, 2025 - 5:00amÉ 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.





