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
Fr. Patton: Prayer and fasting are only weapons Christians should use
March 19, 2026 - 4:59amSpeaking from Jordan, the former Custos of the Holy Land makes an appeal for a “great gathering for all” in the name of peace and an end to violence in the Middle East, stressing that the only weapons Christians should use are "prayer and fasting."
GreenAccord Forum 2026: Sustainability, media, and a shared future
March 18, 2026 - 12:59pmMore than 100 journalists from over 40 countries gather for four days of dialogue on ecology, innovation, and the responsibility of information
Cardinal Parolin to Trump, Israel: End the war as soon as possible
March 18, 2026 - 11:38amResponding to questions by journalists on the sidelines of a book presentation, Cardinal Pietro Parolin shares what we would say if face-to-face with U.S. President Trump: "Put an end to it as soon as possible because the real danger is that an escalation is just around the corner."
Apostolic Nuncio to in Lebanon visits bombarded southern villages
March 18, 2026 - 10:45amThe Apostolic nuncio, Paolo Borgia, meets with Shiite religious authorities in the south of Lebanon, and encounters a group of refugees hosted by a Maronite community,.
Israel kills Iranian intelligence chief and intensifies attacks on Lebanon
March 18, 2026 - 9:12amIsrael says Iran's intelligence minister Esmail Khatib has been killed in an overnight strike and intensifies its attacks on Beirut following an escalation between Hezbollah and Tel Aviv.
Parish Flocknote
Feast of Saint Joseph
March 18, 2026 - 4:18pmThe Tradition of St. Joseph’s Bread According to legend, there was a famine in Sicily many centuries ago. The villagers prayed to St. Joseph, foster-father of the Infant Savior, and asked his intercession before the throne of...Bible Study
March 15, 2026 - 3:50pmSignup: Lenten Bible Study: Lazarus and Preparing for Easter Join us at the Cathedral Basilica for an evening of prayer and reflection with Brother Benedict Gregory Johnson, OP , a Dominican friar. Brother Benedict will be...Bilble Study
March 12, 2026 - 2:01pmSignup: Lenten Bible Study: Lazarus and Preparing for Easter Join us at the Cathedral Basilica for an evening of prayer and reflection with Brother Benedict Gregory Johnson, OP , a Dominican friar. Brother Benedict will be...Weekly Update
March 6, 2026 - 3:25pmSchedule for March 7-8 Saturday, March 7 7:00 am Cathedral Open for Private Prayer and Devotion 8:00 am Mass 1:00 pm Archbishop's Lenten Afternoon of Reflection 3:30 - 4:15 pm Holy Hour - concluding with Evening Prayer and...Ash Wednesday - Schedule of Masses
February 15, 2026 - 2:00pmAsh Wednesday Schedule of Masses Wednesday, February 18, 2026 7:00 am Mass 8:00 am Mass 12:05 pm Mass 5:30 pm Mass Archbishop's Afternoon of Recollection Parishioners, their guests, and all throughout the Archdiocese are...
National Catholic Register
The Lebanon Sideshow Could Be Worse Than the Iranian Main Event
March 18, 2026 - 5:22pm
-
A photograph shows a banner bearing portraits the slain leaders of the Lebanese Shia movement Hezbollah, Hassan Nasrallah (l) and Hashem Safieddine, at the site of an overnight Israeli airstrike that targeted the Burj al-Barajneh neighborhood in Beirut's southern suburbs on March 14. Lebanon was drawn into the Middle East war last week when Iran-backed militant group Hezbollah attacked Israel in response to the killing of the Iranian supreme leader during US-Israeli strikes.
COMMENTARY: Israel’s vigorous response, with Christians in the crossfire, could rid the Lebanese host of the Hezbollah parasite, or destroy both.
National Eucharistic Pilgrimage Registration Opens; Schedule Released
March 18, 2026 - 4:39pm
Promotional poster.
The 2026 National Eucharistic Pilgrimage will bring the faithful together in prayer and celebrate the 250th anniversary of the United States.
House Bill Targets Environmental Impact of Chemical Abortion and Doctors’ Role in the Process
March 18, 2026 - 4:27pm
Savanna Deretich, Students for Life Action’s government affairs coordinator, speaks on the Clean Water for All Life Act on March 18, 2026.
The bill would tighten prescription requirements, requiring an in-person exam and requiring the doctor to be present during the abortion.
Immigration Enforcement Harms Children, Drives Family Separation, Speakers at Democratic Forum Say
March 18, 2026 - 2:14pm
Madalaine Elhabbal
Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Connecticut; Sen. Mazie Hirano, D-Hawaii; and Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Illinois, hear testimony on March 17, 2026, during a forum on immigration enforcement impact on children who have been detained or separated from their families.
More than 3,800 children, including 20 infants, were detained by U.S. immigration authorities from January to October 2025, according to data shared by the Immigrants’ Rights Clinic.
Is the ‘Revival’ of Faith in Gen Z Real?
March 18, 2026 - 1:59pm
Ashwin Mannur
Recent Catholic convert Ashwin Mannur, center in glasses, smiles with friends from the UNL Newman Center.
While there are near-record numbers converting to Catholicism in some regions in the US, there’s no conclusive statistical answer.
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.





