U.S. bishops’ conference creates a permanent subcommittee to address racism

 

United States Conference of Catholic Bishops headquarters in Washington, D.C., where Archbishop Timothy Broglio, USCCB president, said the Subcommittee for the Promotion of Racial Justice and Reconciliation will continue “important work.” / Credit: Farragutful, CC BY-SA 3.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0>, via Wikimedia Commons

Washington, D.C. Newsroom, Sep 12, 2025 / 16:34 pm (CNA).

The Ad Hoc Committee Against Racism established in 2017 by former United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) President Cardinal Daniel DiNardo of Galveston-Houston has officially been made a permanent body within the USCCB, according to a Sept. 10 press release.

The newly created, permanent Subcommittee for the Promotion of Racial Justice and Reconciliation “continues the important work of the temporary ad hoc committee,” said USCCB President Archbishop Timothy Broglio.

“As we call for a genuine conversion of heart that will compel change at both individual and institutional levels,” he continued, “I invite all Catholics to join us as we carry forward this work to recognize and uphold the inherent dignity of every person made in the image and likeness of God.”

The Administrative Committee of the USCCB approved the transition on Sept. 9, according to the press release, noting that the new subcommittee falls “under the Committee on Domestic Justice and Human Development.”

The Committee on Domestic Justice and Human Development “seeks to teach about and to witness to the intrinsic dignity of the human person as an antidote to the grave sin of racism” and “explores and implements concrete solutions to address the racism that still pervades our society and our Church today, and works in collaborative ways to strengthen the response of all people to this evil.”

The move to cement the ad hoc committee comes as part of the bishops’ “ongoing commitment to addressing the sin of racism,” the release noted.

The committee’s chair, Bishop Joseph Perry, also weighed in, stating: “I speak on behalf of the bishop members, staff, and consultants of the Ad Hoc Committee Against Racism in expressing gratitude for the transition of our committee to a standing subcommittee so that the important work of evangelization of the faithful and the community at large may continue in the spirit of the Gospel of Jesus Christ.”

The committee will officially begin work after this year’s November plenary assembly.


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1 Comment

  1. Now that we have a permanent subcommittee on “racism,” maybe we can also look forward to a permanent subcommittee on sexual immorality which also “still pervades our society and our Church today,” so it is said.

    And, considering the wraparound of “intersectionality,” maybe the incomparable Fr. James Martin can weasel his way into a few photo-ops–linking minorities with LGBT tribal grievances with surely ubiquitous “racism.” After all, it’s all the same thing! Forgetting that in his “Letter from a Birmingham Jail,” Martin Luther King Jr. still appealed to natural law rather than to ersatz ideology.

    Butt, what better connection than the Jesuit American clericalist to an American-grown pope! Martin (all genuflect!) is already an expert consultant (since 2017) for the Rome Dicastery on Communications.

    p.s. And, about communications, the embedded link (Sept. 10 Press release) has no relation to the article.

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