Scott Richert, publisher for OSV, shares a story from his recent Viking river cruise up the Danube to celebrate his 30th wedding anniversary with his wife, Amy. During one stop in Czechia, Richert found himself ...
On July 6, OSV Publisher Scott P. Richert announced the creation of OSV News, a new Catholic news agency in the wake of the closure of the excellent and well-regarded Catholic News Service. Richert writes ...
OSV publisher Scott Richert explores the key differences between the Catholic media and secular media — differences that have only been made all too clear in their coverage of recent Supreme Court decision, writing: ...
OSV publisher Scott Richert quotes Father John Francis Noll, who founded Our Sunday Visitor. In the first issue of the newspaper, Father Noll wrote: “The supply of most things, good and bad, is generally regulated ...
Publisher Scott P. Richert addresses the issue of a gun fetishization in our culture, particularly in films and games “Growing up in West Michigan in the 70’s and early 80’s, guns were a part of ...
OSV publisher Scott P. Richert shares how, from an early age, he has been fascinated by numbers: “I add, subtract, multiply and divide, do square roots and other complex calculations, all in my head and ...
Following the bombshell leak of a draft of the majority opinion in the case of Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization, OSV publisher Scott Richert writes that it’s clear that somebody within the Supreme Court ...
OSV publisher Scott Richert explores an old interpretation of a familiar Gospel passage. Writing about the devil’s temptation of Jesus near the end of his 40 days in the desert, Richert writes that most people ...
Publisher Scott Richert shares a background on fasting in Lent, originally meant for those coming into the Church, but eventually expanding to 40 days for the faithful. But for those who may have waited till ...
In his latest column, Publisher Scott P. Richert addresses a human tendency: to cling to lies and misapprehensions that make sense in the dark. Comparing it to children seeing monsters in their rooms when the ...