Catholics United for the Faith
 
 


CUF chapters are local groups of CUF members who gather for prayer, study, fellowship, and apostolic activity. CUF chapters promote CUF’s mission to support, defend, and advance the efforts of the teaching Church.

To learn more about the history and mission of CUF chapters, click here.

Click here to read "Works of Mercy: Walking the walk and talking the talk," given by CUF Chapter Chairman David Rodriguez to the Saint John the Baptist Chapter in Colorado Springs.

If you are interested in getting involved with a chapter in your area or forming a chapter where none yet exist, please contact our chapter coordinator at chapters@cuf.org.

The following is a listing of the CUF chapters that currently have websites. This is by no means a comprehensive list of our chapters. Please contact us to find out if there’s a chapter in your area.

To view a chapter’s website, click the chapter name below.

St. Catherine of Siena Chapter (Anchorage, AK)

Blessed Kateri Tekakwitha (Phoenix, AZ)

St. Gianna Beretta Molla (Tucson, AZ)

Mary, Mother of the Eucharist (Huntington Beach, CA)

St. John the Baptist (Colorado Springs, CO)

Abba, Father Chapter (Indianapolis, IN)

St. Thomas More Chapter (St. Paul, MN)

St. Gregory VII Chapter (Milwaukee, WI)

CUF New Zealand

CUF Resources
Member Services
Church Documents

From Our Founder

How different the holy Church would be this very day if, years ago, we had been filled with a spirit of humility and compunction, of patience and ready obedience, with the spirit of the Publican, who stood afar off, not venturing to raise his eyes to heaven, but only saying, “Lord, be merciful to me, a sinner” (Lk. 18:13). Or if, like St. Paul, we had begun by saying, from the bottom of our hearts, “Lord, what would you have me do?” Or if, like St. Catherine of Siena, we had been able to cry: “Thanks be to Thee, Eternal Father! . . . I was sick and you gave me . . . a medicine against a secret infirmity that I knew not of, in this precept that in no way can I judge any rational creature, and particularly Thy servants, upon whom oft times I, as one blind and sick with this infirmity, passed judgment under the pretext of Thy honor and the salvation of souls.”

H. Lyman Stebbins
March 1987