Truth is among the most enduring and demanding concerns of human existence. It is sought in scholarship, confessed in faith, tested in community, and embodied in concrete forms of life. To speak the truth requires intellectual clarity and moral courage. To live the truth calls for the integration of conviction and practice. To discern the truth presupposes judgment capable of distinguishing what leads to communion and flourishing from what distorts persons and communities. The contributions gathered in this issue under the title Speaking, Living and Discerning the Truth approach these interrelated dimensions from various perspectives.