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Browsing News Entries

Browsing News Entries

Jihadists trying to establish a caliphate in northern Mozambique, says bishop (Aid to the Church in Need)

Jihadists in Mozambique are attempting to establish a caliphate, a local bishop warned.

“The signs are all there,” Bishop António Juliasse of Pemba told Aid to the Church in Need. “They speak openly of a caliphate. When they find people, when they kidnap victims, that is what they say, that they are working for a caliphate.”

A brutal Islamist insurgency in Mozambique’s Cabo Delgado province began in 2017. The Southeast African nation of 34.2 million (map) is 57% Christian (32% Catholic), 18% Muslim, and 24% ethnic religionist.

Survey: 55% of US adults view Pope Leo favorably (The Economist/YouGov Poll)

A survey of 1,604 U.S. adult citizens, conducted between May 29 and June 1, found that 55% had a favorable opinion of Pope Leo XIV. 23% expressed an unfavorable opinion, and 21% said they “don’t know.”

Kamala Harris voters (84%), liberals (79%), Democrats (79%), and college graduates (65%) were more likely to have a favorable opinion of the Pontiff than Trump voters (37%), conservatives (42%), Republicans (42%), and those with no degree (50%).

Catalonian parish church bricked up after vandalism (OIDAC Europe)

Authorities in Òdena, a small town in Catalonia, Spain, bricked up a parish church after vandals ransacked it, the Observatory on Intolerance and Discrimination against Christians in Europe reported.

“The attack caused strong indignation among residents and parishioners, particularly because the response ultimately focused on sealing the church rather than immediately prosecuting those responsible,” the Observatory reported. “To prevent further break-ins or acts of desecration, authorities decided to brick up the church, the rectory and the lower parish premises.”

Sydney archbishop, in pastoral letter on Eucharistic adoration, emphasizes importance of kneeling (The Catholic Weekly)

Archbishop Anthony Fisher, O.P., issued a pastoral letter on Eucharistic adoration for the feast of Corpus Christi.

In “Adoring the Eucharistic Lord: ‘Let us kneel before the God who made us,’” Archbishop Fisher wrote that kneeling is the posture that “most clearly reveals what we believe about God and our relationship to Him.” Receiving Communion while kneeling, he said, is “a perfectly valid option envisaged in the current Missal.”

Archbishop Fisher asked priests to “offer at least one holy hour each week in each parish, and to collaborate with adjoining parishes to increase availability of prayer before the Blessed Sacrament, including a Perpetual Adoration chapel in each deanery.”

Miami archbishop ordains 12 FSSP priests (Archdiocese of Miami)

Archbishop Thomas Wenski of Miami, Florida, ordained 12 members of the Priestly Fraternity of St. Peter on May 28 at Our Lady of Guadalupe Seminary in Nebraska.

The priests of the institute offer the Latin Mass in the extraordinary form. Founded in 1988, the institute, in 2024, had 139 religious houses, 567 members, and 375 priests, according to the Annuario Pontificio.

Video surfaces of Vatican appointee saying it's 'wrong' to believe all Jews should become Christians (LifeSite News)

Following the appointment of Maria Montserrat (Montse) Alvarado as prefect of the Dicastery for Communication, a “video clip surfaced from 2022 of her stating it ‘obviously is wrong’ to believe ‘that all Jews should become Christians,’” LifeSiteNews reported.

Prior to her 2023 appointment as president and chief operating officer of EWTN News, Alvarado worked for the Becket Fund for Religious Liberty, where she served as vice president and executive director. She will succeed Paolo Ruffini, the layman who has led the dicastery since 2018, on November 1.

When Colleges Cut Theology, Students Lose More Than Credits

commentary

In Spain, 7 cardinals, 61 bishops implicated in covering up abuse, newspaper charges (El País )

On the eve of Pope Leo’s apostolic journey to Spain, a leading Spanish newspaper reported that since 1952, “94 senior Church officials have covered up complaints, protected clerics or silenced victims.”

“Of those, seven are cardinals, 61 are bishops and 26 are superiors of religious orders,” El País reported. “Two other cases are particularly striking because the accused [i.e., those accused of covering up abuse] are in the process of beatification.”

Young missionary dioceses will need to become more financially self-sufficient, Vatican official warns (CWN)

A Vatican official told national directors of the Pontifical Mission Societies that younger missionary dioceses will need to become more financially self-sufficient because of a decrease in donations from Catholics in the West.