Lord we pray "Help me to continually increase parish vitality and reflect the presence of Christ in the world."

Browsing News Entries

Browsing News Entries

Pope Leo XIV May Add European Parliament to 2026 Travel Agenda

news

Pope Calls for Olympic Truce in Letter for Winter Games

cna

The Japanese Martyrs: Evangelizers Through Blood

commentary

German Parish’s ‘Harry Potter’ Church Service Sparks Catholic Outcry

cna

‘My Catholic Faith Guides Me’: HHS Assistant Secretary Speaks On Policy, Saints

cna

Full Text: Archbishop-Elect Ronald Hicks’ First Homily From St. Patrick’s Cathedral

commentary

Cardinal Farrell: Changing doctrine, structures is false 'solution' to problems in Church (CWN)

The Dicastery for Laity, Family and Life began a three-day plenary assembly on February 4, only the third such assembly since the dicastery’s establishment in 2016, and the first such assembly since 2023.

Pope, in video, prays for children with rare diseases (Pope's Worldwide Prayer Network)

The Pope’s Worldwide Prayer Network released a video associated with the Pontiff’s February prayer intention, for children with incurable diseases.

In the four-minute video, filmed in San Pellegrino in Vaticano and released on February 5, Pope Leo began, “Lord Jesus, who welcomed the little ones in your arms and blessed them tenderly, today we bring before you the children living with incurable illnesses.”

The Pope concluded:

Make of us a Church that, animated by the feelings of your Heart and moved by prayer and service, knows how to uphold fragility, and in the midst of suffering, becomes a source of comfort, a seed of hope, and a proclamation of new life. Amen.

Virginia bishop writes pastoral letter on mental health (Diocese of Arlington)

In a recent pastoral letter, Bishop Michael Burbidge of Arlington, Virginia, sought to “offer encouragement and guidance, in light of the teachings of Christ and the Gospel, to all who wish to confront and overcome the modern world’s challenges to mental health and wellbeing.”

“As a priest and bishop, I have observed with increasing pastoral concern the emergence of a broad crisis concerning mental health that is negatively impacting Americans, and especially young people, in terms of their spiritual, mental, emotional, and physical wellbeing,” Bishop Burbidge wrote in “The Divine Physician and a Christian Approach to Mental Health and Wellbeing.”

The prelate also offered his reflections on the “proper place of counseling in the Catholic life—when and in what manner we should make use of it in our pursuit of that authentic happiness that is holiness.”