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Browsing News Entries

Browsing News Entries

Iranian Missile Fragments Fall Near Church of the Holy Sepulchre

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St. Patrick’s Day During Lent ‘Should Inspire Us to Be Joyful, Not Dire’

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‘Catholic Connections’ Aims to Unite Catholics Working On Capitol Hill

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Pakistan’s ‘Blasphemy Business’ Leaves Christian Families Shattered

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Primate highlights youth interest in faith in St. Patrick's Day message (Irish Catholic Bishops' Conference)

Archbishop Eamon Martin of Armagh, the Primate of All Ireland, spoke in his St. Patrick’s Day message about the revival among youth of interest in the faith.

“New research tells us that young adults in Ireland are becoming more curious and searching for faith,” he wrote. “Many young people are struggling to find hope nowadays. They seek nourishment for their interior lives, their well-being and mental health.”

“As a boy, Saint Patrick had experienced violence and displacement at the hands of traffickers,” Archbishop Martin continued. “His loneliness and vulnerability on the hills of Ireland brought him face to face with suffering. He found solace and courage in a new relationship with God, sensing that God was close to him in adversity. This experience shaped Patrick’s vocation and his sense of mission.”

Author critical of Opus Dei meets with Pope Leo (Gareth Gore)

Pope Leo XIV met for over 40 minutes on March 16 with Gareth Gore, the author of Opus: The Cult of Dark Money, Human Trafficking, and Right-Wing Conspiracy inside the Catholic Church.

“I spoke at length about what former members had told me about the way that Opus Dei operates: about how the group abuses the legitimacy conferred upon it by the Catholic Church to lure unsuspecting victims into its clutches,” Gore said following the audience. “I detailed allegations about how the group actively targets young children, how it grooms and manipulates them into a lifelong commitment to serving its interests from the tender age of ten or eleven—without their parents ever being consulted.”

“I ended the meeting by imploring Pope Leo to take action against this abusive group,” Gore added. “I urged him to immediately launch an independent inquiry into Opus Dei abuses headed up by both clerical and lay experts—covering allegations of spiritual, psychological, emotional, physical and financial abuse. “

Founded by St. Josemaría Escrivá in 1928, Opus Dei was established as a personal prelature by Pope St. John Paul II in 1982. The prelature has published a response to Gore’s book.

Abuse prevention is a 'constitutive dimension' of the Church's mission, Pope tells pontifical commission (Dicastery for Communication)

Addressing the members of the Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors, Pope Leo XIV said that “the prevention of abuse is not an optional task, but a constitutive dimension of the mission of the Church.”

“Prevention is never just a set of protocols or procedures,” Pope Leo said in his March 16 address. “It is about helping to form, throughout the Church, a culture of care, in which the protection of minors and persons in vulnerable situations is not seen as an obligation imposed from outside, but as a natural expression of faith.”

“It calls therefore for a process of conversion where the sufferings of others are heard and move us to take action,” he continued. “In this regard, the experiences of victims and survivors are essential reference points.”

Pope Leo also said that “it is my expectation that you continue to achieve even greater cooperation” with the dicasteries of the Roman Curia, “so that they may enrich your work with their knowledge.”

Reject ideological preconceptions and shun propaganda, Pope tells TV journalists (Dicastery for Communication)

Pope Leo XIV encouraged television journalists to reject “ideological preconceptions” and show “creativity, critical discernment and freedom of thought.”

Addressing the editorial staff of the Italian public-television news program TG2 on its fiftieth anniversary, Pope Leo said on March 16 that “we all know how difficult it is to allow ourselves to be surprised by facts, by encounters, by the gazes and voices of others; how strong the temptation is to seek out, see and listen only to what confirms our own opinions. But there can be no good communication, nor true freedom and healthy pluralism, without this openness.”

“Always, but especially in the dramatic circumstances of war, such as those we are currently experiencing, the media must guard against the risk of becoming propaganda,” the Pope continued. “And the task of journalists, in verifying the news so as not to become a mouthpiece for those in power, becomes even more urgent and delicate.”

Pope Leo added, “It is up to you to show the sufferings that war always brings to the people; to show the face of war and to relate it through the eyes of the victims, so as not to transform it into a videogame.”

Christians in the Holy Land 'have never faced anything like this,' Catholic official says (Aid to the Church in Need)

George Akroush, director of the Development Office of the Latin Patriarchate of Jerusalem, spoke with Aid to the Church in Need about the immense challenges faced by Christians in the Holy Land, including terrifying Iranian attacks and Israeli restrictions that prevent Palestinian Christian teachers who live in the West Bank from entering Jerusalem to teach at their Christian schools there.

“This is a big challenge that we have to face, because 40% of our high-quality teachers and support staff come from the West Bank on a daily basis,” said Akroush.

Akroush also spoke about restrictions on sending humanitarian aid to the Christian hospital in Gaza, as well as the end of pilgrimages from abroad, on which many Christians depend for their livelihood.

Cardinal Parolin: St. Francis of Assisi offers 'effective therapy' for our world (Vatican News (Italian))

Cardinal Pietro Parolin, the Secretary of State of His Holiness, celebrated Mass in Assisi on Laetare Sunday, a week before the conclusion of the unprecedented exposure of St. Francis’s remains for veneration.

Cardinal Parolin preached that St. Francis offers “effective therapy” to a world marked by an “unbridled desire to possess, by luxury, waste, superfluity, and consumerism.” This therapy, he said, consists in “sobriety, the joy of small things, the sense of being brothers to everyone and everything.”