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

CCHD highlights efforts to promote affordable housing in California (USCCB)

The Catholic Campaign for Human Development, the US bishops’ anti-poverty program, highlighted its efforts to promote affordable housing in California in its new newsletter.

“In March 2025, the state’s median home price was a staggering $884,350, according to the California Association of Realtors, and it’s expected to rise again this year,” the newsletter stated.

In 2023, the program had an operating deficit of $11,412,329, leading to net assets of negative $2.3 million at year’s end. Ralph McCloud, who was named director of CCHD in 2008, resigned from his position in 2024.

Fathers Mazzolari, Milani, Di Liegro: Pope Leo praises 20th-century Italian priests (CWN)

In his June 12 address to clergy of the Diocese of Rome (CWN coverage), Pope Leo XIV paid tribute to three 20th-century Italian priests:

Jun. 13 Memorial of St. Anthony of Padua, Priest and Doctor of the Church; <i>Ember Friday</i>, Memorial

Today is the Memorial of St. Anthony of Padua (1195-1231), who was born at Lisbon, Portugal. He bacame a canon regular and then a Franciscan preaching the Gospel everywhere in Portugal and Italy. Both as a theologian and as a popular preacher he fought vigorously against heresy. His preaching was inspired by the love of God and of souls and had an extraordinary power of conviction; it was filled with the penetrating power of the Bible. Pope Gregory IX, who heard him preach, called him during his lifetime the Arca Testamenti, meaning "the living repository of the Holy Scriptures" and Pope Pius XII, when he proclaimed him a Doctor of the Church, declared that he based all that he said on the texts of the Gospels, and could justly be called the Evangelical Doctor. St. Anthony lived for a time in France, but chiefly in Italy, and died at Padua in 1231 at age 36, with the reputation of great sanctity. From the day of his death innumerable miracles caused the faithful to invoke him as a wonderworker of untiring benevolence.

Lebanese president meets with Pontiff (Vatican Press Office)

Pope Leo XIV met on June 13 with President Joseph Aoun of Lebanon.

A brief Vatican statement issued after the meeting said that the conversation had focused on the hope that Lebanon, “through the stabilization and reform process, would experience a new season of political harmony and economic recovery, enabling it to strengthen the ideals of coexistence among faiths and the promotion of development that characterize it.” The meeting also included a more general discussion of the need for peace in the Middle East.

Congo bishops decry politician's charges against Church (ACI Africa)

The Catholic bishops of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) have denounced attacks against the public role of the Catholic Church by the country’s deputy prime minister, Jean-Pierre Bemba.

The bishops’ conference issued a statement noting “with great consternation—but not real surprise—the nonsense spoken by Mr. Jean-Pierre Bemba” in which the politician had charged that the country’s bishops were plotting to destabilize the government of President Felix Tshisekedi.

All share in God's wealth, Pope writes in message for World Day of the Poor (Vatican Press Office)

“The poor can be witnesses to a strong and steadfast hope, precisely because they embody it in the midst of uncertainty, poverty, instability and marginalization,” Pope Leo XIV writes in his message for World Day of the Poor.

The World Day of the Poor will be observed on Sunday, November 16. The papal message for the occasion was released by the Vatican on June 13.

In his message the Pope reminds readers: “The gravest form of poverty is not to know God.” He says that in our commitment to the common good, “our social responsibility is grounded in God’s creative act, which gives everyone a share in the goods of the earth.”

Gallup poll finds jump in belief that religious influence is growing (Washington Times)

A new Gallup poll reports a sharp increase in the number of Americans who believe that the influence of religious faith is growing.

Gallup found that 34% of adults in the US see religious influence as on the rise, as against only 20% who felt the same way last year.

Although a majority of Americans (59%) say that the influence of faith is in decline, that number is down dramatically from the results of a similar survey last year, in which 75% of respondents saw religion in decline.

Congressmen include USCCB, Catholic Charities in immigration investigation (CatholicVote)

A Congressional investigation is seeking information about more than 200 organizations—including the US Conference of Catholic Bishops and Catholic Charities USA—about how those groups were involved in the handling of immigrants during the Biden administration.

Congressmen Mark Green and Josh Brecheen—the chairmen, respectively, of the Homeland Security Committee and Oversight Committee of the House of Representatives—sought information from non-government organizations (NGOs) that had worked with the government in resettling immigrants. The goal of the investigation is to determine if government funds were used “to facilitate illegal activity.”

In their letter to the NGOs, the lawmakers explained their concern that the Biden administration had encouraged illegal immigration “by signaling to those who arrived illegally or without proper documentation that they could expect such assistance, all expensed to American taxpayers, once they arrived in the United States.”

Bl. Carlo Acutis, Pier Giorgio Frassati to be canonized September 7 (Vatican Press Office)

Pope Leo XIV will preside at the canonization of Blessed Carlo Acutis and Blessed Pier Giorgio Frassati on September 7, the Vatican has announced.

The canonization of Blessed Carlo Acutis had been scheduled for April 27, the Jubilee for Teenagers, but was postponed because of the death of Pope Francis. The canonization of Blessed Pier Giorgio Frassati had been set of November 20.

The scheduled canonizations were announced at a consistory of cardinals on June 13. The same consistory also approved the canonizations of:

  • Peter To Rot, a lay catechist martyred in Papua New Guinea in 1945;
  • Bartolo Longo, a Satanic priest who converted to Catholicism;
  • Ignazio Choukrallah Maloyan, the Armenian Catholic Archbishop of Mardin, a martyr who died in 1916, during the Armenian genocide, when he refused to embrace Islam; and
  • María del Monte Carmelo Rendiles Martínez, founder of the Congregation of the Servants of Jesus;
  • Maria Troncatti, professed religious sister of the Congregation of the Daughters of Mary Help of Christians; and
  • José Gregorio Hernández Cisneros, a Venezuelan doctor who died in 1919.

Archbishop of Tehran pleads for peace (AsiaNews)

Cardinal Dominique Joseph Mathieu of Tehran issued a call for prayer “that peace through dialogue based on a consensus will prevail” after a series of Israeli air strikes against Iran.

“It is with regret that we observe in these last few hours, once again, that peace is sought through preventive attacks instead of committing to dialogue around the negotiating table,” the cardinal wrote in a message to the AsiaNews service.

Cardinal Mathieu recalled that last year, in a meeting with Iranian Muslim leaders, Pope Francis had said that the cardinal’s role in Iran was “to integrate, include and be in contact with the nation.” There are about 22,000 Catholics in Iran, of a population of over 84 million. The entire Christian population accounts for less than 1% of the people in the overwhelmingly Islamic nation.