2017-02-14T13:02:00+00:00

Paris, France, Feb 14, 2017 / 06:02 am (CNA/EWTN News).-  A complaint brought by a Catholic group against a dating site that promotes extramarital affairs was thrown out by a French court last week.  The suit was dismissed after a Paris court determined that the National Confederation of Catholic Family Associations could not file the complaint, since infidelity complaints can only be filed within a private marital relationship, and because an affair does not always constitute a civil violation, according to reports from the AP.  The website, Gleeden, advertises itself as “The first extramarital dating site made by women,” with a logo featuring a half-eaten apple referencing the sin of Adam and Eve in the garden of Eden. Launched in 2009, the website claims to be a world leader in coordinating extramarital affairs, with a million users in France and 2.4 million throughout the world.  Catholic Family Associations first filed a legal complaint against the site’s U.S. based publisher, Black Divine, in a Paris court in February 2015. The group said the advertisements for the site were crude and immoral and constituted a breach of an article in French civil code.  While adultery was decriminalized in France in 1975, article 212 of the French Civil Code states, "Married partners owe each other the duty of respect, fidelity, help and assistance." Many family lawyers believed the suit would succeed for this reason.  Despite France’s secularism and typical laissez faire attitude towards sexual mores, Gleeden scandalized many with the release of its public advertisements in 2015, highlighting a cultural divide within the country. Several towns and bus companies opted to remove the advertisements after receiving numerous complaints.  "There are plenty of other websites out there which promote sexual contact between individuals, but what makes Gleeden different is that its very business model is based on marital infidelity," Jean-Marie Andres, president of the Association of Catholic Families, told the BBC in 2015.  "It states quite openly that its purpose is to offer married women opportunities to have sex outside the marriage,” she said.  "But here in France, people and parliament are all in agreement that marriage is a public commitment. It's in the law. What we are trying to do with our suit is show that the civil code - the law - has meaning."  Gleeden argued in the case that it was merely facilitating affairs, and that the demand for them already existed.  A spokesperson for Catholic Family Associations told the AP that the group had not yet decided whether it would appeal the decision. Read more

2017-02-14T10:36:00+00:00

Washington D.C., Feb 14, 2017 / 03:36 am (CNA/EWTN News).- It’s Valentine’s Day, and in countries across the world, people are focused on love and marriage. But for the Catholic Church, the celebration of – and support for – mar... Read more

2017-02-14T09:17:00+00:00

Vatican City, Feb 14, 2017 / 02:17 am (CNA/EWTN News).- In his preface for a book written by a survivor of clerical sex abuse, Pope Francis once again lamented the “monstrosity” of the act, calling the author, Daniel Pittet, courageous for ... Read more

2017-02-14T07:08:00+00:00

Vatican City, Feb 14, 2017 / 12:08 am (CNA/EWTN News).- A special invitation to visit Egypt was delivered to Pope Francis by Coptic Catholic bishops during their ad limina visit Feb. 6, during which they also gave a report on the state of the Church in... Read more

2017-02-14T01:03:00+00:00

Washington D.C., Feb 13, 2017 / 06:03 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- Objectors to abortion need stronger conscience protections in federal law, the U.S. bishops have said in a letter to Congress supporting a bill being considered by Congress. “While exist... Read more

2017-02-13T23:39:00+00:00

Springfield, Ill., Feb 13, 2017 / 04:39 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- A Catholic advocacy group is warning the governor of Illinois that he will face massive political opposition if he signs an abortion funding bill into law. “Let me be clear. If Governo... Read more

2017-02-13T23:28:00+00:00

Madrid, Spain, Feb 13, 2017 / 04:28 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- Josefa Rodríguez and Amaro Pesquero were not expecting to receive a letter from Pope Francis. But that's exactly what happened last September, when the Pope himself thanked them in his own handwriting for the donation they had made for the persecuted Christians in the Middle East. Josefa and Amaro are a married couple from Fuenlabrada, Madrid, Spain, who made a pilgrimage to Rome on the occasion of the Holy Year of Mercy in August 2016. “My wife bought a prayer book on Divine Mercy and got in contact with this apostolate so they could send her more books so she could to give them away to others. Then they informed her that there was going to be a pilgrimage to Rome and we signed up,” Amaro Pesquero told CNA. But in addition to going on pilgrimage for the Jubilee, the retired couple brought a gift that they had gathered together with a lot of effort and that they wanted to give to the Holy Father: a sum of money they wished to donate for the persecuted Christians. “We wanted it to be for the persecuted Christians of the Middle East, because we thought that they're the ones who need it the most right now,” Amaro said. At the general audience in Saint Peter's Square, they gave the envelope with the letter and the money to their fellow pilgrim who was going to greet Pope Francis on behalf of the entire group and who was able to personally hand it to the pontiff. It was a sum of money that they never thought would get a response, but Pope Francis replied to them in his own handwriting, thanking them “for this gesture of concrete charity” along with two holy cards with prayers to Saint Joseph and Saint Therese of Lisieux. Amaro explained that “the letter was late in  arriving because it didn't come by ordinary mail, but in the diplomatic pouch of the Diocese of Getafe.” “Someone at the Diocese came to our house, but we weren't there and when we returned, our neighbor told us we needed to go there to pick up something important,” he said. “We went and it was from the Holy Father.” In his letter the Pope told them: “I have received your letter of this past Aug. 2 with the donation included…to help the persecuted Christians, particularly in the countries of the Middle East.” “I thank you from the heart for this gesture of concrete charity and ask the Lord to abundantly reward you. I ask you, please, to not forget to pray for me so that I can be faithful to the Lord in this ministry. May Jesus bless you and the Holy Virgin care for you.” However, this is not the first time that a pontiff wrote to this couple from Fuenlabrada – Saint John Paul II also thanked them for a similar gift. As the couple told CNA, “we were able to greet Pope John Paul II in person, we shook hands with him and gave him a donation. He replied to us through his secretary and he also sent us a small card showing his thanks in his own handwriting.” Read more

2017-02-13T23:28:00+00:00

Madrid, Spain, Feb 13, 2017 / 04:28 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- Josefa Rodríguez and Amaro Pesquero were not expecting to receive a letter from Pope Francis. But that's exactly what happened last September, when the Pope himself thanked them in his own handwriting for the donation they had made for the persecuted Christians in the Middle East. Josefa and Amaro are a married couple from Fuenlabrada, Madrid, Spain, who made a pilgrimage to Rome on the occasion of the Holy Year of Mercy in August 2016. “My wife bought a prayer book on Divine Mercy and got in contact with this apostolate so they could send her more books so she could to give them away to others. Then they informed her that there was going to be a pilgrimage to Rome and we signed up,” Amaro Pesquero told CNA. But in addition to going on pilgrimage for the Jubilee, the retired couple brought a gift that they had gathered together with a lot of effort and that they wanted to give to the Holy Father: a sum of money they wished to donate for the persecuted Christians. “We wanted it to be for the persecuted Christians of the Middle East, because we thought that they're the ones who need it the most right now,” Amaro said. At the general audience in Saint Peter's Square, they gave the envelope with the letter and the money to their fellow pilgrim who was going to greet Pope Francis on behalf of the entire group and who was able to personally hand it to the pontiff. It was a sum of money that they never thought would get a response, but Pope Francis replied to them in his own handwriting, thanking them “for this gesture of concrete charity” along with two holy cards with prayers to Saint Joseph and Saint Therese of Lisieux. Amaro explained that “the letter was late in  arriving because it didn't come by ordinary mail, but in the diplomatic pouch of the Diocese of Getafe.” “Someone at the Diocese came to our house, but we weren't there and when we returned, our neighbor told us we needed to go there to pick up something important,” he said. “We went and it was from the Holy Father.” In his letter the Pope told them: “I have received your letter of this past Aug. 2 with the donation included…to help the persecuted Christians, particularly in the countries of the Middle East.” “I thank you from the heart for this gesture of concrete charity and ask the Lord to abundantly reward you. I ask you, please, to not forget to pray for me so that I can be faithful to the Lord in this ministry. May Jesus bless you and the Holy Virgin care for you.” However, this is not the first time that a pontiff wrote to this couple from Fuenlabrada – Saint John Paul II also thanked them for a similar gift. As the couple told CNA, “we were able to greet Pope John Paul II in person, we shook hands with him and gave him a donation. He replied to us through his secretary and he also sent us a small card showing his thanks in his own handwriting.” Read more

2017-02-13T21:56:00+00:00

Portland, Ore., Feb 13, 2017 / 02:56 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- An Oregon bill on advanced medical directive rules could allow patients who suffer from dementia or mental illness to be starved or dehydrated, opponents warned. “These are patients who a... Read more

2017-02-13T20:09:00+00:00

Washington D.C., Feb 13, 2017 / 01:09 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- President Donald Trump’s administration will stop fighting in court to implement the Obama administration’s transgender bathroom policy, leading to applause from a religious freedom legal group.   “This is good news for the privacy, safety, and dignity of young students across America,” stated Gary McCaleb, senior counsel with the legal group Alliance Defending Freedom. On Friday, the Trump administration announced that it was dropping the government’s appeal on behalf of the Obama administration’s transgender bathroom guidance. That guidance had directed schools to allow students to use the bathroom or locker room of the gender they currently identify with, not the facilities of their birth or biological sex. In August, the Northern District of Texas federal court placed an injunction on the policy, halting it from going into effect.   In response to the injunction, the Obama administration appealed its case to the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals. That appeal was dropped on Friday, a decision McCaleb praised as “the first steps to end” the Obama administration’s “error.” The guidance in question was an interpretation of Title IX of the Civil Rights Act, which forbids discrimination “on the basis of sex” within “any education program or activity receiving Federal financial assistance.” In its interpretation, the administration said the Title IX anti-discrimination protections include those for gender identity, meaning that transgender students had to have access to facilities of the gender with which they identified, like single-sex locker rooms and bathrooms. In response to the Trump administration’s decision to drop the government’s appeal, McCaleb said the Obama administration’s policy had “radically distorted” Title IX, which “was intended to equalize educational opportunities for women.” Leading U.S. bishops had expressed serious concerns with the guidance, saying that it “contradicts a basic understanding of human formation so well expressed by Pope Francis: that ‘the young need to be helped to accept their own body as it was created’.” “Children, youth, and parents in these difficult situations deserve compassion, sensitivity, and respect,” said Bishop Richard Malone of Buffalo and Archbishop George Lucas of Omaha, chairs of the committees on youth and Catholic education, respectively. “All of these can be expressed without infringing on legitimate concerns about privacy and security on the part of the other young students and parents. The federal regulatory guidance issued on May 13 does not even attempt to achieve this balance.” The August injunction by the Texas district court came weeks after the U.S. Supreme Court had halted from going into effect a Fourth Circuit Court ruling that a transgender student had to be able to access the public school bathroom of their choice. The Court will hear that case of Gavin Grimm this term. “It is only common sense to ensure privacy for all students by keeping boys out of girls' locker rooms and vice versa,” McCaleb said. “It’s right to respect the real differences between boys and girls, because that protects the privacy, safety, and dignity of all students.”   Read more




Browse Our Archives