2016-10-31T18:21:00+00:00

New York City, N.Y., Oct 31, 2016 / 12:21 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- Christianity is at a crossroads in the Middle East, and only a dedicated campaign of aid and activism can help Christians survive as a merciful, forgiving leaven in the region. “Eith... Read more

2016-10-31T17:34:00+00:00

Vatican City, Oct 31, 2016 / 11:34 am (CNA/EWTN News).- Hours after landing in Sweden Pope Francis said that without God we can do nothing, but with him Catholics and Lutherans can work toward greater unity – not in order to forget the past, but ... Read more

2016-10-31T14:50:00+00:00

Lund, Sweden, Oct 31, 2016 / 08:50 am (CNA/EWTN News).- In a joint declaration signed on the 500th anniversary of the Reformation, Catholic and Lutheran leaders apologized for division in the Church and pledged to work for greater unity. “Fifty ... Read more

2017-11-04T21:02:00+00:00

Brownsville, Texas, Nov 4, 2017 / 03:02 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- They call her Santa Muerte (‘Holy Death’ or ‘Saint Death’), but she’s no saint. Literally. The skeletal female figure has a growing devotion in Mexico, Central America, and some places in the United States, but don’t be fooled by the Mary-like veil or the holy-sounding name. She’s not a recognized saint by the Roman Catholic Church. In fact, in 2013, a Vatican official condemned devotion to her, equating it to “the celebration of devastation and of hell.” “It’s not every day that a folk saint is actually condemned at the highest levels of the Vatican,” Andrew Chesnut, a Santa Muerte expert who has been studying the devotion for more than eight years, told CNA. Chesnut is the Bishop Walter F. Sullivan Chair in Catholic Studies at Virginia Commonwealth University and author of "Devoted to Death: Santa Muerte, the Skeleton Saint," the only English academic book to date on the subject. Despite her condemnation from on high, Santa Muerte remains increasingly popular among criminals, drug lords and those on the fringe of society, as well as cultural Catholics who maybe don’t know (or care) that she is condemned by the Church. “She’s basically the poster girl of narco-satanic spirituality,” Chesnut said. According to Chesnut’s estimates, Santa Muerte is the fastest growing religious movement in the Americas - and it’s all happened within the past 10-15 years. “She was unknown to 99 percent of Mexicans before 2001, when she went public. Now I estimate there’s some 10-12 million devotees, mostly in Mexico, but also significant numbers in the United States and Central America,” he said.The roots of Santa Muerte Although she has recently exploded in popularity, Santa Muerte has been referenced in Mexican culture since Spanish colonial times, when Catholic colonizers, looking to evangelize the native people of Mexico, brought over female Grim Reaper figures as a representation of death, Chesnut said. But the Mayan and Aztec cultures already had death deities, and so the female skeletal figure became adopted into the culture as a kind of hybrid death saint. She’s also mentioned twice in the historical records of the Inquisition, when Spanish Catholic inquisitors found and destroyed a shrine to Santa Muerte in Central Mexico. After that, Santa Muerte disappeared from historical records for more than a century, only to resurface, in a relatively minor way, in the 1940s. “From the 1940s to 1980s, researchers exclusively report Santa Muerte (being invoked) for love miracles,” Chesnut said, such as women asking the folk saint to bring back their cheating husbands. She then faded into obscurity for a few more decades, until the drug wars brought her roaring back.What’s the appeal of a saint of death? Part of the attraction to Santa Muerte, as several sources familiar with the devotion explained, is that she is seen as a non-judgemental saint that can be invoked for some not-so-holy petitions. “If somebody is going to be doing something illegal, and they want to be protected from the law enforcement, they feel awkward asking God to protect them,” explained Fr. Andres Gutierrez, the pastor of St. Helen parish in Rio Hondo, Texas. “So they promise something to Santa Muerte in exchange for being protected from the law.” Devotees also feel comfortable going to her for favors of vengeance - something they would never ask of God or a canonized saint, Chesnut said. “I think this non-judgemental saint who’s going to accept me as I am is appealing,” Chesnut said, particularly to criminals or to people who don’t feel completely accepted within the Mexican Catholic or Evangelical churches. The cultural Catholicism of Mexico and the drug wars of the past decade also made for the perfect storm for Santa Muerte to catch on, Chesnut explained. Even Mexicans who didn’t grow up going to Mass every Sunday still have a basic idea of what Catholicism entails - Mass and Saints and prayers like the rosary, all things that have been hi-jacked and adapted by the Santa Muerte movement. “You can almost see some of it as kind of an extreme heretical form of folk Catholicism,” he said. “In fact, I can say Santa Muerte could only have arisen from a Catholic environment.” This, coupled with the fact that Mexican Catholics are suddenly much more familiar with death, with the recent drug wars having left upwards of 60,000 - 120,000 Mexicans dead - makes a saint of death that much more intriguing. “Paradoxically, a lot of devotees who feel like death could be just around the corner - maybe they’re narcos, maybe they work in the street, maybe they’re security guards who might be gunned down - they ask Santa Muerte for protection.”Why she’s no saint Her familiarity and appeal is actually part of the danger of this devotion, Fr. Gutierrez said. “(Santa Muerte) is literally a demon with another name,” he said. “That’s what it is.” In his own ministry, Fr. Gutierrez said he has witnessed people who “suffer greatly” following a devotion to the folk saint. Fr. Gary Thomas, a Vatican-trained exorcist for the Diocese of San Jose, told CNA that he has also prayed with people who have had demonic trouble after praying to Santa Muerte. “I have had a number of people who have come to me as users of this practice and found themselves tied to a demon or demonic tribe,” he said. Fr. Gutierrez noted that while Catholics who attend Mass and the sacraments on a regular basis tend to understand this about Santa Muerte, those in danger are the cultural Catholics who aren’t intentionally engaging in something harmful, but could be opening the door to spiritual harm nonetheless.    Elizabeth Beltran is the parish secretary at Cristo Rey Church, a predominantly Latino Catholic parish in Lincoln, Nebraska. Beltran, who grew up in Mexico and whose family is still in Mexico, said she started noticing Santa Muerte about 15-20 years ago, but she hasn’t yet noticed the presence of the devotion in the United States. Besides narcos and criminals, the folk saint also appeals to poor, cultural Mexican Catholics or those who are simply looking for something to believe in, Beltran said. “People who don’t know their faith very well, it’s very easy to convince them” to pray to Santa Muerte, she said. It’s common practice in Mexico for people to mix superstitious practices with Catholic prayers like the Our Father or the Hail Mary, in order to gain trust in the Catholic culture. Besides her demonic ties, she’s also a perversion of what the practice of praying to saints is all about, said Fr. Ryan Kaup, a priest with Cristo Rey parish. “What we venerate as saints are real people who have chosen this life to follow the will of our Lord and have done great things with their lives, and now they’re in heaven forever, and so that’s why we ask for their intercession,” Fr. Kaup said. “So taking this devotion and this practice that we have of asking for this saint’s intercession and twisting it in such a way as to invoke this glorified image of death is really a distortion of what we believe is true intercession and truly the power of the saints.” Because of her growing popularity in the United States, Fr. Gutierrez said he is hoping that bishops and Catholic leaders in the U.S. become more aware of the danger of the Santa Muerte devotion and start condemning it publically. “I would love to hear something on a national level, from the U.S. conference of Catholic bishops or from local bishops speaking about it publicly,” he said. “I think that would be one way to really call it to attention.” Fr. Thomas added that honoring a saint of death is a corruption and distortion of what Christians belief about Jesus, who came to give us eternal life. “‘Saint Death’ is an oxymoron. God is a God of the living, not the dead.”  This article was originally published on CNA Oct. 30, 2016. Read more

2016-10-30T14:56:00+00:00

Amatrice, Italy, Oct 30, 2016 / 08:56 am (CNA/EWTN News).- A large earthquake struck the central Italian town of Norcia this morning, leveling the Basilica of St. Benedict and several other buildings in the town. The earthquake, which occurred around ... Read more

2016-10-30T12:01:00+00:00

Vatican City, Oct 30, 2016 / 06:01 am (CNA/EWTN News).- Sunday Pope Francis expressed his nearness to everyone affected by an earthquake which hit central Italy Sunday morning, asking for the Blessed Virgin Mary to watch over them.   “I ex... Read more

2016-10-29T22:00:00+00:00

San Francisco, Calif., Oct 29, 2016 / 04:00 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- When it comes to legalizing marijuana in California, the risks to children, teens and the poor are just too great, said four Bay Area bishops ahead of the November ballot.   Discussi... Read more

2016-10-29T09:02:00+00:00

Rome, Italy, Oct 29, 2016 / 03:02 am (CNA/EWTN News).- Archbishop Paulino Luduku Loro of Jubo, South Sudan has said that when it comes to the dramatic and widespread phenomena of child soldiers in his country’s conflict, the only way to stop it is to end the fighting and focus on talking about the issues. “The only solution we have been saying is stop fighting, stop war, so that we fight in dialogue. Because there are reasons why these people, these child soldiers are fighting,” Archbishop Paulino Luduku Loro told CNA Oct. 27. Many children, he noted, “are maybe not simply caught by the government,” but choose to fight on their own. “It's because they feel the problem, they are grieved, they feel that there is an injustice in the administration of the government and here you have young boys, young children, by themselves. They are not even recruited by anybody,” he said. Recruitment of child soldiers in South Sudan is among the worst in the world with an estimated 16,000 child soldiers fighting since the conflict intensified in December 2013. A primary concern regarding the phenomena of child soldiers is what violence does to a young person’s psyche, particularly as they transition into adulthood. Since many soldiers recruited by the government don't want to fight, the government has resorted to the use of more militia-type fighters, or forces children to fight for them, the archbishop explained. However, it's also children and young boys who “simply go by themselves” to fight against the government, he said, stressing that the only solution “is to stop fighting and talk peace. This is what we are working on together.” Archbishop Loro heads the Catholic Archdiocese of Juba in South Sudan, and traveled to Rome alongside Rev. Daniel Deng Bul Yak, Archbishop of the Province of the Episcopal Church of South Sudan and Sudan, and Rev. Peter Gai Lual Marrow, Moderator of the Presbyterian Church of South Sudan. The three of them met with Pope Francis Oct. 27 to discuss the desperate situation of their country with the Pope, both highlighting their joint collaboration and inviting him to visit. The meeting was arranged by Ghanaian Cardinal Peter Turkson, currently President of the Vatican’s Council for Justice and Peace and president-elect of the new mega-dicastery dedicated to Integral Human Development, which will go into effect as of Jan. 1, 2017, and which will absorb the Councils for Migrants, Justice and Peace, Charity and Healthcare. According to an Oct. 27 Vatican communique on the meeting, discussion focused on current tensions dividing Sudanese people “to the detriment of coexistence in the country.” Mention was made of the “good and fruitful collaboration” among differing Christian Churches, “who wish primarily to offer their contribution to promoting the common good, protecting the dignity of the person, protecting the helpless and implementing initiatives for dialogue and reconciliation.” In his comments to CNA, Archbishop Loro said that from a religious point of view, “the three of us as different religions, all are Christian religions and we are perfectly together.” Different Christian communities have always spoken about the situation of the country together, he said, explaining that it’s “perfectly in place” that the three of them would come to the Vatican together to voice concerns surrounding the state of their country. “We are together and we are really speaking one voice and one language” to raise awareness of the humanitarian, political and social crisis of the country both locally and internationally. In light of the ongoing Jubilee of Mercy, the necessity for forgiveness and acceptance of others was underlined as a key path to building peace and fostering human development, according to the communique. The three Christian leaders stressed their commitment to working together “a spirit of communion and unity, to service to the population, promoting the spread of a culture of encounter and sharing.” Sudan has been the scene of nearly continuous civil war since it gained independence in 1956. Many of the initial problems were caused by corruption in the government, which led to the political, economic, and religious marginalization of the country’s peripheries. South Sudan became an independent country in 2011 but it has been torn by a civil war since December 2013, between the state forces – the Sudan People’s Liberation Army – and opposition forces, as well as sectarian conflict. A peace agreement was signed but it was broken by violence earlier this summer, which prompted the South Sudan Council of Churches to publicly condemn the violence and pray for peace. A ceasefire was then ordered by President Kiir and then-Vice President Machar in July. Machar, the former rebel leader, ended up fleeing the country, but despite this, some fighting has continued in the country. Although South Sudan is now independent from Sudan, the two countries share an episcopal conference. South Sudan also shares a common apostolic nuncio with Kenya, Archbishop Charles Daniel Balvo. This point was also brought up during their meeting with Pope Francis, Archbishop Loro said, explaining that when the Pope asked how it was working out to have a shared nuncio between the two countries, he requested that South Sudan have its own. The three Christian leaders extended an official invitation to Pope Francis to visit the country, particularly as a sign of solidarity and peace. Francis said he would like to go if possible, Archbishop Loro said, explaining that he Pope's visit “would be the visit of a religious leader to the country.” Given this fact, the visit “would have a great impact and would be very welcome by us and by civil society, and it would be a great help for us. This is why we came to the Pope,” he said. Read more

2016-10-28T23:07:00+00:00

Munich, Germany, Oct 28, 2016 / 05:07 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- In a recent article for a German journal, Cardinal Walter Kasper – a protagonist for the admission of the divorced-and-remarried to Holy Communion – has written that Amoris laetitia marks a “paradigm shift” that allows for a “changed pastoral practice.” “There is leeway in the concrete elaboration of the dogmatic principles’ practical pastoral consequences,” the president emeritus of the Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian Unity wrote in his article for the November 2016 edition of Stimmen der Zeit, a monthly journal on Christian culture. Cardinal Kasper began by examining the range of interpretations of the apostolic exhortation issued by Pope Francis in March. He dismissed Cardinal Raymond Burke's denial that it is magisterially binding, saying this “formally contradicts the character of an apostolic exhortation as well as its content.” The cardinal complained that most commentaries focus on the document's controversial eighth chapter, saying this “does not do justice in any way to the rich biblical and pastoral content of the exhortation.” On the conservative side, he cited Robert Spaemann's view that Amoris laetitia is a breach with the Church's teaching tradition; Cardinal Gerhard Müller's that it has not changed the Church's “teaching position”; and Rocco Buttiglione's that it is a “progression” which “lies on the line sketched out” by St. John Paul II. Turning to the progressive side, Cardinal Kasper pointed to those who see “a cautious progression” and those who, like Norbert Lüdecke, “see the door open for a new pastoral praxis, which allows civilly remarried divorces to decide themselves in their own conscience, whether they can partake in Communion.” For his own part, Cardinal Kasper said he “fundamentally associates” with the “centrist conservatives (or also centrist progressives)”, such as Cardinal Christoph Schönborn and Fr. Antonio Spadaro, whose interpretation he said “essentially concurs” with Buttiglione's position. He charged that “alleged anxiety” about the document comes from a group “which has alienated itself from a sense of faith and the life of the people of God.”Amoris laetitia has “a new, fresh and honestly liberating tone,” Cardinal Kasper maintained. “It speaks not from an abstract image of the family thought out at a desk, but a realistic one of the joys as well as the difficulties in family life today. It does not want to criticize or moralize or indoctrinate, but it addresses sexuality and eroticism openly and in a relaxed manner expressing understanding and appreciation for the good that can also be found in situations that are not or not fully conforming to church teaching and ordinance.” He emphasized the encouragement and joy of the exhortation, pointing out that the fourth chapter, an exegesis on St. Paul's hymn to charity, is what Pope Francis has called its “heart”. From this exegesis comes a pastoral conception “not characterized by the raised finger but the outstretched helping hand. Listening, appreciating, accompanying and integrating are decisive for this pastoral care.” According to Cardinal Kasper, behind this pastoral tone is a “thoroughly thought-out theological position,” demonstrated by the “many references” to St. Thomas Aquinas on the passions: “One could say cum grano salis that Amoris laetitia refrains from a predominantly negative, Augustinian view of sexuality and turns toward the creation-affirming Thomistic view.” He also emphasizes the central place of the concept of the journey of life in Francis' thought, in which he said “the law always applies” as the final cause which “orients every single step towards the goal” and “is not a distant ideal.” “Usually people – and we are all such people - cannot do the optimum, but only the best possible in one’s situation; often we must choose the lesser evil. In a lived life, there are not only black and white, but also very different nuances and shades,” Cardinal Kasper wrote. He added that Amoris laetitia can be understood only “if the paradigm shift that this exhortation undertakes is comprehended.” “A paradigm shift does not change the previous teaching; it moves the teaching nonetheless into a larger context. So Amoris laetitia does not change an iota in the Church’s teaching, and yet it still changes everything. The paradigm shift entails Amoris laetitia taking the step from a legal morality towards the virtue ethics of Thomas Aquinas. Hence the exhortation stands in the best tradition. The new is, in reality, the proven old.” The cardinal cited Aquinas as a support for his understanding of the exhortation, and hearkened back to his February 2014 address to the consistory of cardinals in which he suggested that a “smaller segment” of the divorced-and-remarried might be admitted to Communion. He emphasized the virtue of prudence and concluded that “the norm is not applied in the same mechanical manner to every situation. For its appropriate application, it needs the visual judgement of prudence and the eye of love and mercy.” Prudence, Cardinal Kasper wrote, “does not rescind the words of the Gospel on adultery but applies them. So the statement of John Paul II is also irrevocably valid, according to which a civil marriage during the continuity of the first valid sacramental marriage stands in objective contradiction to the indissoluble sacramental bond of the first marriage. That is immovable Catholic tradition, which is not contradicted in Amoris laetitia, but affirmed.” As a consequence, he acknowledged that “a civil marriage during the continuity of the first sacramental marriage cannot be a sacramental marriage.” He also traced different ways that the tradition has regarded the divorced-and-remarried, saying that Benedict XVI “adhered to the decision of John Paul II to not allow divorced-and-remarried persons to Communion; he did this while he spoke of an encouragement of civilly divorced-and-remarried persons to an abstinent life. With this, he focused on a process of maturity and spiritual growth.” “In this dynamic way of thinking, Pope Francis now goes a step further, in which he places the problem in the process of a comprehensive pastoral care of gradual integration.” According to Cardinal Kasper, St. John Paul II “had already opened the door a little bit” by allowing the divorced-and-remarried to receive absolution if they take on the duty to live in complete continence. “This clause is basically an admission,” the cardinal wrote. “For the abstinence belongs to the realm of intimacy and it does not rescind the objective contradiction between the continuous marital bond of the first sacramental marriage and the legal public marriage … It shows that there is leeway in the concrete elaboration of the dogmatic principles’ practical pastoral consequences.” For Cardinal Kasper, Amoris laetitia gets to the root of this leeway by its use of Aquinas' “distinction between the objective deadly sins and their subjective culpable apportionment,” with Pope Francis choosing to emphasize the subjective aspect of sin and the role of conscience. He noted that the exhortation does not draw “any clear practical consequences,” but it does adopt premises by which “a changed pastoral practice is allowed in justified individual cases.” “It leaves open the concrete question of admittance to absolution and Communion,” Cardinal Kasper wrote. “On this question, the Pope has followed the way of the preserved tradition of the teaching to not force contentious questions but to leave it open for the unity of the Church. That does not mean, as some think, that the teaching office is abolished; leaving a question open is itself a momentous decision of the teaching office.” He said that “The direction in which Pope Francis wants to go seems clear,” while adding that it is much more important that step-by-step integration of the divorced-and-remarried be “oriented according to its essence towards admittance to the Eucharist as a full form of participation in the life of the Church.” This interpretation “agrees with valid canon law without any difficulties,” according to Cardinal Kasper. “With what right may the Church deny Christians the help of a means of grace that they, moved by grace, strive with their best powers towards a Christian life through prayer, the Christian raising of children, service to the parish, and charitable and social dedication?” he asked. “Can it be that the Spirit of God proves to be presently effective, but the Church – like Pilate – washes her hands in innocence and is sorry to not be able to do anything? Does it not also pertain to the Church in certain situations to be merciful like our Father?” Concluding, Cardinal Kasper maintained that Amoris laetitia “does not give up one iota of the traditional teaching of the Church. Indeed, this exhortation changes everything insofar as it places the traditional teaching in a new perspective. This apostolic exhortation is no breach of tradition, rather the renewal of a great tradition. It is about continuity in the reform as Benedict XVI – following John Henry Newman – described.” He said local Churches now “face the question of how they can concretely pursue the pastoral way that Amoris laetitia basically established,” and that this should be not focused solely on the divorced-and-remarried, but includes marriage prep and accompaniment. Regarding the divorced-and-remarried, he said the exhortation “does not lead us on the comfortable way of patent formulas, which cannot exist in reality … that presents bishops, priests, and pastoral ministers, but most especially confessors, with great challenges.” “Spiritual discernment demands spiritual competence,” he maintained. “It is a gift of the Holy Spirit as well as a fruit of spiritual experience and of learning from the great masters of the spiritual life. This matter must be strongly accounted for in the formation and continuing education of clerics and pastoral ministers going forward.” Cardinal Kasper finished, saying, “Everything will need time: time to rethink and time to implement. We can absolutely not forget the synod. There remains much to be done. The synod has passed. The fierce debates will also hopefully pass soon. The concrete work begins now. We must make Amoris laetitia an awakening of family pastoral ministry. Marriage and family must be the central theme in pastoral care because the family is the way of the Church.” Read more

2016-10-28T21:15:00+00:00

Washington D.C., Oct 28, 2016 / 03:15 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- The Supreme Court has announced that it will hear a case on whether students identifying as transgender may be required to use restrooms according to their biological birth sex. “Schools... Read more



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