2016-08-11T06:02:00+00:00

Washington D.C., Aug 11, 2016 / 12:02 am (CNA/EWTN News).- A small patch of the city of Miami is being called “ground zero” for the Zika virus in the United States, adding fuel to the abortion debate surrounding the disease, which can cause birth defects in unborn children. "I understand a lot of people disagree with my view – but I believe that all human life is worthy of protection of our laws. And when you present it in the context of Zika or any prenatal condition, it’s a difficult question and a hard one," Florida Senator Marco Rubio told POLITICO magazine. "But if I’m going to err, I’m going to err on the side of life," he added. New Zika cases in the area of Wynwood, Miami, have public officials concerned, because they  seem to have been contracted from local mosquitoes rather than from travelling or being in close contact with someone from the Caribbean or Latin America, where the disease has been most widespread. Public health officials are warning pregnant women to stay away from the area because of the threat Zika can pose to unborn children, particularly those in the early stages of pregnancy. Namely, Zika has been linked with an increased risk for microcephaly, which causes babies to be born with a small head, and, in severe cases, stunted brain development. "Obviously, microcephaly is a terrible prenatal condition that kids are born with. And when they are, it’s a lifetime of difficulties," Rubio told POLITICO. "So I get it. I’m not pretending to you that that’s an easy question you asked me. But I’m prolife. And I’m strongly prolife. I believe all human life should be protected by our law, irrespective of the circumstances or condition of that life." Marjorie Dannenfelser, president of the Susan B. Anthony List, a pro-life political advocacy group, said in a statement on Monday that Rubio was “absolutely right” to defend unborn children who are at risk due to Zika. “Zika should not be used as a springboard for a search-and-destroy mission against disabled babies,” she said. “Rather, adults, children, and unborn children who are victims all deserve the same standard of care. Killing the patient is not medical treatment and we cannot make advances in medicine if we destroy patients before we find treatments for them.” “The United States strives to be a beacon for disability rights. To advocate abortion in cases of Zika and other prenatal diagnoses is a major step backwards for the rights of Americans with disabilities and a distraction from the urgent need to develop a vaccine or method to eliminate mosquitos carrying the virus,” Dannenfelser added.    Despite the latest outbreak, a doctor with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention told The New York Times that the United States has a much better chance of containing the virus than some Latin American countries due to better mosquito control, more air-conditioning and less standing water than other countries. At the start of the Zika outbreak, many countries in Latin America issued an advisory cautioning women to avoid pregnancy for up to two years, until the virus is under control. Abortion is illegal in many countries in the heavily Catholic region. In February, the United Nations issued a statement calling for the repeal of laws and policies “that restrict access to sexual and reproductive health services in contravention of international standards” in Zika-affected countries in order to give women access to abortion and birth control. Also in February, a Brazilian journalist with microcephaly spoke out against the calls for abortion, saying that it does not “give children a chance to succeed,” and that she was living a “happy and fulfilled life” despite having microcephaly. On his return flight from Mexico in February, Pope Francis strongly rejected abortion as a response to the fears surrounding the Zika virus outbreak. “Abortion is not the lesser of two evils. It is a crime. It is to throw someone out in order to save another. That’s what the Mafia does. It is a crime, an absolute evil,” the Pope said Feb. 18. “It’s against the Hippocratic oaths doctors must take. It is an evil in and of itself, but it is not a religious evil in the beginning, no, it’s a human evil. Then obviously, as with every human evil, each killing is condemned.” Read more

2016-08-10T23:23:00+00:00

Austin, Texas, Aug 10, 2016 / 05:23 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- In Texas, two scheduled executions could kill innocent men, Catholic and other Christian leaders have warned. “In both cases, there are strong indicators that the defendants may be innocen... Read more

2016-08-10T21:10:00+00:00

Washington D.C., Aug 10, 2016 / 03:10 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- Among the biggest threats to religious freedom worldwide are blasphemy laws, the State Department said in its annual religious freedom report, released Wednesday. “I want to highlight th... Read more

2016-08-10T18:11:00+00:00

Vatican City, Aug 10, 2016 / 12:11 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- Each of us must respond to the gift of mercy in our hearts by getting up and putting mercy into action, Pope Francis said Wednesday. Speaking about a bishop who had in his cathedral one Holy Door of mercy for entering and one for exiting, Pope Francis said: “Let us also do the same with the journey that goes from the heart to the hands.” “Let us enter the church through the door of mercy, to receive the forgiveness of Jesus, who tells us: ‘Arise! Go, go!’ And with this ‘Go!’ – on foot – let us leave through the exit door,” he continued. Pope Francis gave this reflection at the end of his General Audience in the Vatican's Paul VI audience hall Aug. 10. Pope Francis reflected on the pain of the mother of the young boy who died in Luke 7 and the compassion that Christ felt for her, saying it is the mother’s great pain which moved Christ to perform the miracle of reviving the boy from death. St. Luke, Pope Francis said, writes that upon seeing the woman, “the Lord was moved by great compassion for her and said to her, ‘Do not cry!’” During this Jubilee Year it would be good for pilgrims to remember this story from the Gospel when entering the Holy Door, “the Gate of Mercy,” Pope Francis explained. “We are confident that, at the Holy Door, the Lord is near to meet each one of us, to bring and offer his powerful word consoling: ‘Do not cry!’ This is the door of the meeting between the pain of humanity and compassion of God.” Pope Francis told those present that crossing the threshold is the beginning of our journey in God’s mercy, a mercy which tells us to “arise,” just as Christ told the boy in the Gospel of Luke. At the Holy Door, each person brings his or her life, with all of its “joys and sufferings, projects and failures, doubts and fears,” Pope Francis reminded pilgrims. “Present it at the mercy of the Lord,” he told them. “In passing through the Holy Door, we try to feel in our heart this word: ‘Get up!’” Pope Francis explained that Christ heals us of our failures, revives us, and gives us hope. In the Holy Door, each of us can find the “inexhaustible treasure of God’s mercy.” At the word of Christ, the dead boy sat up and began to speak. “What Jesus did is therefore not only an action of salvation destined to the widow and her son, or a gesture of kindness limited to that town,” he said. “Today too the Church recognizes a visit from God.” “Mercy, both in Jesus and in us, is a journey that starts from the heart to get to the hands. What does this mean? Jesus looks at you, heals you with his mercy, tells you: ‘Get up!’, And your heart is new,” Pope Francis concluded. Read more

2016-08-10T17:29:00+00:00

Vatican City, Aug 10, 2016 / 11:29 am (CNA/EWTN News).- Fr. Bonifacio Buzzi, a Brazilian priest convicted of child abuse and who was mentioned in the Oscar-winning film ‘Spotlight,’ committed suicide in his prison cell over the weekend. Ac... Read more

2016-08-10T16:17:00+00:00

Washington D.C., Aug 10, 2016 / 10:17 am (CNA).- Republican vice presidential nominee Mike Pence was met with heated criticism after suggesting that a Trump administration may ban Christian and Jewish refugees fleeing from terrorism. Speaking on a con... Read more

2016-08-10T12:06:00+00:00

Rome, Italy, Aug 10, 2016 / 06:06 am (CNA/EWTN News).- A Catholic charity is launching a campaign to support the studies of 1,000 seminarians around the world in honor of a French priest who was killed by ISIS sympathizers while celebrating Mass two weeks ago. The Italian chapter of the pontifical foundation Aid to the Church in Need announced the campaign, which will help fund the education of future priests in 21 dioceses around the world.   “Support for the formation of new priests is a concrete response to fundamentalism, because especially in countries where the extremist threat is the greatest, the ministers of God must possess the appropriate tools to promote dialogue and contribute to a peaceful coexistence between all the religious groups, putting an end to the conflicts,” said Alessandro Monteduro, director of the group in Italy. The campaign comes in response to the July 26 murder of Father Jacques Hamel, an 84-year-old priest who was killed while celebrating Mass in Saint-Etienne-du-Rouvray, France. ISIS claimed responsibility for the attack, in which two armed gunmen stormed the church, taking the priest and four others hostage. They slit Fr. Hamel’s throat and critically injured another of the hostages before being shot dead by police. Aid to the Church in Need Italy said on its website that it will offer support to seminarians belonging to dioceses in Africa, Eastern Europe, Latin America and Asia. Monteduro explained that “we chose the seminaries that had the greatest need for aid, to allow them to accommodate more students and form what we consider to be the new 'soldiers of the faith.'” According to the agency, there are a great number of young men who want to become priests in areas experiencing great poverty and persecution, despite the difficulties they face. The pontifical foundation also noted that the Church is the first to promote religious dialogue as well as to offer the young people alternatives to violence. In this sense, the group said, the contribution of Catholic schools is crucial in spreading the values of peace and mutual respect. It is because of this, Monteduro concluded, that “forming well-prepared priests in a powerful weapon against fundamentalism” as well as “the Christian presence being visible, especially in those societies under attack by the extremists.”     Read more

2016-08-10T10:03:00+00:00

Krakow, Poland, Aug 10, 2016 / 04:03 am (CNA).- Clarence Gilyard is the seasoned Hollywood actor who kicked major bad-guy posterior as Chuck Norris' gun-slinging, karate-kicking deputy James Trivette on the hit 1993-2001 CBS series. The man is legitimate – especially after working alongside Chuck Norris and his impressive slow-mo high kicks for an entire eight seasons on Walker, among other roles. But what many fans may not know is how Gilyard's high-octane life led to a breaking point and eventual conversion to Catholicism, or how his faith profoundly shapes his life today. In a sit-down interview with CNA July 29 during World Youth Day in Krakow, Gilyard in a nutshell recounted his former wild lifestyle and his decision to convert, which eventually led him to get involved in the global youth event. He also gave his advice to parents on how to help their kids authentically live the faith. “I hit bottom, I hit bottom…I was pretty much sex, drugs and rock and roll, ya know what I mean?” Gilyard said. He said that while he was going through his process of recovery, which included “therapists (and) 12-step programs,” he met a man who invited him to go to Mass. Gilyard agreed, and joined the man for Mass the following Sunday. It was during the consecration of the Eucharist “when everybody hit their knees,” he said, that he felt something that changed his life. “Man, it rocked my world, it rocked me. So I went to the priest on the way out and I said hey, can I come see you this week? And the rest is history,” he said. After speaking to the priest, he joined RCIA and entered the Church. That was 21 years ago. Several years after his conversion, while working as a consultant for his local bishops’ conference, Gilyard went on vacation to Martha’s Vineyard with his wife and five kids. It was there that he met a priest who, given Gilyard’s background in film, told him to visit the production house of Holy Cross Family Ministries when he got back to Hollywood. Holy Cross Ministries is a nonprofit organization affiliated with the Sisters of the Holy Cross. It was founded by “the Rosary priest” Fr. Patrick Peyton, who coined the phrase “the family that prays together, stays together.” Through various projects the organization serves low-income and at-risk families by providing critical health, education and legal immigration representation. After meeting the organization’s president Fr. Willy Raymond, Gilyard was eventually asked to be on the board, and one of the services this role includes is to help organize and facilitate the English speaking venues for the global WYD encounters every 3-4 years. Gilyard, who attends every WYD, said while he’s at the event “I wear my cowboy hat and I say, hey, there is a Catholic who’s a Hollywood actor that you’ll recognize and he’s got a family, he’s open to life, he’s striving just like everybody else.” The actor admitted that he has his own issues to work on “just like everybody else,” but stressed that there is a big-name star who “loves Jesus, he loves Mother Church and prays the rosary.” On the topic of mercy, which was the heart of WYD Krakow’s theme, Gilyard said that the concept isn’t necessarily well-understood by the secular world, but is something he felt during his first Mass “when we were at the consecration where we hit our knees.” “I don’t get those people standing up – because the geography is God is God, and I need you so much God that I can’t even articulate,” he said, explaining that every day “we’re on our knees not necessarily physically but metaphorically,” begging God for his intercession in our lives. Gilyard got teary-eyed as he spoke about the day he came into the Church, explaining that his birthday is Dec. 24, and he entered the Church on Christmas Day, Dec. 25. “I asked to come in on my birthday, and Mother Church accepted me on Christ’s birthday. That’s mercy,” he said. “How do you explain mercy? Five kids, gorgeous wife, fantastic faith community, opportunities to serve all over the world. I say ‘thank-you’ daily.” He said when it comes to living mercy concretely, Pope Francis is a key example. “This cat’s walking the walk, isn’t he?” Gilyard said, adding that while the Pope has “a lot of energy,” he can’t do it by himself, so “you better get off your butt and help him.” The actor, who currently teaches film as an associate professor at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, offered some tips for parents in terms of helping their kids live their faith, based on personal experience. First of all, he said, adults “need to stop being youth…the youth are being authentic. It’s those people who have gone through those years and are trying to hang out in the space where the youth are supposed to be” that need advice. The role of a parent is to “to support and mentor and pray” for their kids and the youth, which includes supporting them spiritually. “We need to be available to youth when they need an answer, when they need a resource, when they need an example,” he said, suggesting that too much time on the cell phone, TV or computer are unnecessary distractions which diminish the role of parents. Speaking of his own children, Gilyard said he has a 13-year-old who is “rebelling and questioning (and) shooting hormones.” “He’s only got two hands, but he’s shooting 12 guns, it’s crazy,” Gilyard said, but stressed that his son is “being appropriate.” The actor said the questions he should be asking himself as a father, then, are: “Am I there for him? Am I being steadfast for him? Am I praying for him? Am I going to daily Mass for him? Am I acknowledging that I need to work on myself because he’s watching me, he’s listening to me, he’s checking me out?” Pope Francis, he said, is a strong example for him in this area. While he hears many people who say they like what Francis is doing, Gilyard said the Pope “scares me. He scares me because he’s calling me by his example to be a Christian, to be a Catholic, not to say I am.” Gilyard also emphasized the importance of prayer, noting that while it’s not easy “to be the man of the house, and say okay, let’s pray,” saying a rosary after dinner is a good way his family has been able to incorporate prayer into their daily lives. Events like WYD, he said, are needed for youth, who often experience a sort of “anxiety” in their search for God. What WYD does, then, is offer them fellowship and the opportunity to join their peers in waving flags, screaming, “blowing horns and beating drums” because they’re excited to see the Pope. Youth, he said, “want to pray with the Pope, they want to hear what the Pope has to say, they’re not alone. What’s happening inside of you is human, it’s real, and it’s happening to all the youth around the world.” The amount of resources the Catholic Church provides in order to help persevere in the faith is “ridiculous,” Gilyard said, and pointed to the sacraments and the lives of the Saints as an example of how to imitate Jesus. The saints, he said, were all “just trying to articulate what Jesus is doing in their lives at the time.” When we turn to them, grace “just keeps pouring out, it just keeps coming,” he said, adding that when it comes to the perfect example of living the Christian life, Jesus is the “one person” we can look to. Read more

2016-08-09T23:06:00+00:00

Rieti, Italy, Aug 9, 2016 / 05:06 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- In keeping with his spontaneous personality, Pope Francis made a surprise visit Tuesday to two convents north of Rome. The Pope visited the province of Rieti the morning of Aug. 9, stopping by the... Read more

2016-08-09T22:45:00+00:00

Philadelphia, Pa., Aug 9, 2016 / 04:45 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- There will be drama in Philadelphia. A landmark case involving Catholic officials’ response to sex abuse is planned for retrial May 1 of next year. The accused is a monsignor who was th... Read more




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