2016-07-22T22:54:00+00:00

Harare, Zimbabwe, Jul 22, 2016 / 04:54 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- In Zimbabwe, there are protests against the government and officials’ harsh treatment of a Christian pastor whose video about his frustration went viral on the internet. Now, Christian leaders in the country have called for an end to harassment of clergy and for a just response to other grievances. “We call upon our government to listen to the cries of citizens whose cries and sufferings are loud and clear. There is need to act justly and mercifully on behalf of the poor and disadvantaged in our nation,” a group of Christian leaders said in a July 14 statement. The Zimbabwe Catholic bishops’ conference joined the Evangelical Fellowship of Zimbabwe, the Zimbabwe Council of Churches, and other groups in making the statement. The leaders voiced concern about apparent disregard for the constitution by the government and police, failure to deal with corruption, and the exclusion of citizens from determining their destiny. Intra-party conflicts are distracting the government from dealing with real economic and social issues. They voiced concern about the harassment and arrests of religious leaders, including Pastor Mawarire, and the intimidation of other pastors “speaking on behalf of powerless people.” “These grievances must be viewed as the early warning signs which indicate underlying and simmering tensions that will soon explode into civil unrest if not addressed,” they said. In May, the Baptist pastor Evan Mawarire launched the “#ThisFlag” social media movement to voice frustration about the state of Zimbabwe. His campaign spread through Facebook, Twitter, and WhatsApp. The pastor’s videos have stressed non-violence, though some younger activists in a movement called Tajamuka are less moderate, BBC News reports. The pastor was arrested and charged with inciting public violence and subversion, but was released after a court threw out charges. Zimbabwe’s President Robert Mugabe has verbally attacked Mawarire, claiming he is a false minister backed by foreign countries that want to destabilize Zimbabwe. The protests center on several demands. They advocate that civil servants be paid on time; fewer roadblocks and police shakedowns; the legal prosecution of corrupt officials; and the end of a ban on many imported goods. They also object to plans to introduce bond notes to ease a cash shortage. In June Zimbabwe ran out of money. All civil servants, including soldiers, police, teachers, and nurses, were paid late. Many people cannot afford food and the country is suffering the worst drought in decades. The unemployment rate is at 90 percent. In early July, a one-day national strike in protest of the situation in Zimbabwe completely shut down schools, businesses, and shops around the country. Mawarire was among the strike's backers. The Christian leaders’ message condemned law enforcement brutality and urged the government to protect citizens’ rights to demonstrate and protest. “In exercising this right, we implore citizens to always remain peaceful in their demonstrations,” they said. They also had a special message for Christian believers: “We call upon the Church, which is the salt and light of this nation, to continue to pray and also to speak out prophetically against any unjust system, until we have a peaceful and prosperous Zimbabwe in which every citizen’s God given and constitutional rights are respected.” The religious leaders said they wanted a nation that respects all citizens and that fears God in its love for justice, peace and love of one’s neighbor. “May God grant us Zimbabweans the courage, faith and hope to face our challenges,” they prayed. Read more

2016-07-22T20:49:00+00:00

Charlotte, N.C., Jul 22, 2016 / 02:49 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- The National Basketball Association’s decision to pull its all-star game from Charlotte, North Carolina over the state’s bathroom bill has drawn criticism from those who say the dec... Read more

2016-07-22T12:53:00+00:00

Vatican City, Jul 22, 2016 / 06:53 am (CNA/EWTN News).- Amid modern challenges emerging from a culture which provides increasingly easier access to outside distractions, Pope Francis has issued new norms for women’s cloistered communities, which ... Read more

2016-07-22T12:53:00+00:00

Vatican City, Jul 22, 2016 / 06:53 am (CNA/EWTN News).- Amid modern challenges emerging from a culture which provides increasingly easier access to outside distractions, Pope Francis has issued new norms for women’s cloistered communities, which ... Read more

2016-07-22T06:02:00+00:00

Madrid, Spain, Jul 22, 2016 / 12:02 am (CNA/EWTN News).- As more drivers hit the roads in the U.S. and Europe for summer road trips, a priest in Spain is ramping up his 'highway ministry' to promote safety and to care for those who spend much of their lives on four wheels. Father José Aumenté  is the head of the Spanish bishops' highway ministry, which began after a priest was aided by a trucker on Christmas night in 1962. “A priest had to go from one town to another and didn't have a car. A truck driver stopped to help him and on the way he told him about his life, how hard it was to be on the road all the time, and how on such  a very special day as Christmas he wasn't going to be able to have dinner with his family because of a mishap on the trip,” Father Aumenté told CNA. This made an impression on the priest, who then started the highway ministry, which was adopted by the Spanish bishops' conference in 1968, and is now entrusted to Fr.  Aumenté. This year the highway ministry is being joined to the Year of Mercy under the theme “Blessed are the merciful”, reaching out to all those who find themselves on the road: truckers especially, as well as those who drive taxis, buses, or ambulances. The message is also being addressed to those “who spend a good part of their time behind the wheel because of their work, necessity, or to enjoy vacation. Also motorists and cyclists, and pedestrians as well, who one way or another make use of the public thoroughfares.” This was seen in a recent blessing of semi-trailer trucks Fr. Aumenté made in Albacete. “It was a very beautiful day because the family comes along with the truck driver. They get into the cab, which is a very special place for them. I blessed the truck with holy water and gave them a holy card of Saint Christopher which has a prayer for the driver,” the priest explained. The highway ministry also cares for those who are suffering the loss of a loved one who died in motoring accidents, as well as those injured in accidents. Last year, almost 2,000 people died in motor accidents in Spain, 400 of whom were pedestrians. The ministry also holds a Mass each November in memory of those who died on the roads; a day is set aside in May to console family members and those whose lives were changed as the result of an accident. Given the millions of trips taken every summer throughout the world, Father Aumenté encouraged drivers to be “merciful on the road.” “All of us have been driving and insulted other drivers for their bad driving. So it's important to know that when you're in a car and on the road, you also have to give way and be merciful.” “Performing the spiritual and corporal works of mercy also benefit those who do them, and in this case the use of a car also provides an opportunity to perform them,” he noted. He also encouraged taking advantage of going on a trip to pray, and recalled the words of Blessed Paul VI: “enjoy life while you're on the road and lift up your spirit to God when you see a church's  bell tower rising over a town.” Read more

2016-07-21T22:58:00+00:00

Cleveland, Ohio, Jul 21, 2016 / 04:58 pm (CNA).- As the 2016 Republican National Convention draws to a close, some Catholics are concerned about a perceived lack of priority given to pro-life, marriage, and religious freedom issues in the GOP. “For a party that portrays itself as the party of religious values, the approach they are outlining this week has little connection to the most important moral issues facing this country," said Robert Christian, editor of Millennial magazine and a graduate fellow at the Institute for Policy Research & Catholic Studies at The Catholic University of America. He identified these critical moral issues as: "addressing poverty, defending life, finding policies to strengthen the family, welcoming those fleeing violence, overcoming racial divisions, protecting God’s creation, and supporting human rights and human dignity.”   The 2016 Republican National Convention began on Monday and runs through Thursday, culminating in the address by the party’s nominee for president, Donald Trump, on Thursday evening. Monday and Tuesday saw the official nomination of Trump by party delegates from the 50 states, despite a last-minute effort by Trump’s opponents within the party to change the rules to deny him the nomination. Indiana Governor Mike Pence, the party’s nominee for vice president, addressed the convention on Wednesday evening following a controversial speech by Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Tex.), Trump’s biggest primary opponent, who implored the crowd to “vote your conscience” and did not endorse Trump for president. However, Cruz’s brief mention of the importance of religious freedom – “Freedom means religious freedom, whether you are Christian, Jew, Muslim, or atheist,” he said – gave more treatment to the issue than other major convention speeches by figures like Pence, Dr. Ben Carson, House Speaker Paul Ryan, and New Jersey Governor Chris Christie. “Whether you are gay, or straight, the Bill of Rights protects the rights of all of us to live according to our conscience,” Cruz continued. Other social issues including pro-life and pro-family policies were upheld in the party’s platform adopted on Monday, but were largely absent from the major convention speeches. Some prominent Catholics have leveled strong criticisms of Trump’s candidacy, pointing to his past remarks about women which they say are misogynistic, and also questioning his pro-life credentials.  A statement signed by over 30 prominent Catholics in March stated that “there is nothing in his campaign or his previous record that gives us grounds for confidence that he genuinely shares our commitments to the right to life, to religious freedom and the rights of conscience, to rebuilding the marriage culture, or to subsidiarity and the principle of limited constitutional government.”   Trump also said he was “pro-choice in every respect” in a 1999 NBC Meet the Press interview. He now maintains that he is pro-life. “Pro-lifers have long had reservations about Donald Trump,” Joshua Mercer, co-founder of CatholicVote.org, acknowledged to CNA on Thursday.  Yet, he added, the GOP platform adopted on Monday was “probably the most pro-life that we’ve ever seen.”  Mercer added that Trump’s selection of Governor Pence, who has “long been a stalwart supporter of the unborn,” as his vice president was assuredly a positive sign for pro-lifers. He pointed to Pence’s acceptance speech where the governor insisted that “for the sake of the sanctity of life...we must ensure that the next president appointing justices to the Supreme Court is Donald Trump.” Other pro-lifers acknowledged concerns about Trump’s history on pro-life issues and controversial remarks he has made about women. However, they added, his promise to nominate conservative judges to the Supreme Court combined with his selection of Pence as a running mate sets Trump apart from the presumptive nominee of the Democratic Party, Hillary Clinton, as the choice for pro-lifers. Ultimately, “to me it’s about the Supreme Court,” Kansas Governor Sam Brownback told CNA on Wednesday.  “My confidence [in Trump] has been growing,” Marjorie Dannenfelser, president of the pro-life group Susan B. Anthony List, told CNA. “And it started at a very small place.” “You couldn’t find a man of better integrity, authenticity,” she said of Mike Pence, adding that Trump has picked some solid pro-life staff members like policy director Josh Mashburn and pollster Kellyanne Conway. Christian also praised the vice-presidential candidate, saying that many Republicans’ criticisms of Pence have been “a bit unfair.”  Despite Trump’s choice of Pence as a running mate, however, Christian is not sold on Trump’s commitment to the pro-life cause. “As someone who is both Catholic and a pro-life activist, I’m seeing little to no enthusiasm for Donald Trump,” Christian stated to CNA, noting Trump’s “past positions on abortion,” and the a campaign that has largely steered clear of the life issue.  “His past positions on abortion and clear lack of interest in the subject, which seems to be reflected in how little the issue has come up at the Convention, is making it difficult for even single issue voters to trust that he is the real deal,” Christian said.  While he criticized the Republican Party for taking “pro-life voters for granted” and failing to advance the pro-life cause beyond speeches, this year’s campaign has said little about the pro-life stance at all. “[The] reality is that very little has even been said to encourage those strongly motivated by their pro-life convictions,” he continued. “Given this and the Democratic platform’s extreme position on abortion, I’ve never seen so many pro-lifers distraught over their choices for the presidency,” Christian lamented.  He added that, as a Catholic, he is also concerned by other issues highlighted – or largely ignored– by the Trump campaign and the speeches at the RNC Convention.  In addition, he criticized the party’s failure to address what he called “a marriage crisis” among working- class families, including the economic hurdles that face many couples.  “It is a serious, grave threat to the common good,” Christian told CNA. “Vague platitudes about the importance of the family are not enough. It has not been an encouraging week for serious pro-family voters.” Religious freedom is another issue where Christian was concerned both about Trump’s proposed policies and the convention’s rhetoric. He called out Trump’s proposed ban on Muslim immigrants as “a stunning attack on religious freedom,” and explained that the move was particularly concerning when the Catholic Church and other organizations “may be facing showdowns over people and organizations having to abort children or stop their work - life and death issues.” This week’s speeches also ran in the face of the message and policy supported by the U.S. bishops on immigration, Christian warned. “Tied in with this is the disturbing portrayal of Muslims. Syrian refugees were booed - people fleeing the barrel bombs of a murderous dictator and the totalitarian terror of ISIS,” he said. “How can a Christian boo people who are desperately seeking refuge?” “Both parties are deeply flawed and problematic for Catholics who reject excessive individualism and the libertarianism it inspires,” Christian said, but he was particularly concerned about Trump’s rhetoric and positions. He offered his hope that moving forward from the convention, the Republican Party would “embrace a more ‘whole life’ approach to defending life, support measures to concretely strengthen families, defend free democracy at home and abroad, and move toward a more communitarian approach to economics that is rooted in human dignity rather than market morality.” That approach, he commented, “would allow the party to be competitive while also aligning with the core values of Catholic moral and social teaching.” “I hope that Catholic Republicans will work to push their party away from extremism and toward a greater commitment to human life and dignity,” he added. “This entire convention should serve as a call to action and motivate them to build a better Republican Party.”   Read more

2016-07-21T20:50:00+00:00

St. Paul, Minn., Jul 21, 2016 / 02:50 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- Prosecutors have dropped criminal charges against the Archdiocese of Saint Paul and Minneapolis as its present and past archbishops apologized for failures to protect children from a sexually a... Read more

2016-07-21T18:02:00+00:00

Rome, Italy, Jul 21, 2016 / 12:02 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- Among the swarms of pilgrims registered for World Youth Day in Poland next week is a large group of Iraqi youth, who aim to witness to the joy of their faith despite ongoing violent persecution. “I want everyone to see a witness of faith, of suffering faith, and the faith of our group,” Fr. Rayan Atto told CNA July 19. He said they don't need “anything special” from the other pilgrims they'll meet in Krakow, but instead want to ensure the others “that we love them, they are our best friends, and we want to work in this mission with them all over the world.” “The only thing we need is (for them) to look at our faces: we are so happy and proud to be Christians in this area,” he added. Fr. Atto is in charge of coordinating the large group of Iraqi youth traveling to Krakow for the July 26-31 event with Pope Francis, which is expected to draw hundreds of thousands of pilgrims from across the globe. Split into three different groups based on the area where they live, there are 315 people in total coming from Iraq, including two bishops, 10 priests and several nuns. There is also a separate group of pilgrims coming from the Neocatecumenal Way. The youth themselves come from all over the country, including cities such as Erbil, Baghdad, Kirkuk and Dohuk. Roughly half of the youth who are coming have been displaced from cities such as Baghdad, Mosul and surrounding villages, yet all of them were able to pay their own way, thanks in part to donations made by Aid to the Church in Need and the Vatican’s department for the Laity. Poland gave visas to the pilgrims free of charge, however, they still had to raise funds for the cost of the paperwork, airfare and lodging. Fr. Atto said that as coordinator, he and the other organizers have sought to foster a strong sense of unity among the youth, so that those who are displaced don’t feel ashamed. “We keep this unity in order not to distinguish between the young people,” he said, explaining that they don’t want anyone “to feel that they are displaced,” but rather at home with their peers. He said keeping their faith strong amid the daily struggles they face “is not that easy,” but is something they fight to maintain through the sacraments and spiritual meetings such as retreats or prayer events. “Our grandfathers, they kept their faith for us and we are feeding it” through spiritual things, he said, adding that the sacraments and prayer “will help us to show our faith, our Christianity. That’s the only thing we have. We are keeping the faith for other generations.” The different groups arrived together July 20, and will stay in Krakow through Aug. 1, the day after the official WYD events have finished. All members of the Chaldean rite, the youth will meet with other communities from around the world and will share Masses and catechesis sessions together. On July 22 the group will celebrate a large Chaldean-rite Mass which will be followed by a brief catechism on themes related to the official WYD program. Other activities the group will participate include a cultural show, during which they will introduce their group with dancing and will wear the traditional clothing from Iraq’s Christian villages. A special catechesis session will be given July 27, in which bishops from around the world will lead a reflection on the WYD theme, “Blessed are the merciful, for they shall obtain mercy,” in different languages. One of the organizers of the Iraqi group will offer a reflection in Arabic. During the Via Crucis with Pope Francis July 29, a number of the Iraqi youth will form a choir and sing both the Our Father and Psalm 115 in Aramaic in front of the Pope and the rest of the youth from around the world. Aramaic is an ancient language spoken during the time of Jesus and is the language of the Chaldean rite. Fr. Atto said the choir will be given 10 minutes to sing while the Stations of the Cross are being acted out by youth below. “Our pilgrims,” he said, “will be there with all the youth from all over the world. We are very happy and excited and we are waiting to give this testimony to all the people.” “We know that everyone is waiting for us and watching us, and they want to know about us, our faith,” he said, adding that his hope for the Iraqi youth who go is that they “bring with them their faith, improve their faith…and come back with more faith. That’s my goal.” Read more

2016-07-21T09:02:00+00:00

Newtown, Conn., Jul 21, 2016 / 03:02 am (CNA/EWTN News).- Some people have difficulty seeing the point of prayer in times of trouble. But for Magnificat magazine columnist Jennifer Hubbard, prayer got her through one of the worst times of her life. &l... Read more

2016-07-21T09:02:00+00:00

Newtown, Conn., Jul 21, 2016 / 03:02 am (CNA/EWTN News).- Some people have difficulty seeing the point of prayer in times of trouble. But for Magnificat magazine columnist Jennifer Hubbard, prayer got her through one of the worst times of her life. &l... Read more




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