2016-06-07T22:19:00+00:00

Mexico City, Mexico, Jun 7, 2016 / 04:19 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- Just a few weeks after Mexican president Enrique Peña Nieto announced measures to legalize gay marriage and homosexual adoption throughout the country, his party suffered a severe setback in the June 5 elections. Leading pro-family advocates have described the situation as a “protest vote” against the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI), to which the president belongs. Elections were held June 5 for governor in 12 states. According to the preliminary tally, waiting for official results on June 8, the PRI lost the elections in 7 states. The Mexican press has called the vote a “severe setback” and “black Sunday” for the PRI. These elections, according to many analysts, serve as an indication as to what the 2018 presidential vote may be like. The president of the Mexican Council for the Family(ConFamilia), Juan Dabdoub Giacomán, told CNA that he clearly sees in the defeat of the PRI the influence of the “protest vote” that pro-family and pro-marriage advocates called for in the country. After Peña Nieto announced he would promote a constitutional reform to recognize gay marriage throughout the country, as well as amendments to the Federal Civil Code to allow homosexual adoption, more than 1,000 organizations joined together to form the National Front for the Family (FNF). Heading up this front are the National Union of Parents, Family Network, ConFamilia, CitizenGo, HazteOir, Dilo Bien, and Mexico is One for the Children, among others. “Yesterday was a historic day in Mexico,” Dabdoub Giacomán emphasized on June 6, and underscored that the protest vote called for by the National Front for the Family was “a mechanism to oppose the decision of President Peña Nieto to regularize so-called homosexual 'marriages' and adoption.” “The important part was that in less than three weeks an organization was created that was able to mobilize an entire country against an initiative of the president attacking the family, calling for a protest vote against him and his party,” he said. However, the president of ConFamila noted, “this doesn't end here, because this same week we are going to meet to plan actions that will continue until the 2018 presidential elections.” “We don't want a repeat (in the presidency) of a party like the Institutional Revolutionary Party, which has openly declared itself, through the voice of its president, as an anti-family party,” he stated. For his part, Carlos Alberto Ramírez Ambríz, president of the Dilo Bien International movement and spokesman for the National Front for the Family, said that Peña Nieto “launched an attack against the family thinking that there would be no consequences for their political operations.” “However, Mexico has spoken at the ballot box; the affront against the family has cost the president and the party that supports him dearly,” he emphasized. Ramírez Ambríz underscored that “Mexican society is tired of the corruption, impunity and arrogance that the PRI represents in Mexico and that fatigue was seen reflected in the recent elections.” “This weekend the family won! It was an historic event for Mexico; everything indicates that society is waking up and we're not going to go on allowing a corrupt political system to continue governing.” The spokesman for the National Front for the Family said that his organization “is driving efforts to raise awareness about the initiative and join more and more Mexicans to it.” “It will also continue efforts so that the political cost is wider not just against the party pushing the issue but against all those players that approve and encourage this type of initiative,” he said.   Read more

2016-06-07T21:55:00+00:00

Vatican City, Jun 7, 2016 / 03:55 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- While many in the developed world might consider leprosy a thing of the biblical past, the illness – officially called Hansen’s Disease – is still a problem for less-advanced nati... Read more

2016-06-07T20:49:00+00:00

Jerusalem, Israel, Jun 7, 2016 / 02:49 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- Jewish youths’ stone-throwing attack on Catholics attending Mass in the Israeli city of Rehovot last month has drawn a rebuke from Church authorities. “It is sad that people in pr... Read more

2016-06-07T20:49:00+00:00

Jerusalem, Israel, Jun 7, 2016 / 02:49 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- Jewish youths’ stone-throwing attack on Catholics attending Mass in the Israeli city of Rehovot last month has drawn a rebuke from Church authorities. “It is sad that people in pr... Read more

2016-06-07T12:18:00+00:00

Los Angeles, Calif., Jun 7, 2016 / 06:18 am (CNA/EWTN News).- California’s assisted suicide bill will go into effect on June 9, and the Archdiocese of Los Angeles is fighting back — with prayer. On June 1, Auxiliary Bishop David G. O&rsquo... Read more

2016-06-07T09:04:00+00:00

Rome, Italy, Jun 7, 2016 / 03:04 am (CNA/EWTN News).- During last week's Jubilee for Priests in Rome, Bishop Robert Barron sat down for an interview with CNA where he discussed Pope Francis' view on the meaning of the priesthood. “In the vision of Pope Francis, (priests) are the key players in communicating the Divine Mercy to the world. He sees that as our primary mission,” Bishop Barron said June 3. “I think (the Pope) sees the mercy emphasis as the best way to renew the priesthood for our time.” Bishop Barron, founder of Word On Fire Catholic ministries and auxiliary bishop of Los Angeles, was invited to give a catechesis to the English-language participants during the June 1-3 Jubilee of Priests. The three day event is the latest initiative in the Jubilee Year of Mercy, which began last December and will continue until November. Before being appointed auxiliary bishop of Los Angeles in July of last year, Bishop Barron served as the rector of Mundelein seminary, starting 2012. A couple years earlier, the Chicago native launched the Word On Fire online ministries in 2000. See the rest of CNA's interview with Bishop Robert Barron below:You gave a catechesis to the English-speaking priests taking part in the Jubilee, with some 800 priests gathered at the Church of Sant'Andrea della Valle. What were some of the main points you discussed? I talked about the woman at the well, which is a favorite of Pope Francis. I drew four points from it about God’s mercy. (First), that God’s mercy is relentless, crossing boundaries and borders as Jesus does, reaching out to this triple outsider. Secondly, the Divine mercy is divinizing. It’s not just padding us on the head and healing our wounds; it lifts us up to share in the very divine life. He wants to give the woman at the well water bubbling up to eternal life. And then thirdly, I talked about Divine mercy as challenging. I’m against the view that the more you say ‘mercy,’ the less you say ‘moral challenge.’ No: it’s both/and. It’s mercy all the way, and that implies transformation – metanoia. Finally, mercy sends us on mission.There have been numerous Jubilees during this Holy Year of Mercy. What makes the Jubilee for Priests so special? I think priests, in the vision of Pope Francis, are the key players in communicating the Divine Mercy to the world. He sees that as our primary mission. So, we’re other Christs. What was Christ doing, but bearing the Father’s mercy to the world? That’s our job, as other Christs. I think he sees the mercy emphasis as the best way to renew the priesthood for our time. As I listen to him talking to priests, I hear that over and over again.Pope Francis is the spiritual father of all priests in the Church, and during this Jubilee, he led a spiritual retreat specifically for priests. From your perspective, having been charged with the formation of priests at Mundelein seminary, what does it mean for the Pope himself to take charge of a retreat for these priests? It’s super important. You say it just right, that he’s the spiritual father. The Pope is more than the leader. He’s more than a guy with smart ideas. He’s the father. He’s the father of the whole Catholic Church, but in a very particular way of priests. I found when I was seminary rector, that was my primary role: to be the spiritual father of that community. That’s how the Church is structured. Without spiritual fatherhood, we drift. And so priests, looking to him, hearing him, but – more importantly – watching him in action, learn what they’re supposed to be, the same way a child learns from his father. I think it’s super important that he personally is here to shepherd us and to father us.When the faithful prays for priests, what should we be praying for? What are the biggest challenges they are facing, especially today? Bishop Barron: I would say pray for our spiritual integrity. That priests remain grounded in Christ, grounded in the sacraments, especially in the sacrament of reconciliation and the Eucharist, that we retain the spiritual center. I would pray – because the priesthood, as you know, is under attack in many ways in our culture, in our society – that priests remain grounded in Christ, they know who they are. I’d also pray for their protection... Ask the Blessed Mother to protect priests. And, I would also say, pray for vocations. One thing I found very edifying when I was rector of Mundelein seminary (was that) the vocations kept coming, even though a lot of us felt, oh gosh, with the scandals the numbers would go down. They really didn’t. Vocations kept coming. So, pray for that, that the numbers continue to grow.Do have any other impressions of the different events in which you’ve taken part over the course of the Jubilee for Priests? The night I gave a talk at Andrea delle Valle, it was at the end of Mass – I celebrated Mass after the talk – and, seeing this army of white robed priests coming forward to receive the Eucharist. So, the Eucharist was on the altar, and the priests were coming forward to receive it. I just thought of the book of Revelation, and the white-robed members of the Church. It just moved me very deeply. And then afterward, talking to so many priests – (from) Canada, America, Great Britain, Ireland, Ghana, the Cameroons, different parts of eastern Europe, all over the world – That image has stayed with me very powerfully. Read more

2016-06-07T06:08:00+00:00

Sora, Italy, Jun 7, 2016 / 12:08 am (CNA/EWTN News).- An Italian sect centered on the worship of an alleged apparition of the Child Jesus which is gathered around the son-in-law of the seer has been found guilty of schism and received a ‘latae sententiae’ excommunication. The news was communicated in a June 5 statement from the Diocese of Sora-Cassino-Aquino-Pontecorvo, where the sect is based. The group, the Universal Christian Church of the New Jerusalem, is based in Gallinaro, a town of central Italy located 15 miles southeast of Sora. There, Giuseppina Norcia reportedly saw an apparition of the child Jesus in 1947. This was followed by subsequent apparitions in 1974, and her family built a chapel on the site the following year. The June 5 statement from the Sora diocese stated that “the group called the ‘Child Jesus of Gallinaro’ or ‘New Jerusalem’ is committed to spreading false religious doctrines and teachings that distort the Bible and are outside the truth of the sacred text.” The statement also notes that “the doctrinal position of the group is clearly against the Catholic faith, as it obliges the faithful not to receive sacraments, to disapprove of the Pope’s teaching and authority, not to entertain relations with priests and their parish communities, and not to observe ecclesiastical discipline.” The Sora diocese stated that the group “established the self-styled ‘Universal Christian Church of the New Jerusalem'” and stressed that “all the faithful of the diocese must be informed” of the consequences of “this very grave abuse, which underwent an examination by the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith.” The abuse constitutes schism, a crime whose penalty is automatic, or latae sententiae, excommunication. “In order to safeguard the integrity of faith, ecclesial communion, and the pastoral action of the Church for the people of God”, the diocese stated that the initiatives of the “self-styled new Jerusalem” are “completely against Catholic doctrine, and have nothing to do with the grace of faith and salvation” that “Christ entrusted to the Church founded on the rock of the apostle Peter.” The diocese also stated that “all the faithful who this ‘self-styled Church’ are punished with latae sententiae excommunication for the canonical crime of schism.” The group established itself as the “Universal Christian Church of the New Jerusalem” in October 2015, and it was with this act of schism that its members will have excommunicated themselves. The sect was founded by Samuele Morcia, the son-in-law of the seer Giuseppina Norcia. Morcia took over the prayer groups dedicated to the “apparition” after Norcia's 1989 death, and turned them into a sect based on a cult of personality. He claimed that Norcia had transferred to him her capacity to receive messages and prophecies from Christ. The group holds that Gallinaro is the “New Jerusalem,” and it has attracted tens of thousands of worshippers from across Italy. Many prayer groups have spread dedicated to the worship of the supposed apparition of the child Jesus. Morcia promoted the building of a chapel in the shape of an ark, and launched a non-profit organization, the Casa Serena del Bambin Gesù, to raise the necessary funds. Its balance sheets have never been published, though according to Italian tax data it collected 305,000 Euros ($346,000) between 2006 and 2012. Some 2,500 Italian taxpayers have opted to give to the non-profit. The Gallinaro group found support from Bishop Carlo Minchiatti, who was Sora's bishop from 1971 to 1982. But by 1992 the diocese had begun warning the faithful against Gallinaro. Another statement from the Sora diocese noted that “no approval from the competent ecclesiastical authority” had been given to the worship of Gallinaro. The document also stated that “facts presented as extraordinary or supernatural cannot be considered so, given their origin, nature and content.” The vicars of the diocese also stressed that “the phenomenon is watched” because it can open to “a certain religious fanaticism and contamination contrasting with Catholic teaching.” They added that the designation of Gallinaro as “the New Jerusalem” is “totally unacceptable and pastorally concerning, because of its millenarian content.” The statement hampered the gathering of faithful from around the diocese, yet Gallinaro-worship continued to develop in neighboring dioceses. For example, a December 2015 statement from the Diocese of Salerno-Campagna-Acerno, more than 100 miles away, warned its faithful that the group was “incompatible with the Catholic faith.” Read more

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

Denver, Colo., Jun 6, 2016 / 05:09 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- On January 19, 1981, in Los Angeles, Muhammad Ali talked a man down from jumping off a ninth-floor fire escape, an event that made national news. “Former heavyweight champions slip out of the news as easily as ex-presidents, but Muhammad Ali was never your garden-variety champion of all the world,” Walter Cronkite said on the Jan. 20, 1981, edition of the CBS Evening News. “Yesterday in Los Angeles, he responded like a superhero when a distraught man threatened suicide.” Ali told the distraught man that he was his brother, that he loved him and wanted to take him home to meet his friends. After half an hour, Ali had his arm around the man’s shoulder and led him to safety. While boxing legend Muhammad Ali will go down in history as “The Greatest” fighter, some of his greatest fights – for hope, courage, and human dignity – took place outside the ring. In 1984, at the age of 42 and just a few years into retirement from boxing, Ali was diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease. Never one to accept defeat and with a keen ability to inspire hope in others, Ali used his diagnosis to raise awareness and funding for research on the progressive neurological disease. But it was not just his fighting attitude, but his religious belief, that kept him moving forward. Dawud Walid, Executive Director of the Michigan chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR), said Ali’s trust in God helped his perspective after receiving what would be a devastating diagnosis for someone who had been so active. “He reflected a very strong faith in the face of that debilitating disease,” Walid told CNA. “I remember him saying that he was humbled by God allowing him to have a disease, to show him who was really the greatest, that God is the greatest,” he said. “(Ali) would say there was a hidden blessing in it.” By being so public about his diagnosis, Walid said Ali was able to show the world that one can still have courage and hope in the face of suffering. “I remember him lighting the Olympic flame in Atlanta, and he struggled and he was there shaking but it was really a sign of courage and a sign of hope not just to people who are struggling with Parkinson’s disease, but other diseases, that you still can have dignity in the face of such enormous challenges,” Walid said. “A diagnosis of Parkinson’s disease or another movement disorder is not a death sentence,” reads a statement on Muhammad Ali Parkinson’s Center website. The site also posted a tribute video to Ali, who died Friday at the age of 74, after a 32-year battle with Parkinson’s disease. Parkinson’s patients in the video recall how Ali’s courage and generosity in the face of suffering changed their lives. “I had no idea how much of a difference Muhammad Ali would make in my life. Now that I have Parkinson's disease, his generosity has been a blessing for me personally,” a man says in the video. “He never said ‘I can’t do this’, so that has become my motto too,” another patient says. Besides his fighting record, charisma, and Parkinson’s advocacy, Ali is also remembered for his peaceful, although controversial, protest and resistance of the draft for the Vietnam war. Ali cited his Islamic religious beliefs, as well as racism, as his reasons for being a conscientious objector. He was arrested for draft evasion and unable to fight for four years while his case went through appeals court.   His appeal took four years to reach the U.S. Supreme Court, which in June 1971 reversed the conviction in a unanimous decision that found the Department of Justice had improperly told the draft board that Ali's stance wasn't motivated by religious belief. Ali, who was born Cassius Marcellus Clay, changed his name when, inspired by Malcolm X, he converted to the Nation of Islam, a controversial American Muslim sect that advocated racial separation and rejected the pacifism of most civil rights activism. He later switched to the more mainstream Sunni Islam. Walid said that Ali openly talked about his belief in God and the virtues contained in all the world’s religions. “He believed that if people lived by those virtues, especially the Golden Rule, then this earth would be a much better place.” During his life, Ali met with religious people and leaders throughout the world of various persuasions and denominations, including, in 1982, St. John Paul II. A sports fan himself, and an eventual Parkinson’s suffer as well, John Paul II exchanged autographs with the famed boxer during a private audience at the Vatican. Pope John Paul II and Muhammad Ali exchange autographs in papal apartment, June 4, 1982 #TBT @Pontifex #UPIArchive pic.twitter.com/Umko6N8nkP — UPI.com (@UPI) September 24, 2015 His legend for the Muslim community, Walid said, will be his non-violent protests and his bold but peaceful activism. “We live in a society now in which people are now provoking violence and meeting those provocations with violence,” Walid said. “Muhammad Ali stood strong for his Islamic belief and against the unjust war in Vietnam, but he was peaceful in that regard.” “Inside the ring he was a gladiator, and outside of the ring, he appealed to people’s moral consciousness,” he said. “Given the era that Ali came from and the boldness and the resilience that he exhibited, it is doubtful that the American Muslim community will ever see the likes of an American Muslim like Muhammad Ali in our lifetime.” Read more

2016-06-06T22:00:00+00:00

Hagatna, Guam, Jun 6, 2016 / 04:00 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- After sex abuse and other allegations were leveled against Guam's archbishop, Pope Francis on Monday appointed a Vatican official to be the local Church's apostolic administrator while an investigation is carried out. On June 6, Archbishop Savio Hon Tai-Fai, secretary of the Congregation for the Evangelization of Peoples, was appointed apostolic administrator “sede plena” of the Archdiocese of Agaña, which serves Catholics in Guam, a U.S. island territory in the northwestern Pacific Ocean. The appointment was made shortly after Archbishop Anthony Apuron of Agaña was accused of sexual abuse dating from the 1970s, and of failing to implement strong policies on the handling of clerical sex abuse. As apostolic administrator “sede plena,” Archbishop Hon will govern the archdiocese because its ordinary is incapable of doing so. Though Archbishop Apuron remains archbishop, he will not exercise his office while Archbishop Hon remains as apostolic administrator. In May, allegations surfaced against Archbishop Apuron. The accusations were raised by a former altar boy, who said that he was molested at age 12, when he spent the night at a rectory with then-Father Apuron. The alleged incident took place in the mid-1970s in Agat, a town located almost 13 miles southwest of Hagåtña, Guam's capital, when Archbishop Apuron was a parish priest. Shortly later, another allegation surfaced, also involving a former altar server who had spent the night at the rectory. Archbishop Apuron has denied the allegations, with a statement from the Agaña archdiocese calling the latter claim a “malicious and calumnious accusation.” On May 18, Vincent Pereda, a member of the archdiocese's review board, wrote that regarding Quintanilla's accusation, “I believe credible, reasonable cause does exist … that the archbishop had engaged in sexual misconduct,” the Pacific Daily News reported. A May 31 statement from the archdiocese claimed that “fierce attacks against the Archbishop exploded three years ago when he removed the administration of the Cathedral-Basilica, the Museum and the Catholic Cemeteries of Guam for reasons of financial mismanagement.” Deacon Stephen Martinez is the archdiocese's former sexual abuse response coordinator and its former financial officer. He was dismissed from his duties in October 2014. Deacon Martinez held a June 1 press conference in which he alleged that the Agaña archdiocese's sexual abuse policy has a conflict of interest and needs to be revised, since Archbishop Apuron has himself been accused of sexual abuse. “The archbishop has purposely kept his sex abuse policies weak in order to protect himself and those around him,” the deacon stated. Deacon Martinez presented letters he sent to the archbishop in 2014 stating his concerns with the local Church's policy on investigating clerical sex abuse. A June 3 statement from the archdiocese called Deacon Martinez' statements calumny, and defended the archbishop's handling of allegations of sexual abuse against clerics in recent years. “To state, as Stephen Martinez did, that the sexual abuse policy of the archdiocese was kept weak purposefully by the Archbishop to protect himself is a calumny of such magnitude that the only avenue, which we are following, is recourse to the civil and canonical legal processes to address these intentional lies,” the archdiocese stated. “We are working with one of the most prominent U.S. legal firms to address these issues and with an independent investigator to inquire about this allegation and these rumors.” The statement also charged that Deacon Martinez was removed from his position as financial officer for the archdiocese because of incompetence, and that he is part of a group “conspiring to topple Archbishop Apuron from his service.” The archdiocese alleged that the accusations against Archbishop Apuron are part of an attack caused by his refusal to sell a seminary – a move which it says would have concealed financial mismanagement of the archdiocesan cathedral and cemetery. In 2014, a California man had accused Archbishop Apuron of having molested his cousin. However, the cousin did not confirm the accusation, and no charges were filed. Archbishop Apuron, 52, is a native of Guam. He was ordained a priest of the Order of Friars Minor Capuchin in 1972. He was appointed an auxiliary bishop of Agaña in 1983, its apostolic administrator in 1985, and he has served as archbishop since 1986. The Pope's decision to appoint Archbishop Hon as apostolic administrator of Agaña shortly follows his release of a motu proprio, “As a loving mother,” providing for the removal of bishops from office in cases where they are negligent in dealing with sex abuse cases.   Read more

2016-06-06T18:40:00+00:00

Vatican City, Jun 6, 2016 / 12:40 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- An elderly couple with disabilities on the outskirts of Rome now has an electric scooter, thanks to a gift from Pope Francis. Both the man and the woman suffer from many health problems, including... Read more




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