April 6, 2016

Vatican City, Apr 6, 2016 / 11:08 am (CNA/EWTN News).- God’s mercy is for everyone, and Jesus Christ is proof, Pope Francis said on Wednesday. “In every moment of his earthly life, Jesus made mercy visible: meeting the crowds, announcing the Gospel, healing the sick, drawing close to the forgotten, pardoning sinners. He showed a love open to all, a love which was fulfilled on the cross,” the Pope said April 6. The Pope spoke in St. Peter’s Square to a crowd gathered for his General Audience. His ongoing catechetical reflections on mercy have begun to focus on how Christ fulfills the promise of God’s mercy. “From the cross, Jesus shows us that no one is excluded from God’s merciful love: ‘Father, forgive them; for they know not what they do.' We should, therefore, never fear to acknowledge and confess our sins, for the Sacrament of Reconciliation offers us the forgiveness which flows from the cross and which renews us in his grace.” The Catholic Church is observing the Year of Mercy, giving special attention to the topic. “Jesus did not bring hatred, nor did he bring enmity. He brought love, a great love, a heart open to all – to all of us – a love that saves,” Pope Francis continued. “In this Jubilee Year, let us embrace the Gospel with greater vigor and be heralds of the Father’s mercy and forgiveness.” The Pope stressed the importance of forgiveness as a counter to fear. “We are all sinners, but we are all forgiven: we all have the possibility of receiving this pardon, which is the mercy of God,” he said. “We need not fear, therefore, to recognize ourselves sinners, confess ourselves sinners, because every sin was carried by the Son to the Cross.” Pope Francis reflected on the fact that before beginning his earthly ministry, Christ went to the Jordan to be baptized by St. John the Baptist, saying that “This event gives a decisive orientation to the entire mission of Christ.” “In fact, he did not present himself to the world in the splendor of the temple: he could have done this. He was not announced with a trumpet blast: he could have done this. And he did not even come in the guise of a judge: he could have done this. Instead, after spending thirty years of his life in Nazareth, Jesus went to the Jordan river, together with so many of his people, and got in line with sinners.” Christ “had no shame” in this, the Pope said. “He was there with everyone, with sinners, to be baptized. Therefore, from the beginning of his ministry, he was manifested as the Messiah who took on the human condition, moved by solidarity and by compassion.” Read more

April 6, 2016

Erbil, Iraq, Apr 6, 2016 / 09:36 am (CNA).- This week Cardinal Timothy Dolan, Archbishop of New York and chair of Catholic Near East Welfare Association, will travel to Iraqi Kurdistan in order to offer support to families displaced by extremist violen... Read more

April 6, 2016

Rome, Italy, Dec 18, 2016 / 05:02 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- Yan Xu is an artist from the central China city of Wuhan. What she drew one day would change her life. Confused about her future after resigning from a job in 2003, she found herself at an unlikely place. “At that time, I used to carry a sketchbook and pen with me, and spent all the day time on urban sketching,” she told CNA. “I like to sketch the classical buildings of the city, and this is how I found St. Joseph's Cathedral, which is built downtown.” She said she found the Church to be “magnificent, beautiful.” “I stayed there and then came back there to sketch my painting,” she said. “On the third day, a Catholic priest came and talked to me about the Catholic faith. For years, I had not cared about religion, and I wanted to know more about faith.” “I attended the Mass every Sunday, and prayed to the Lord that he show me the way, even though I was not Catholic.” It took her nearly seven years to be baptized, and she came into the Church at St. Joseph's Cathedral during the Easter Vigil of 2011. Yan said there is a sense in China that “more and more people are looking for a way, and for real life… the true life that is meaningful and filled with mercy and the glory of God. So, praise be to the Lord.” “China is far from Rome, but Catholics in China always pray that the Pope will visit our land someday in the future,” she said. Being a Catholic in China, however, means being part of a minority. Out of 10 million people in Wuhan, just 30,000 people are Catholic. “The People's Republic of China is a socialist country. Most of the people have no religious preferences,” Yan said.Yan Xu's art. However, the faith is lived in a very lively way. “I love my Church, there are so many wonderful young Catholics,” Yan said. “We often attend Mass, pray the Rosary together… the Catholic Faith makes me a better person.” Among the main difficulties in living the faith in China, she said, is the lack of public holidays for Catholic feasts. “Especially on Christmas Eve and Christmas Day, Good Friday, Easter Vigil and the Assumption of the Virgin Mary. If you want to attend the celebrations, you have frequently to ask for the day off,” she said. Yan always attends Mass on Sundays, serves as a lector, and is a member of the choir in the cathedral. She said that they can certainly celebrate Mass publicly, but this is “only permitted within the Church building.” “We can't parade outside the courtyard.” Though Rome is very far away, she has a perfect way to feel closer to Rome: EWTN. “I watch daily Mass on EWTN every day. We can read the news about the Pope and the Holy See on the Internet.” Aside from keeping themselves informed on the life of the Church worldwide, local Catholics try to take part in it as well. Some young people planned a trip to Krakow for World Youth Day this year, and St. Joseph's Cathedral opened its Holy Door on Dec. 8. “The celebration was very important,” Yan said, adding that she wasn't able to attend because of work. “The Holy Door is a very important symbol, for Jesus said, 'I am the way, and the truth, and the life. No one comes to the Father, except through me.' People have to go through the Door of Christ to get the salvation.” But the opening of the Holy Door had another symbolic meaning in Yan's view, because “it connected us with the Holy Catholic Church. One, holy, catholic and apostolic Church.”Yan Xu's art. There are some tensions between the Catholic Church and the Chinese government, which has set up a parallel Catholic Patriotic Association that has sometimes named bishops without Vatican approval. Some Catholic clergy, including bishops, have been imprisoned for their loyalty to the Holy See. There is some legacy of these problems in Wuhan. Yan said she always faces “prejudice from other people.” “I would love to attend Mass every day, but I cannot, because Mass time conflicts with my working time.” In 2007, she went back to school and took a graduate degree in art history. She saw this as “another way to help me be in touch with the Catholic faith.” Yan has now created a special portrait of St. Thomas Aquinas. She won honors for the portrait in the “Veritas et Amor” international contest run by Circolo San Tommaso D’Aquino. The Italy-based cultural society is dedicated to the influential theologian, philosopher and saint of the 13th century. Her portrait depicted Thomas Aquinas in the style of an illuminated manuscript. “Thomas Aquinas makes me reflect about how to build the goal of my life, and find out the plans of God for me. In fact, the plans of God are often unfathomable, but you have just to pray,” she said. Yan said she finds comfort in art. “Painting, or depicting, things of God is a special way for me to pray.”This article was originally published on CNA April 6, 2016. Read more

April 6, 2016

Lima, Peru, Apr 5, 2016 / 06:06 pm (CNA).- The superior general of the Sodalitium Christianae Vitae released on Tuesday a video statement confirming that the founder of the community, Luis Fernando Figari, is guilty of the accusations leveled against h... Read more

April 6, 2016

Lima, Peru, Apr 5, 2016 / 06:06 pm (CNA).- The superior general of the Sodalitium Christianae Vitae released on Tuesday a video statement confirming that the founder of the community, Luis Fernando Figari, is guilty of the accusations leveled against h... Read more

April 5, 2016

Washington D.C., Apr 5, 2016 / 05:03 pm (CNA).- The Catholic University of America’s new dean of the School of Business and Economics says that he hopes to integrate the Church’s “rich set of social doctrine” into sound business principles, especially when people have become less trusting of businesses. “I look forward to working with our faculty and students to translate these principles into concrete actions that improve business operations without sacrificing financial return,” Bill Bowman said in an April 5 statement. “At a time when so many are losing faith with business, The Catholic University of America can help them gain confidence that there is a better way to operate.” President John Garvey said that Bowman “has achieved great success while living out his faith in the business world.” “We look forward to working with him as he brings his talents, experience, and values into his new role as dean of the School of Business and Economics,” Garvey added. The father of nine, with wife Leigh Bowman, and seasoned entrepreneur brings over 25 years of experience to his new post. Most recently, Bowman served as President and CEO of Core Values Group in Boston, a consulting firm that helps businesses nurture virtues that will help them be successful. Before that, he was President and CEO of the country’s leading provider of supplemental child care services to corporations, Bright Horizons (then called ChildrenFirst Inc.). He served as past chairman of the Software Publishers Association, was a former director of the Massachusetts High Technology Council, and co-founded the Massachusetts Software Council. He worked for the U.S. Public Health Service and the Boston Consulting Group. His experience includes work in the educational field as well. In 1982, he helped found one of the nation's first educational software companies, Spinnaker Software Corp., and then went on to work for Logal Software, Inc. which he helped take public in 1996. He helped found an independent day school for girls, the Montrose School, where he served as chairman and remains a trustee. He has also served as the governor-appointed trustee of University of Massachusetts’ five campuses. Bowman begins his new position at the start of the fall semester on Aug. 20, but will be on campus during the summer. Read more

April 5, 2016

Olympia, Wash., Jun 24, 2016 / 06:24 am (CNA/EWTN News).- Every morning, Greg Stormans contemplates a Bible verse perched in a tiny frame above his bathroom sink, which his daughter handwrote: “This is the day which the Lord has made; let us rejo... Read more

April 5, 2016

Hanceville, Alabama, Apr 5, 2016 / 12:06 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- Mother Angelica may have had an international television audience, but she also left an impression in her own backyard. “Her impact, you can feel it, it’s here,” Sister Te... Read more

April 5, 2016

Washington D.C., Apr 5, 2016 / 03:33 am (CNA).- Democratic frontrunner Hillary Clinton has long been known for supporting legal abortion. But her comments in this election year have some pro-life critics saying that she is becoming more radical. “She is publically signaling to the abortion lobby that she backs abortion on demand and won’t support any restrictions,” said Mallory Quigley, communications director for the Susan B. Anthony List, a pro-life political advocacy group. In an interview with NBC’s Meet the Press on Sunday, Clinton was asked when, or if, an unborn child has constitutional rights. “Well, under our laws currently, that is not something that exists,” she said. “The unborn person doesn't have constitutional rights.” In the same interview, Clinton said she supports “reasonable restrictions” on abortion that account for “health of the mother.” Quigley suggested that these comments are both incoherent and an attempt by Clinton to convince voters that she has a moderate stance on abortion. “It’s a complete contradiction to say that the unborn are people, to recognize them by calling them persons, but to insist that they do not have constitutional rights,” Quigley told CNA. “If you acknowledge that the baby is a person, then of course they should have constitutional rights.” In the interview, Clinton did not specify which restrictions she would support. Quigley said that because the definition of health in abortion legislation is so broad, it is questionable whether Clinton supports any restrictions at all. “(S)he’s really gotten increasingly radical on this issue,” Quigley said, discussing the abortion language used in Clinton’s campaign speeches over the years. In one speech during her bid for the nomination in 2008, Clinton responded ‘Yes’ when asked whether her goal was ultimately to “reduc(e) the decisions for abortion to zero.” During that discussion, Clinton said that she thought abortion should be “safe, legal and rare, and by rare, I mean rare” and that it “should not in any way be diminished as a moral issue.” Four years later, Clinton has dropped the emphasis on making abortion “rare” and ultimately nonexistent. This February, when responding to claims from Sen. Marco Rubio that she believed in abortion on demand and without restrictions, Clinton said: “You know, I’ve been on record for many years about where I stand on abortion, how it should be safe and legal and I have the same position that I’ve had for a very long time.” Quigley said she thinks the change in Clinton’s abortion platform mirrors what has been happening in the Democratic Party over the past few years.   “The Clintons were famous for normalizing the mantra of ‘safe, legal and rare’, but over time the Democratic party has really become more extreme, taking the word ‘rare’ out of the party platform and putting in ‘regardless of ability to pay,’ which of course means paid for at taxpayers’ expense,” Quigley said. Other comments about abortion during Clinton’s campaign have also caused some critics to question whether her stance on the issue has become more extreme. In April 2015, Clinton said she believes that “religious beliefs and structural biases have to be changed” to expand access to abortion. And in August 2015, Clinton likened GOP candidates with pro-life views to terrorists: “Now, extreme views about women, we expect that from some of the terrorist groups, we expect that from people who don't want to live in the modern world, but it's a little hard to take from Republicans who want to be the president of the United States,” Clinton said at a speech in Cleveland. “Yet they espouse out of date, out of touch policies. They are dead wrong for 21st century America. We are going forward, we are not going back.” The most radical position that Hillary has espoused during her 2016 presidential bid, Quigley suggested, is her proposal to get rid of the Hyde Amendment, which since its passage in 1976 has barred taxpayer money from paying for abortions other than in cases of an endangered life of the mother. In 1993, President Bill Clinton expanded the exceptions to include rape and incest. Both Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders have made repealing the Hyde Amendment part of their 2016 campaign, which signals a dramatic, “abortion on demand and without apology” platform, Quigley said. “(Clinton) wants to change longstanding federal policy, which has always been bipartisan,” she said. “The Democrats have for a long time realized that many taxpayers just can’t stomach the idea of federal funding for abortion without limits, but her position is more and more extreme at a time when it’s very clear that there’s areas of consensus when it comes to abortion.” Polls indicate that there is the greatest consensus on abortion policy surrounding abortion restrictions after 20 weeks, when scientists generally agree that a fetus can feel pain in the womb. A 2013 Washington Post-ABC News poll found 56 percent of voters preferred limiting unrestricted abortion rights to 20 weeks rather than 24 weeks.  A 2012 Gallup poll found 61 percent of Americans believe abortion should generally be legal during the first trimester, but the support dropped to 27 percent in the second trimester and 14 percent in the third trimester. A 2014 Quinnipiac poll found that 60 percent of Americans support pain capable legislation, which restricts abortion after a fetus can feel pain, typically after 20 weeks. Kristen Day, executive director of Democrats for Life, said since so many American voters favor restrictions on abortion after 20 weeks, Clinton’s more extreme views seem out of touch with the American people. “She (Clinton) surrounds herself with these people who are telling her that everyone supports abortion, but it’s a minority view, it’s not what the rest of the country believes,” Day said. “If you look around, and all these states are passing 20 week bans and eliminating funding for Planned Parenthood.” Twenty states limit abortion after fetal viability, and 23 states have some form of limits on abortions at 20 weeks or later, with varying exceptions. In Sept. 2015, the Senate blocked a Republican bill to ban abortion after 20 weeks nationwide. Quigley added that election pressures from the pro-choice and Planned Parenthood lobby have likely led Clinton to embrace a more extreme stance. For the first time ever in their 100-year existence, Planned Parenthood announced their endorsement of a candidate, Clinton, during the primaries rather than waiting for the general election. “We’ve said it before and we’ll say it again: Hillary Clinton is the most outspoken supporter of Planned Parenthood among all the presidential candidates,” Planned Parenthood said in January of their endorsement of Clinton. Other pro-choice groups including NARAL Pro-Choice America PAC have also endorsed Clinton. CNA reached out to Planned Parenthood and NARAL Pro-Choice America for comment, but did not hear back by press time. “They are certainly one of Hillary Clinton’s key allies, so as they’ve gotten more and more stringent, not allowing for any concessions on abortion at all, the politicians have been forced to follow suit because there’s a lot of money that comes with those endorsements, money and power,” Quigley said. Ultimately, however, she thinks “the American people are going to reject that level of extremism when going to the voting booth.”     Photo credit: Joseph Sohm via www.shutterstock.com Read more

April 5, 2016

Ballarat, Australia, Apr 5, 2016 / 12:04 am (CNA/EWTN News).- Bishop Ronald Mulkearns, who led the Diocese of Ballarat in Australia's Victoria state from 1971 to 1997, died Monday at the age of 85. He had been accused of covering up sexual abuse of children in his diocese. Bishop Mulkearns died April 4 at the Nazareth House Nursing Home in Ballarat after suffering colon cancer. “Those who knew him personally will remember a man who was dedicated in his service over those years and, indeed, over the sixty years he served as a priest,” Bishop Paul Bird of Ballarat stated. “At the same time, Bishop Mulkearns himself acknowledged that he had made some tragic mistakes during his time as bishop.” Bishop Mulkearns was born in 1930 in Caulfield, a suburb of Melbourne, and was ordained a priest of the Archdiocese of Melbourne in 1956. He was consecrated a bishop in 1968 and appointed coadjutor bishop of Ballarat. He succeeded as bishop in 1971, remaining there until his resignation in 1997, at the age of 66. The bishop was known to have moved Gerald Ridsdale, one of Australia’s most notorious abusers, between parishes for several years while being fully aware of the former priest’s abuses. Ridsdale is known to have committed more than 130 offenses while chaplain at Ballarat’s St. Alipius school in the 1960s-1980s. Ridsdale was first convicted of charges related to child sex abuse in 1993. In 2013 Australia established the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse. The commission has held more than 30 hearings on institutions' handling of sex abuse, including religious groups, sporting and youth institutions, and government institutions. Bishop Mulkearns appeared before the commission in February via video, saying that “I certainly regret that I didn't deal differently with paedophilia. We had no idea, or I had no idea, of the effects of the incidents that took place.” Bishop Bird noted in his statement that Bishop Mulkearns had “expressed his sorrow for [his] mistakes in the evidence he gave to the Royal Commission in February.” “The Royal Commission had foreshadowed a further hearing of evidence from Bishop Mulkearns. His death means that the Royal Commission and survivors will not be able to hear any further evidence that he might have given and this will be a disappointment to them,” Bishop Bird added. Cardinal George Pell, prefect of the Vatican's Secretariat for the Economy, was ordained a priest of the Ballarat diocese and served for a time as a consultor to Bishop Mulkearns. At his hearing before Australia's Royal Commission at the end of February, Cardinal Pell voiced criticism for the way Bishop Mulkearns had dealt with Ridsdale, saying it was “a catastrophe for the victims and a catastrophe for the Church.” Read more


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