January 10, 2016

Vatican City, Jan 10, 2016 / 03:07 am (CNA/EWTN News).- On Sunday Pope Francis baptized 26 babies in the Sistine Chapel, telling parents to nurture the faith in the lives of their children, because it is the greatest inheritance they can give. “... Read more

January 9, 2016

Dagupan, Philippines, Jan 9, 2016 / 04:06 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- The president of the Filipino bishops' conference has explained that couples are unable to write their own wedding vows because in the sacrament of marriage, it is Christ himself who is acting through the husband and wife. Archbishop Socrates Villegas of Lingayen-Dagupan wrote recently that personal expressions “should not be mixed in with the Church’s liturgy because this diminishes, confuses, and spoils the action of Christ himself in the sacrament.” The archbishop made this clarification in response to the increasing practice of couples attempting to write their own vows and to replace those established by the marriage rite. Archbishop Villegas explained that Catholic couples cannot do this because it would be deleterious to the rite and because they do not have the authority to change the wedding liturgy. “The sacred character of the marriage rite must not be compromised at the altar with romanticism,” the archbishop wrote. He recalled that the liturgy “does not belong to us, and so we can’t change it.” Quoting from Sacrosanctum Concilium, Vatican II's 1963 constitution on the sacred liturgy, he added that “no person, even if he be a priest, may add, remove, or change anything in the liturgy on his own authority.” Archbishop Villegas added that authority to change the liturgy is held by the Vatican, and in certain cases, by bishops' conferences. This, he explained, is why a couple is unable to take the initiative in writing their own vows. Instead of using personalized vows within the marriage service, he noted, couples are welcome to use such individualized words at their wedding reception or a similar gathering following the liturgical service. Read more

January 9, 2016

Vatican City, Jan 9, 2016 / 06:08 am (CNA/EWTN News).- Amid the lengthy process of reforming Vatican communications, the Secretariat of State has stated that the Holy See press office's administrative and human resources branches are to be handed over to the new Secretariat for Communications. The announcement came in a Dec. 21, 2015 letter signed by Cardinal Pietro Parolin, Vatican Secretary of State. The letter also noted that the press office's Bollettino, used to deliver official information, will remain under the control of the state secretariat, in accordance with Pastor bonus, the 1988 apostolic constitution of St. John Paul II which regulates the functions and tasks of the Roman Curia's dicasteries and departments. The Holy See press office's other activities, however, will be coordinated with the communications secretariat so as to “secure the unification of all the communications processes, which are within the competence of the Secretariat for Communications.” Cardinal Parolin’s letter recalls that the Pope entrusted the Secretariat for Communication with a “comprehensive restructuring” of all Holy See communications efforts. The drafting of the statutes of the Secretariat for Communication is still underway, but the letter clarifies that the Holy See press office will be part of the new secretariat. The project for the restructuring of Vatican media is proceeding on a four-year plan. According to a source within the Secretariat for Communications, “the secretariat will take over control of the delivery of official information at the end of that term, and the passage of competences from the Secretariat of State to the communications secretariat will be gradually assessed in the course of these four years.” The same say as Cardinal Parolin's letter was delivered, the Holy See press office announed the appointment of Greg Burke as its deputy director, and of Stefano D’Agostini as director of the Vatican Television Center. Burke has served as the Secretariat of State’s senior advisor for communication for three years; he will replace the current deputy director, Fr. Ciro Benedettini, who will retire as he will turn 70 in February. Burke is likely to serve as a liaison between the state and communications secretariats. D’Agostini has spent all of his career within the Vatican Television Center. He replaces Msgr. Dario Edoardo Viganò, who is now prefect of the Secretariat for Communications. D’Agostini was “technical head” at CTV, and will largely manage the organization of filming, while the Secretariat for Communications will manage the content. The Pontifical Council for Social Communications will likely be absorbed by the Secretariat for Communications, which is expected to move its headquarters to the building which currently hosts the pontifical council. Archbishop Celli, currently president of the Pontifical Council for Social Communications, will turn 75 in July, reaching retirement age. He is not expected to be replaced. Archbishop Celli's deputy, Monsignor Paul Tighe, was transferred Dec. 19, 2015, to the Pontifical Council for Culture. He is to be its adjunct secretary, and will be consecrated a bishop. At the conclusion of the four-year plan for the reform of Vatican media, it is likely that all offices involved in Vatican communications will be under the control of the Secretariat for Communications. Moreover, a unified newsroom to manage news content is being studied. Read more

January 8, 2016

Rome, Italy, Jan 8, 2016 / 03:44 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- Funds raised during the collection in Pope Francis' public Masses in Mexico have a special destination: they will be used to build two new welcoming centers for the country’s large influx of immigrants. “On the occasion of the Extraordinary Holy Year of Mercy we have decided to open two new welcoming centers for immigrants: one at the border with Mazapa (de Madero) and another in Salto de Agua,” Bishop Felipe Arizmendi Esquivel said a Dec. 30 interview with Zenit news agency. “I told the Pope that the collection we are doing for the visit, in agreement with the Episcopal Conference, will be destined for the construction of these two new structures. It is what we will symbolically deliver in the collection of the Mass.” Bishop Esquivel heads the Mexican diocese of San Cristóbal de las Casas, near Tuxtla Gutierrez, Chiapas, where Pope Francis will visit on his third full day in Mexico. The Pope is scheduled to make a Feb. 12-17 visit to the country, during which he will also travel to the crime-ridden city of Morelia and the U.S.-Mexico border town Ciudad Juarez. He will also pay a visit to the shrine of Our Lady of Guadalupe, which he has stated is the primary reason for going to Mexico. Veneration of Our Lady of Guadalupe goes back to the 16th century when a “Lady from Heaven” appeared to Saint Juan Diego, a poor Indian from Tepeyac, on a hill northwest of Mexico City. Over the course of a series of apparitions in 1531, the Woman, who identified herself as the Mother of the True God, instructed Juan Diego to have the bishop build a church on the site. As a sign, the now-famous image of Our Lady of Guadalupe was imprinted miraculously on his tilma. Both the image and the tilma remain intact after more than 470 years. Francis will hold a public Mass every day of the trip, apart from the day he arrives, adding up to five in total. Collection funds from all of them will go toward the two new welcoming centers for immigrants. A regular contributor to Zenit’s Spanish edition, Bishop Esquivel spoke with the agency during a recent two-week trip to Rome to flesh out the final details ahead of the Pope’s visit. He met with the Pope at his residence in the Vatican’s Santa Martha guesthouse alongside the Archbishop of Tuxla Gutierrez, Fabio Martínez Castilla. In the course of the meeting, Pope Francis explained that aside from visiting the shrine of Our Lady of Guadalupe, his main reason for going to Mexico are the problems the country faces due to migration and violence, Bishop Esquivel told Zenit. After informing Francis of their plans for the collection money raised during his public Masses, the bishop said he also explained that the local church already manages three other such centers: one in Palenque, a second in Comitán de Dominguez and a third in San Martín de Porres, which was just inaugurated Nov. 3, 2015. All three of the centers are in the Chiapas region of Mexico, which has a high indigenous population and sits along the country’s border with Guatemala. The problem of immigration in Mexico “is serious,” the bishop said, noting that the number of incoming migrants tends to increase when “work or security for people is lacking.” Most of Mexico’s incoming migrants are from what the bishop referred to as “the northern triangle of Central America.” Namely, from Guatemala, Honduras and El Salvador. Others also arrive from Cuba, India and China. Bishop Esquivel explained that among those who come are many mothers with young children. He recounted how one of these women with a 10 month old baby told him if she stayed in Honduras, “they will kill me and take my daughter.” “This is what happens with migration to Europe, (it’s) because of the lack of security and work.” When asked why so many choose to go to the United States when they are unable to become regularized citizens, the bishop responded by saying the problem is often aggravated by “false information.” Parents, he said, are misled into thinking that “if children arrived to the United States they could acquire citizenship automatically, which is not true, and these lies serve the ones who exploit migrants, charging them $3-5,000 to let them pass (the border).” “It pains us a lot to see groups of people walk for kilometers and kilometers and arrive at our welcoming centers with blistered feet, sick,” the bishop said, explaining that the centers they have established offer migrants basic assistance such as access to food, beds and showers. There is also a certain juridical protection that is offered, “so that they can have legal refuge or also defend themselves from violations that there are on the part of some minor authorities.” While some Mexican authorities have been “ambivalent” in their position toward incoming migrants, there is still “too much control for them to pass,” Bishop Esquivel said. One example he pointed to was the fact that migrants are not allowed to cross the border on the famous train called “the beast,” which is a network of Mexican freight trains frequently used by U.S.-bound immigrants who want to pass through Mexico more quickly. Because using the train is illegal, immigrants are left to search for “other paths that are more dangerous,” Bishop Esquivel observed. On the topic of drug trafficking, the bishop was asked how there can be such high levels of drug related problems and violence in Mexico, a predominantly Catholic country where nearly everyone considers themselves to be a “guadalupano,” that is, a committed devotee to Our Lady of Guadalupe, or the Virgin Mary, in a more general translation. In response, he said that money is a major root cause: “Unfortunately money corrupts everything, at times event the Church itself,” he noted, explaining that many youth can't find work, and as a result “these criminal gangs recruit them, force them to steal, to kill, to traffic drugs.” And if they don't do what the gangs want, “(the gangs) kill them along with their families.” However, despite the depth of the country’s wide range of problems, Bishop Esquivel said that people are excited for the Pope’s upcoming visit. Pope Francis is giving everyone a much-needed “Gospel kick…and because of this the people love him a lot,” he said. It’s not only the Pope’s humility and simplicity the people admire, but the fact that Francis “is going to the essence of the Gospel, and he doesn't leave the bishops or himself out.” Read more

January 8, 2016

St. Louis, Mo., Jan 8, 2016 / 03:03 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- A massive cleanup is left for those whose homes were in the path of one of the worst floods in the St. Louis area in over two decades. “I have been fervently praying for those suffering du... Read more

January 8, 2016

Vatican City, Jan 8, 2016 / 05:22 am (CNA/EWTN News).- Love was the center of Pope Francis’ second daily homily after taking a break for Christmas - he said the word has become so casual that we no longer know exactly what we mean when we say it. “This word ‘love’ is a word that is used so many times and when we use it we don’t know exactly what it means. What is love?” the Pope said during his Jan. 8 daily Mass in the Vatican’s Saint Martha guesthouse. It was his second daily Mass after taking a break during the Christmas holiday season. At yesterday's Mass, the Pope dedicated his homily to the topic of mercy. He focused today’s reflections on the passage in the First Letter of St. John when the apostle tells his readers that “God is love.” At times, the Pope said, we can think real love is the kind we see in soap operas, “but that doesn’t appear to be love.” For others, love can seem like having a crush on someone, but that feeling eventually fades away, he noted, and asked where the source of true love can be found. “Whoever loves has been created by God because God is love,” he said, and cautioned against a mistaken notion that “Every love is God. No, God is love.” Francis went on to describe how God is the one who loved us first. The Apostle John provides numerous examples of this in the Gospel, he said, pointing specifically to Jesus’ multiplication of the loaves and fish and to the parable of the Prodigal Son as examples. “When we have something on our mind and we want to ask God to forgive us, it’s he who is waiting for us – to forgive us,” the Pope said, explaining that the current Jubilee of Mercy is a means of being assured that “our Lord is waiting for us, each one of us.” The reason, he said, is “to embrace us. Nothing more. To say to us: son, daughter, I love you. I let my Son be crucified for you: this is the price of my love, this is the gift of my love.” Pope Francis then noted how God is waiting for us to open the doors of our hearts to him, and said that we must have the certainty that God waits for us as we are, not as we are told we ought to be. He encouraged attendees to go to the Lord and tell him how much they love him. If a person feels that they are unable to say that, Francis told them instead to say something to the effect of “you know Lord that I would like to love you but I am such a bad sinner.” When God hears this, the Pope said, “he will do the same as he did with the prodigal son who squandered all his money on vices: he won’t let you finish your speech and with an embrace will silence you. The embrace of God’s love.” Read more

January 8, 2016

Madison, Wis., Jan 8, 2016 / 03:03 am (CNA/EWTN News).- When Bishop Robert Morlino arrived as the new bishop for the Diocese of Madison, Wis. in 2003, he began quietly encouraging priests to promote more reverence towards the Blessed Sacrament – through more adoration, more reverent Masses, and moving tabernacles back to the center of churches. Now, he's made it official. Bishop Morlino has asked his priests to make sure every tabernacle is moved to the center of each church behind the altar by 2018. “Obviously the reason is because he wants to reiterate that this is the living God residing in the tabernacle,” Patrick Gorman, director of the Office of Worship for the Madison diocese, told CNA. “This isn't just another piece of furniture which can go anywhere, this is the house of the living God and we want to have that in a prominent place where people can pray before it whenever they want.” In the wake of Vatican II, many churches in Madison and throughout the United States relocated their tabernacles either to the side of sanctuaries or to their own side chapels. The idea at the time, Gorman said, was that this created a separate, quiet space which would encourage more people to spend time in adoration. “After Vatican II, (the tabernacle) could be in a sanctuary or separate chapel… it still had to be prominently located, which is where we were finding some of the confusion. Tabernacles were being placed in chapels that weren’t even adjacent to the nave of the church let alone the sanctuary, so that when you walked into the Church proper, there would be none visible,” he said. “I think that was the first step of the confusion, to say that the Church has these two options, and this is what they're supposed to be. The chapel kind of got divorced from the worship space of the church and kind of got put aside for a separate thing almost.” There were also some who argued at the time that Christ had two presences in the Eucharist – His presence in the tabernacle and His presence on the altar, and that the separate locations helped emphasize this. Gorman said it's an argument that few in the Church will make, and that it just ended up contributing to the confusion. “There's no conflict,” when it comes to Jesus' presence in the Blessed Sacrament, whether on the altar or in the tabernacle, Gorman added. There are several major Cathedrals and Basilicas – like St. Peter’s in Rome, for example – that maintain separate chapels for tabernacles and Eucharistic adoration, but this is primarily because they are churches that see a lot of visitors and tourists, Gorman said. For the most part, in Madison, Wisc., that's not the case. “The average church in a diocese doesn't have visitors coming and going all the time, and certainly in our diocese, even when the new Cathedral is built I suspect there won't be, so there's no need for a side chapel,” he said. “People can come in and it'll be quiet. Occasionally there might be a run-in with a wedding rehearsal or something, but that’s manageable.” Even before Bishop Morlino told his priests of the three year plan to move the tabernacles, he had asked several years ago that every new church built in the diocese place the tabernacle in the center behind the altar. Many priests were also preferring to move tabernacles to the center of their parishes on their own initiative, so it was a direction in which the diocese was already heading, Gorman said. The bishop has allowed three years for the project because the nature of tabernacles can make them difficult to move – they are supposed to be made of a solid, unbreakable material and securely attached to the church. Gorman said in most cases, the move should be simple. Most churches have tabernacles already in the sanctuary that may be a little off-center. A few will require a bit more cost and effort. Overall, Gorman said, the project has been well-received within the diocese among priests and parishioners alike, with many people sending the bishop their thanks on social media. “I don't know that too many people are crushed by it, and even most of the priests had already done this to be honest…it's somewhat of a non-issue. We were moving that way, the bishop acknowledged that, but he said let’s finish this one up.” “The idea is we’re going to put Christ in the most central place in the Church because that’s the position he has in the Church, in the body of Christ,” he added. “Of course Jesus Christ himself is in it, therefore standing at the head of our church.” “That the tabernacle then has its own prominent space at the center of the church is just one more way to show we believe in this presence of Christ and we’re going to follow him wherever he goes.” Corrected on Jan. 8 at 9:30 a.m. MST: Article incorrectly reported that Bishop Morlino was installed in the Madison diocese in 1993. He was installed in 2003. Read more

January 8, 2016

Juarez, Mexico, Jan 8, 2016 / 02:42 am (CNA/EWTN News).- With Pope Francis set to visit the Mexican city of Juarez Feb. 17, some crime victims are telling their stories of loss – and talking about the healing power of faith. “That the Pope... Read more

January 8, 2016

Belfast, UK, Jan 8, 2016 / 12:04 am (CNA/EWTN News).- For many reasons, pro-life advocates in Northern Ireland want the attorney general to challenge a November court ruling that would legalize more abortions. “The right to life is a shared huma... Read more

January 7, 2016

Washington D.C., Jan 7, 2016 / 04:42 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- After the House of Representatives voted Wednesday to pass a budget bill blocking federal funding of Planned Parenthood, the legislation will reach President Barack Obama’s desk in a histo... Read more


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