2015-11-11T23:00:00+00:00

Washington D.C., Nov 11, 2015 / 04:00 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- Proposed federal anti-discrimination rules could threaten the religious liberty of health care providers and also infringe on the privacy of patients, lawyers for the U.S. Catholic Bishops have... Read more

2015-11-11T12:57:00+00:00

Vatican City, Nov 11, 2015 / 05:57 am (CNA/EWTN News).- For Pope Francis the dinner table is a key place to strengthen family bonds and foster a sense of “togetherness,” which he said can often be thwarted by an excess attachment to technol... Read more

2015-11-11T11:02:00+00:00

Vatican City, Nov 11, 2015 / 04:02 am (CNA/EWTN News).- Pope Francis celebrated Mass in Florence this week, saying that joy comes from discerning the real Jesus from the image offered by distorted philosophies of God, popular only for a short time. “Our joy is to go against the tide and overcome the popular opinion, which, then as now, cannot see in Jesus more than a prophet or a teacher,” the Pope said Nov. 10. He said Christian joy comes from sharing the faith and responding together to what Jesus asks of us, and recognizing in Jesus “the presence of God, sent by the Father, the Son come to make himself and instrument of salvation for humanity.” Francis celebrated Mass in the Artemio Franchi municipal stadium of Florence during his Nov. 10 daytrip to the city, and to the neighboring town of Prato. Earlier in the day the Pope met with participants in the Fifth National Ecclesial Convention of the Italian Church in Florence’s Santa Maria Del Fiore cathedral. Afterward he went to the Santissima Annunziata Basilica, where he prayed the Angelus with sick and disabled persons. He greeted them each individually after the prayer, before going on foot to the nearby Poor St. Francis cafeteria, where he ate lunch before heading to stadium for Mass. In his homily, Francis focused on the day’s Gospel passage from Matthew in which Jesus asks his disciples who the people say that he is, as well as how they would respond to the question. Jesus’ initial question of “who do they say that the Son of Man is” demonstrates the how open his heart is to others, the Pope said, explaining that what interests Jesus is not so much hearing the answer, as using it to communicate with the people. “Without knowing what the people think, the disciple is isolated and begins to judge the people according to their own thoughts and convictions,” he said. Therefore, “a disciple must maintain a healthy contact with reality and with people’s lives with their joys and sorrows.” Pope Francis said that it’s also important for the disciples to remember that they were all chosen from among the people, and cautioned that they must never fall into the temptation of believing that what the people think and live doesn't concern them and is isn’t important for them. “This also goes for us,” he said, adding that like Jesus, the Church “lives in the middle of the people and for the people. Because of this the Church, in her entire history, has always brought the same question: who is Jesus for the men and women of today?” Francis stressed the importance of getting to know Jesus “for what he really is, not a distorted image from the philosophies and ideologies of the time.” However, in order to do this one’s personal faith in Jesus has to mature, he said. He pointed to the Pope Saint Leo the Great, whose liturgical feast was celebrated yesterday, as an example of someone who was able to recognize the true Jesus amid the falsities of his time. Turning to the second question Jesus poses to his disciples, “who do you say that I am?” the Pope said it’s a question that still resonates today, and is decisive for the identity and mission of a disciple. “Only if we recognize Jesus in his truth will we be able to look at the truth of our own human condition, and we will be able contribute to the full humanization of society.” Peter’s response to Jesus that “you are the Christ, the Son of the Living God” sums up the entirety of his own mission, as well as what will become the Church’s Petrine ministry, namely, the papacy, Francis continued. He said that the mission of the Petrine ministry is to guard and proclaim the truth of the faith, as well as to defend it and promote communion among all churches. Francis said that at the root of the mystery of salvation is the will of a merciful God who didn’t want to give up in the face of misunderstanding and misery, but instead chose to become man in order to encounter each person in their concrete condition. God wanted the “supreme revelation” of the Father to be found in the humiliating image of the crucifixion, the Pope observed. The cross, he said, is a truth “that scandalizes, because it asks us to believe in Jesus, who, though being God, is emptied, is lowered to the condition of a servant, until death on the Cross.” “It's a truth that still scandalizes today those who don't tolerate the mystery of God imprinted on the face of Christ,” he said, adding that “only from the heart of Jesus can we understand, profess and live his truth.” Pope Francis explained that the good we sow along our path as Christians will help to create “a new and renewed humanity” where no one is marginalized or discarded, where the person who serves is considered the greatest and where children and the poor are both welcomed and helped. He closed his homily by quoting St. Leo the Great, who taught that “there can be no true wisdom if not in adherence to Christ and in service to the Church.” “This is the path on which we meet humanity and we can meet it with the spirit of the Good Samaritan,” he said, and noted the importance of humanism at the most creative points in Florence’s history. He said that this humanism “has always had the face of charity,” and prayed for a new humanity both for the city and Italy as a whole. Read more

2015-11-11T07:25:00+00:00

Santiago, Chile, Nov 11, 2015 / 12:25 am (CNA/EWTN News).- Cardinal Gerhard Mueller, prefect for the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, firmly rejected a proposal to legalize abortion in Chile, calling it “a trap for the gullible.”... Read more

2015-11-10T22:45:00+00:00

Washington D.C., Nov 10, 2015 / 03:45 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- Our Lady. Blessed Mother. Virgin Mary. Queen of Peace. Theotokos. Handmaid of the Lord. Mother Mary. These are just some of the titles used to describe the young woman to whom an angel appea... Read more

2015-11-10T19:13:00+00:00

Florence, Italy, Nov 10, 2015 / 12:13 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- In a lengthy speech to the Italian Church at large, Pope Francis said that true human and ecclesial advancement can only be achieved when founded on the humility and detachment of power exemplified by Christ. “We can speak of humanism only beginning from the centrality of Jesus, discovering in him the traits of the authentic human face,” the Pope said Nov. 10. He told those gathered to contemplate the face of Jesus, which is represented on the dome of the Florence’s Santa Maria del Fiore Cathedral in an image of the final judgement. When we look at Jesus, “what do we see? Above all the face of a God who is emptied, of a God who has assumed the condition of a servant, humble and obedient unto death,” Francis said. The face of Christ resembles “so many of our brothers, humiliated, enslaved, emptied,” he said, explaining that God himself chose to take on their face. “And that face looks at us. If we don't lower ourselves we cannot see the face of God. We will not see anything of his fullness if we don't accept that God is emptied.” Pope Francis spoke to participants in the Fifth National Ecclesial Convention of the Italian Church, who are gathered in Florence for five days to discuss the theme, “A new humanism in Jesus Christ.” More than 2,000 people from 220 dioceses have traveled to Florence in order to set goals and an agenda for the national Church for the next 10 years. They met with Pope Francis Tuesday during his daytrip to the city. After making a brief stop in the nearby city of Prato, Francis paid a visit to the baptistery of the Florence cathedral, before meeting with the thousands gathered inside. In his speech, the Pope referred to the gathering’s theme, and said that Jesus Christ must be the central figure when thinking about a new, Christian humanism. Rather than painting an abstract picture of man or of this new humanism, Francis said he wanted “to present with simplicity some of the traits of a Christian humanism which is that of the sentiments of Jesus Christ.” He outlined three traits in particular, encouraging Italians to adopt an attitude of humility, of disinterest in worldly power and authority, and of beatitude, meaning to live according to the beatitudes. “These are not temporary, abstract feelings of the soul, but represent the burning inner strength which makes us able of living and making decisions,” he said. What they tell us is that “we shouldn't be obsessed with power, even when this takes on the face of a useful and functional power for the social image of the Church.” If the Church doesn't assume the sentiments of Jesus, “it is disoriented, because it loses its meaning,” Francis continued. However, if the Church does take on these sentiments, “it knows how to live up to its mission.” “The sentiments of Jesus tell us that a Church which thinks of itself and its own interests would be sad. The beatitudes, however, are the mirror in which to look at ourselves, which allows us to know if we are walking on the right path: it's a mirror that doesn't lie.” He quoted his Apostolic Exhortation “Evangelii Gaudium,” saying that he prefers a “wounded” Church that is dirty from “being out on the streets” rather than one that is “concerned about being the center and which ends up trapped in a maze of obsessions and procedures.” In addition, Francis warned the Italian Church against two different temptations: the ancient heresies of Pelagianism and Gnosticism. Pelagianism, the heretical belief that human beings can obtain salvation on their own without divine assistance, “pushes the Church not to be humble, disinterested or blessed. And it does so with the appearance of good.” What this attitude does is lead one to put trust in structures, organizations and in “perfect plans,” however abstract. It also leads a person “to assume a style of control, of hardness, of normalcy.” This gives the Pelagian the security of “feeling superior, of having a precise orientation,” Francis observed. But Christian doctrine is alive and knows how to both unsettle and to enliven, he said. “It has a face that is not rigid, it has a body that moves and develops, it has a soft flesh: it is called Jesus Christ.” Reform of the Church, then, isn’t complete with endless plans to change structures, but instead means “rooting yourself in Christ” and allowing yourself to be guided by the Holy Spirit, he noted. On the topic of Gnosticism – the belief that the material world should be set aside in favor of the spiritual – Pope Francis said that this attitude leads us “to trust in clear and logical reasoning, but which loses the tenderness of the flesh of the brother.” The difference between Christian transcendence and any form of gnostic spiritualism, he said, “is in the mystery of the Incarnation.” Not putting this into practice “means building on sand, remaining in pure idea and denigrating into intimacies which bear no fruit, which render God's dynamism sterile.” Both people and prayer are needed in order to live out a humble, generous and happy Christian humanism, the Pope continued. He pointed to the example of set by St. Francis of Assisi and St. Phillip Neri, saying that if we lose contact with the faithful, we ourselves become lost and go nowhere. Pope Francis then told those present to look again at the face of Jesus on the cathedral’s dome, and asked what Jesus might be telling them as far as what to do next in their work for the national Church. In contemplating the face of Jesus, there are two possible responses, the Pope said: either they welcomed and fed him when he was hungry and a stranger, or they did not. He said the beatitudes are helpful in living Christian life “at the level of holiness. They are few words, simple, but practical…May the Lord give us the grace to understand this, his message!” Francis told Italians to look again at the sentiments of Jesus as well as his actions. What we see in addition to Jesus’ humility, disinterest in worldly power and beatitude is him eating with sinners, speaking with the Samaritan woman at the well, and comforting the afflicted. In a direct appeal to the Italian bishops, Pope Francis asked that they “be pastors: may this be your glory.” “It will be the people, your flock, who sustain you,” he said, and asked that “nothing and no-one take away the joy of being sustained by your people.” Francis also expressed his hope that as true pastors, the bishops would not be “preachers of complex doctrine,” but rather “pronouncers of Christ, dead and resurrected for us. Aim for the essential, the kerygma.” To the Italian Church as a whole, he recommend a furthering of the social inclusion of the poor, “who have a privileged place in the people of God.” “The poor know well the sentiments of Jesus Christ because through experience they know the suffering Christ,” he said, and prayed that God would protect the Italian Church “from every surrogate power, from image and from money.” Pope Francis also spoke at length about dialogue and encounter, explaining that it doesn't mean to negotiate, but rather searches for the common good. In a special appeal to Italian youth, the Pope charged them to “overcome apathy,” and encouraged them to work toward building a better society, while immersing themselves in the broad spectrum of social and political dialogue. “You can say today we are not living an era of change but a change of era,” he said, noting that the new challenges of today are at times difficult to understand. He stressed the importance of living the problems “as challenges and not obstacles,” said that the Lord is not passive, but active in the work of the world. “You, therefore, go forth to the streets and go to the crossroads: all who you find, call out to them, no one is excluded. Wherever you are, never build walls or borders, but meeting squares and field hospitals.” Pope Francis said that he would like to see an Italian Church that is “restless…always closer to the abandoned, to the forgotten, to the imperfect.” “I desire a happy Church with the face of a mother, who understands, accompanies, caresses. Dream of this Church, believe in it, innovate with it freedom.” The Pope closed asking every community, parish, institution, diocese and district to deepen in the contents of Evangelii Gaudium in their work for the national Church over the next decade, in order to draw out essential criteria and to implement its provisions. He told them to believe “in the genius of Italian Christianity, which is not the wealth either of individuals or of an elite, but of the community, of the people of this extraordinary country.”   Read more

2015-11-10T10:25:00+00:00

Washington D.C., Nov 10, 2015 / 03:25 am (CNA/EWTN News).- Honoring individuals with disabilities and mental health challenges, Cardinal Donald Wuerl of Washington, D.C., celebrated the archdiocese's annual White Mass on Sunday and encouraged the faithful to embrace, serve and welcome the diversity of the Church. The White Mass, hosted by the Archdiocese of Washington's Department of Special Needs Ministries, drew various caregivers and individuals with disabilities. It was celebrated at the Cathedral of St. Matthew on Nov. 8 and the homily was delivered by Father William Byrne, pastor of Our Lady of Mercy in Potomac. “Last week, I just met a wonderful man named Jason,” Fr. Byrne said in his homily, explaining that he encountered the man at the Tricia Sullivan Respite Care Program run by the Potomac Community Resources. “During the Rhythmic Music Program, Jason reached over and grabbed me around the neck, pulled our heads together and gave me a long hug,” he continued. For Fr. Byrne, this hug symbolized something more than just an embrace. It was a gesture that all Christians should imitate – one of welcoming strangers into the Church and embracing them as Christ would embrace the world. “We are the universal Church, whose job it is to welcome, embrace and accompany everyone in his and her encounter with Jesus,” Fr. Byrne stated, saying “we are called to be the hug of Christ to the world.” “The hugs of Jason and me, the embrace of the apostles, the warm squeeze of the cousins Elizabeth and Mary while John leaps for joy in his mother's womb – these hugs are a great image for what we are called to be as a Church.” For the past six years, the White Mass in the Archdiocese of Washington has been held to honor caregivers and individuals with special needs. Those in attendance at the White Mass wore white to symbolize their baptismal vows and life within the Church.    “The White Mass boldly proclaims that all are needed at the altar of God and commends and commissions us to be the agents of that message,” Fr. Byrne said. The White Mass celebrates the familial bond of the Body of Christ within the Church, he explained. If one member is missing, then the whole body is incomplete. This includes the members of the Church who are disabled or mentally challenged, as well as their caregivers. “The White Mass celebrates not just all are welcome to the altar, but most important, all are needed at the altar of God!” the priest stressed. Respite care is not a luxury, he reminded the faithful, but rather a necessity for the effective care of the Church. He also noted that caregivers need help and support from the community to fulfill their mission of serving the disabled or mentally challenged. Fr. Byrne went on to highlight Sunday's Gospel, Mark 12:38-44, pointing to the poor widow and her sense of trust and generosity. Her witness of giving everything she had, he stated, should be every Christian's aspiration. “The lady is not just giving up her second latte and dropping the change in the basket. She is literally hungry, hungry to serve God. She is hungry to help others.” Fr. Byrne also noted that the caregivers who are involved in special ministry with the disabled or mentally challenged emulate the “modern day vision of this Gospel,” because they sacrifice but they also receive – just like the poor widow in the Gospel. “Remember that in the end, what the woman in the Gospel was given was truly more than she herself gave. But, her giving also hurt,” he said, emphasizing that true love is sacrificial. “Real love mandates always doing the right thing, even if it is the hard thing. Real love is extraordinary. Real love means going out of our way, digging in a bit deeper and finding Jesus not in my excess, but where I need Him most.” The priest concluded his homily by challenging the faithful gathered to embrace one another and pray for the Body of Christ. “First, don't be afraid to give someone a big ol' hug,” he said. “Second, pray to understand that in order to be holy, we have to be whole. With all our differences, the huggers and the hugged, we are one Body, the Body of Christ.”   Read more

2015-11-10T09:58:00+00:00

Vatican City, Nov 10, 2015 / 02:58 am (CNA/EWTN News).- Pope Francis today traveled to the Tuscan city of Prato, where he told the city’s labor force – many of whom are Chinese immigrants – to be courageous in fighting corruption and indifference, and to work toward a culture of inclusion. “This is what the Lord asks us today, today more than ever: not to remain closed in indifference, but to open ourselves,” the Pope said. God is asking that we listen to each other, and that we are “ready to leave something in order to reach someone with whom can be shared the joy of having encountered the Lord and also the fatigue of walking on the road.” He told them not to be discouraged in the face of difficulty, but to be “animated by the desire to establish true pacts of proximity.” Pope Francis’ address to the workers of Prato was the first speech of his Nov. 10 daytrip to Prato and Florence. After leaving Vatican City by helicopter Tuesday morning, Pope Francis landed in Prato’s municipal sports field, where he greeted and spoke with the laborers. The trip marks Francis’ first time traveling to both Florence and Prato, which are both located in Italy’s northern Tuscan region and sit about 15 miles apart. In addition to participating in the Fifth National Ecclesial Convention of the Italian Church, another purpose of the trip is to give special attention to the Church in Italy. Filled with small brick factories known as “capannoni,” Prato has in recent years become a hub for Chinese textile producers, who often disregard safety and labor laws. Once a leading producer of high-quality wool textiles, Prato has come under difficulty in recent years due to competition from other countries where labor is cheaper. While most of the Prato factories have either gone under or transferred to other locations in order to stay afloat, the Chinese textile producers have moved in and are accused of running factories in hazardous, sweatshop-like conditions. In his speech to the laborers, Francis said that God is asking us to go out of ourselves in order to “get closer to the men and women of our time.” Naturally going out means taking risks, but “there is no faith without risk,” he said, adding that a closed faith which thinks only of itself “isn't faithful to the invitation of the Lord, who calls his own to take the initiative and get involved without fear.” When faced with the rapid changes of recent years, the danger arises of getting lost in the “whirlwind” of transformation and losing the courage needed to take up the right path. However, rather than seeking shelter in some safe heaven, we are urged by the Lord to reach out to those who still don’t know him, Francis said. What God wants is “a renewed missionary passion to be born in us and he entrusts us with a great responsibility.” “He asks that the Church, his spouse, to walk on rugged paths of today, to accompany those who have lost their way, to pitch tents of hope, where those who are wounded and no longer expect anything from life are welcomed.” Pope Francis noted that Jesus himself has given us the example of what it means to reach out and to be close to others when he put on the clothes of a servant and washed the feet of his disciples. We have been served by him in order to serve others in turn, he said, explaining that for a true disciple of Jesus, “no neighbor can become far.” “On the contrary, there are none far away who are too distant, but only the next to reach,” he said, and thanked the community for their constant efforts to go against “the culture of waste and indifference” by seeking to integrate everyone. Although an integral coexistence and efforts to welcome can at times be difficult, Francis told the workers not the get discouraged, but to instead build bridges of closeness and proximity. Like St. Paul, the Pope encouraged the laborers to put on the armor of Christ, dressing themselves with the virtues needed in order to “confront our true enemies, which are never others, but the spirit of evil.” “We must gird ourselves with the truth. Nothing good can be built on the plots of lies and the lack of transparency,” he said. While choosing the truth isn’t always easy, it’s “a vital decision” in order to have a more just and honest society. Francis closed by recalling the death of Chinese workers who were killed in a factory fire two years ago, referring to the incident as a “tragedy of exploitation” and calling for an end to corruption. “The sacredness of every human being calls for everyone to be respected, welcomed and to have dignified work,” he said, and urged the community to fight “the cancer of corruption and lawlessness to the end.” “Within ourselves and together with others, let us never tire of fighting for the truth!” After his speech, Pope Francis greeted representatives of the civil, ecclesial, business and working communities of Prato before transferring to Florence by helicopter. Read more

2015-11-10T00:00:00+00:00

Rome, Italy, Nov 9, 2015 / 05:00 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- At Saint John Lateran cathedral in Rome, Pope Francis ordained Monsignor Angelo De Donatis as an auxiliary bishop, encouraging the new prelate in off-the-cuff remarks to be an example of God's mercy. “Near the beginning of the Year of Mercy, I ask you – as a brother – to be merciful,” Pope Francis told the new bishop during his homily Nov. 9. “The Church and the world need so much mercy. You teach priests, seminarians the way of mercy, with words, yes, but above all with your attitude,” he said. “The mercy of the Father who always receives, there is always place in his heart, never chase anyone away.” Bishop De Donatis previously served as pastor of Saint Mark the Evangelist parish in Rome. Saint John Lateran is known as the cathedral of the Diocese of Rome, and Pope Francis celebrated the feast of the dedication of the church, along with the bishop's ordination.   The Pope made his impromptu comments as his jubilee Year of Mercy, announced earlier this year, is set to kick off next month. The jubilee, also called a Holy Year, will open this year on Dec. 8 – the Solemnity of the Immaculate Conception – and will close Nov. 20, 2016 with the Solemnity of Our Lord Jesus Christ, King of the Universe. It will also coincide with the 50th anniversary of the closing of the Second Vatican Council in 1965. The jubilee will be organized by the Pontifical Council for the New Evangelization. In addition to his off-the-cuff remarks, Pope Francis also based his homily on a specific pontifical text which outlines the role of a bishop. “In the person of the bishop, with his priests around him, Jesus Christ, the Lord, who became High Priest for ever, is present among you,” the Pope said. “Through the ministry of the bishop, Christ himself continues to proclaim the Gospel and to confer the mysteries of faith on those who believe.”   “Through the fatherly action of the bishop, Christ adds new members to his body,” he said. “Through the bishop's wisdom and prudence, Christ guides you in your earthly pilgrimage toward eternal happiness.” Read more

2015-11-09T21:29:00+00:00

New Haven, Conn., Nov 9, 2015 / 02:29 pm (CNA).- The Knights of Columbus announced last week that they have surpassed $100 billion of life insurance in force, adding to a year of record-breaking sales. “The $100 billion milestone is not simply... Read more




Browse Our Archives