2015-10-15T12:03:00+00:00

Homs, Syria, Oct 15, 2015 / 06:03 am (CNA/EWTN News).- A Syrian priest who was captured by Islamic State militants in May thought he would die for his faith. Now, he credits the Virgin Mary and the help of a Muslim friend for his escape. “This is the miracle the Good Lord gave me: while I was a prisoner I was waiting for the day I would die, but with a great inner peace. I had no problem dying for the name of Our Lord; I wouldn't be the first or the last, just one of the thousands of the martyrs for Christ,” the Syriac Catholic priest, Father Jacques Mourad, told Italian TV 2000. “I want to thank all those who prayed for my liberation. It's truly a miracle that a priest has been freed from the hands of the Islamic State. A miracle that the Virgin Mary worked for me.” Father Mourad was prior of the Monastery of Mar Elian in the Syrian town of Al Qaryatayn, about 60 miles southeast of Homs. He said he was captured with another young man on May 21 after the militants arrived at the monastery. “The first four days we were in the mountains, locked up in the monastery's car we were captured in,” he said. “On Aug. 11 we were taken to near Palmyra, where there are 250 other Christian prisoners from the city of Al Qaryatayn.” The Islamic State had captured Al Quaryatayn Aug. 6. Only around 30 Christians were able to escape the town for Homs after it was captured. Father Mourad that his captors regularly asked him to declare his faith. “Almost every day there was someone who came to my prison and asked me ‘what are you?’ “I would answer: ‘I’m a Nazarene, in other words, a Christian.’ “‘So you’re an infidel,’ they shouted. ‘Since you’re a Christian, if you don't convert we’ll slit your throat with a knife’.” Despite the threats, the priest refused to renounce Christ. Father Mourad said he wore a disguise in order to escape. “I escaped on a motorbike with the help of a Muslim friend. But now I'm working with an Orthodox priest and other Bedouin friends and a Muslim friend to free the 200 other Christians who are still imprisoned,” he said. According to the priest, 40 other Christians were able to escape the same day as his interview with Italian television. On Oct. 10 Father Mourad celebrated his first Mass since his release, Agence France Presse reports. The priest was also pastor of a parish in Al Qaryatayn, where he served as an active mediator between the Syrian army and rebel forces in their years-long civil war, Fides news agency said. The Monastery of Mar Elian dated back 1,600 years and was the subject of restoration work in recent decades. It provided refuge to hundreds of Syrians displaced from Al Qaryatayn, partnering with Muslim donors to provide for their needs. However, Islamic State militants destroyed the monastery in August. Since the Syrian civil war began in March 2011, more than 250,000 people have been killed. Four million have become refugees, and another 8 million Syrians are believed to have been internally displaced by the violence. Le père Jacques Mourad, enlevé le 21 mai dernier en Syrie, a été libéré. http://t.co/CGRWf7ENaZ pic.twitter.com/MdNdMAcqsX — Terre Sainte Mag (@terresaintemag) October 13, 2015 Read more

2015-10-15T09:38:00+00:00

Philadelphia, Pa., Oct 15, 2015 / 03:38 am (CNA).- Dan, Rilene and Paul knew that once their stories were out, life would not be the same. “We’ve been advised not to google ourselves,” Rilene said, laughing. These three are the subjects of a recently released documentary, “Desire of the Everlasting Hills,” which chronicles their stories of having same-sex attraction, and how they eventually found peace in the Catholic Church. The film made its world premiere in Pennsylvania July 19 last year at a conference for Courage, the Vatican-approved apostolate that reaches out to Catholics with same-sex attraction with the goals of growing closer to God, engaging in supportive friendships, and learning to live full lives within the call to chastity. Its simple style and universal themes of human love and longing, however, make the film a touching and moving experience for a much broader audience. All three said they approached their involvement in the film with some trepidation. They were hesitant about the responses they might get from their family and friends, and those in the LGBT community. “I was very scared to do this movie,” Dan told CNA when the film debuted. A professional musician, he was worried what people in the music industry might think. He didn’t want to be seen as “Dan the gay man.” Before this film he had never been publicly out, and had occasionally dated women. “But I was thinking about 1 Peter 3:15, where he says ‘Always be prepared to give an answer for the hope that lies within you.’ With how good God has been to me, if I can help other people through my story, that’s why I chose to do this.” Dan’s passion is especially to help young people who are experiencing same-sex attraction. Although he was Catholic when he was young, his family became Protestant by the time he was in his teenage years. He remembers feeling like there was no one he could talk to about what he was experiencing.   “I remember the pastor doing a series on sexual purity, and he was talking about lusting after women,” Dan said, “And I remember thinking, ‘Who can I tell, that the guy two pews in front of me is the guy that I’m lusting after?’” In the film, Dan recounts going to a strip club as an experiment. He ended up talking vegetables with a dancer, and still uses some of her gardening tips to this day.   He then decided that he still wanted the normalcy of a dating relationship, so he started dating Jason, with whom he was in a relationship for about a year. But his desires for a family and biological fatherhood were reawakened when he found himself falling in love with Kelly, a woman at work. When his relationship with Kelly ended, Dan said he found himself tempted to find another relationship with a man. “But I had reached a threshold where I realized the path to peace … was not going back.” Rilene participated in the film because she felt she owed it to God to be as outspoken about him as she had been about being gay. “When I was gay I dragged my partner out of the closet,” she said. “I feel like I at least owe God the same level of full disclosure, so that’s why I am openly back in the Church and abandoned my gay identity.” In the film, Rilene recalled that at first she wanted to be loved by a man and to have a family. But after a dating dry spell and a woman making a move on her at a party, she started questioning whether or not she might really be attracted to women. On a business trip, she met a woman, Margo, who was to be her partner for 25 years. “I think she was a lot like me in many ways, she was professional,” Rilene said. “And she wanted me, honestly. And I needed to be wanted.” But even throughout that relationship, Rilene said she felt restless and often alone. After a series of financial downfalls and a marriage proposal from Margo, Rilene left the relationship and eventually found her way back into a Catholic parish. She said she felt like the film was a good chance for her and the other subjects to sort through their thoughts and examine their lives. “There were so many blessings in this movie for us, the actual conversation, the questioning, helped to focus our own thoughts for each of us on different aspects of our life that maybe we hadn’t considered as closely before.” “And it has wonderful graces so far, and whatever else comes, that’s the way it goes, we’ll just take it as it comes.” Paul got involved in the gay scene after moving to New York City in the 1970s. He landed a high-end job as an international model and rubbed elbows with celebrities at clubs in the city. “Studio 54, especially if you were young and somewhat attractive, you could go there and it would be total heaven. The lights, the way people dressed, the music, the movie stars … it was exactly like you’ve heard,” he said in the film.   When he wasn’t at the studio or at the gym, Paul spent his time looking for partners. He found himself going through dozens, and then hundreds, and then thousands of lovers. “It became frantic, and it was never my intention … but I became insensitive to what it means to be with a partner, both body and soul.” When the AIDs epidemic claimed around 90 percent of his friends, Paul decided to move to San Francisco for a fresh start. He met his partner, Jeff, there and they moved to a cabin in Sonoma County. One day while watching T.V., Paul came across a strange image and called Jeff into the room to laugh at what they saw. “I’m laughing mockingly at this nun with a patch over her eye, a distorted face (I didn’t know she had a stroke at the time), and a complete, old fashioned habit,” he said. It was Mother Angelica on EWTN. Jeff and Paul both laughed at “these crazy Christians”, but when Jeff left the room, Paul kept watching. “I was about to change the channel, she said something so intelligent and so real and so honest that it really struck me.” “You see God created you and I to be happy in this life and the next. He cares for you. He watches your every move. There’s no one that loves you (that) can do that,” Mother Angelica said. From then on, Paul was hooked on Mother Angelica. But he hid his new obsession. He would change the channel after watching her so that Jeff or anyone who used the T.V. wouldn’t see the nun. “And it reminded me as I was doing this of when I used to turn the channel when I was watching porn because I didn’t want Jeff or anyone else to see a porn station come up.” Paul anticipates that the negative response to this film will be huge. Even though the film wasn’t public at the time of the interview, Paul said he’s already seen a reaction. “I got blowback because I walked up the stairs … of a church called the Catholic Church. I lost clients, I lost friends.” “People were in shock that an educated, relatively intelligent man could believe in Jesus Christ. These were the few friends that were aware that I was back in the Church.” Dan echoed Paul’s sentiments about the reaction he expects from the film. “I think my colleagues would have no problem if I were to come out as gay. I think they’re baffled by the fact that I’m Catholic.” All three also said that once they were back in the Church, they started to distance themselves from the label “gay” or “lesbian”. Within the Church, the terminology is not preferred because it tends to pigeonhole people by defining them first by their sexual drives. “I went to a Protestant conference and one of the people said, ‘Maybe you need to consider the fact that the label 'gay' doesn’t define you,’ and that was one of the most liberating things,” Dan said. “I think the very fact that the Church would avoid the terms gay and lesbian speaks to the truth of the human person, and there’s something vitally important about the Church’s refusal to use that.” When asked about what the Church needs to do to better serve people with same-sex attraction, the answer was resoundingly that priests and the Church need to be better educated about the Church’s position. Rilene said within the first few years of living with Margo, a priest knocked on her door for a parish survey. When she burst into tears, explaining that she used to be Catholic but felt unwanted by the Church because she was a lesbian, the priest didn’t know what to say. “He just said, ‘No, we want you!’ But there was nothing behind that … he just had no tools. So I think that our priests need the education, they need training. I know priests who I don’t think even know what the Church’s position is on it, or are resistant to it.” “So, that’s what we need to do. We need to arm our priests.” Dan said he hoped that priests would also not shy away from the topic, or the Church’s teachings on the subject. “One of the guys in Courage said chastity isn’t a consolation prize. Our lives are better because of the Church’s teaching, and we shouldn’t be embarrassed by that,” he said. “We should shout it from the mountaintops, it’s the good news!”*This story originally ran July 25, 2014 with the headline "Film: People with same-sex attraction find peace in Church"   Read more

2015-10-15T06:26:00+00:00

Calcutta, India, Oct 15, 2015 / 12:26 am (CNA/EWTN News).- Orphanages in India run by the Missionaries of Charity have decided to close their doors in light of new adoption guidelines that the sisters say violate natural law and their religious views. Sister Amala, who serves at Nirmala Shishu Bhawan, a New Delhi orphanage run by the Missionaries of Charity, explained the decision.   “The new guidelines hurt our conscience. They are certainly not for religious people like us,” she said, according to NPR.   The new protocol issued by the Ministry of Women and Child Development allows single, divorced, and separated individuals to participate in adoption services from the Missionaries of Charity, who have a policy of only placing children with a married mother and father.   “Our rules only allow married couples to adopt,” Sister Amala explained, saying the sisters are concerned about the moral upbringing of the children who are adopted by single individuals, rather than a mother and a father.   Under the new law, prospective parents will now register online through the Central Adoption Resource Authority (CARA), which will allow single, separated or divorced individuals to participate in registered adoption services throughout India.   The new guidelines are aimed at boosting the number of adoptions within India, where the adoption process is notoriously complex. According to the Ministry of Women and Children Development, opening adoption services to a wider group of prospective parents will help increase adoptions within the country.   Indian Women and Child Development Minister, Maneka Gandhi, commented on the situation at a local conference, saying that “we are trying to persuade them, they are good people,” but that the Missionaries of Charity did “not want to come under a uniform secular agenda.”   Instead, the sisters opted to seek de-recognition from CARA, believing the new rules to contradict natural law. So far, over a dozen orphanages run by the Missionaries of Charity have ceased adoption services over the past two months.   “It is not a religious rule but a human rule,” Sister Amala said, according to the Catholic Herald. “Children need both parents, male and female. That is only natural, isn't it?”   In addition to allowing single individuals to adopt, the new guidelines will also include a choice in which child is adopted, giving prospective parents the ability to pick one of six different children at the orphanage.   This option was not available previously, as the Missionaries of Charity placed the orphaned children with their adoptive families based on the parents' background, ethnicity, and best overall match.   “Parents are not allowed a choice, even if the child has a deformity. We cannot allow parents one option out of six to adopt children,” Sister Amala stated, according to The Indian Express.     “When a woman gives birth to a baby, is she allowed a choice? She gets what God gifts to her,” she continued, saying that it should be no different for adoptive parents.   The Missionaries of Charity, who were founded by Mother Teresa, will continue their care for the poor and abandoned in India. NPR reported that instead of providing adoption services, the sisters will turn to special needs children within the country who are still orphaned.   Photo credit: Zvonimir Atletic via www.shutterstock.com. Read more

2015-10-14T23:14:00+00:00

Mar del Plata, Argentina, Oct 14, 2015 / 05:14 pm (CNA).- A mob of violent abortion supporters attempted to desecrate an Argentine cathedral and threw stones and bottles at Catholics praying the rosary in front of the church on Sunday. The feminist activists bared their chests, on which they had painted phrases such as “I had an abortion” and “I choose.” They approached the cathedral in Mar del Plata Oct. 11 shouting “the Church is a piece of trash, you're a dictatorship.” The activists were among the tens of thousands of participants in the 30th National Meeting of Women. They were pushed back by local police. Authorities had set up a railing around the church and stationed police there in anticipation of an attack. The abortion supporters knocked down part of the protective railing and police reacted with tear gas and rubber bullets. The most violent demonstrators were arrested but released soon after. Martin Patrito, the president of the pro-life group ArgentinosAlerta, told CNA the incident is “the first time the police got involved” to protect a Catholic church from attacks by abortion activists. He considered police involvement to be progress. Prior to the incident, ArgentinosAlerta launched a petition asking the authorities for a police presence to counter the violence of the abortion advocates. Patrito said that the National Meeting of Women has “numerous workshops on various topics concerning women” and many of these are “very reasonable.” “But the feminists manipulate all of this and when the event is over, everything concludes with a big march where the main slogan is abortion on demand,” he said. The residents of Mar del Plata are outraged by the violence unleashed by the abortion activists and their hatred against the Catholic Church, Patrito said. He criticized the activists for “running at the mouth talking about women's rights, but it seems they can't stand the right to religious freedom.” “This reminds us of the Islamic State which can't stand the presence of Christians in their countries.” Mobs of abortion activists have tried to desecrate Catholic churches during previous gatherings of the National Meeting of Women in a number of cities in Argentina. In November 2013 young men peacefully defended the Cathedral of San Juan de Cuyo against one mob and prayed the rosary during its attack. The feminists spat at the men, physically assaulted them and sprayed them with aerosol paint. Abortistas intentaron asaltar la Catedral de Mar del Plata (Argentina), lo impidió la policía. #ENM #30ENM #ENM2015 pic.twitter.com/yuLejAlgf0 — CitizenGO es (@CitizenGOes) October 12, 2015 Read more

2015-10-14T21:57:00+00:00

Vatican City, Oct 14, 2015 / 03:57 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- Cardinal Robert Sarah has told the Synod of Bishops they should respond to the twin threats of Western and Islamic radicals by helping the world realize the beauty of the Christian family. &ldq... Read more

2015-10-14T21:34:00+00:00

Vatican City, Oct 14, 2015 / 03:34 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- Read below the full text of the report released Wednesday by the German-speaking small group at the Synod on the Family. The reports of the 13 small groups, or circoli minori, were all released Oct. 14 in their own languages: four English, three French, three Italian, two Spanish, and one German. The text below is CNA's translation of the German original:   We extensively debated the concepts – that are, again and again, considered to be opposites – of mercy and truth, of grace and justice, and their theological relationship to each other. In God, they are not opposites: because God is love, in God justice and mercy are one. God's mercy is the foundational divine truth of revelation, which is not in opposite to other divine truths of revelation. Rather, it reveals to us the deepest foundation of revelation, since it tells us, why God emptied himself in his son and why Jesus Christ through his Word and through his sacraments is present and remains for our salvation in his Church. The mercy of God through this reveals to us the reason and the goal of the entire work of Redemption. The justice of God is his mercy, with which he makes us just. We also considered what consequences this interpenetration has for how we accompany marriages and families. It precludes a one-sided, deductive hermeneutic, which subsumes concrete situations under a general principle. In the sense of Thomas Aquinas and also the Council of Trent, the application of foundational principles is expected to be applied with prudence and wisdom to each specific, often complex situation. This is not about exceptions, in which the Word of God would not apply, but about the just and proper application of the words of Jesus – for instance the words on the indissolubility of marriage – in prudence and wisdom. Thomas Aquinas illustrated this necessity of making a concrete application when he says: “to prudence belongs not only the consideration of the reason, but also the application to action, which is the end of the practical reason.“ (STh II-II 47.3: “ad prudentiam pertinet non solum consideratio rationis, sed etiam applicatio ad opus, quae est finis practicae rationis”). Another aspect of our discussion was the topic of gradually leading people to the sacrament of marriage as mentioned repeatedly in the third chapter of the second part [of the instrumentum laboris], from informal relationships to unmarried cohabiting couples to couples married by the state up to ecclesially valid, sacramental marriage. To accompany these people on the different steps pastorally, is a great pastoral responsibility, but also a joy.   It also became clear to us, that in many discussions and perceptions we think too statically and not sufficiently biographically-historically. The Church's teaching on marriage has developed and deepened historically. At first it was about humanizing marriage, which led to the conviction of monogamy. In the light of the Christian faith, the personal dignity of the marriage partners was recognized more deeply and the image of God in man perceived through the relationship of man and woman. In a further step, the ecclesiology of marriage was deepened, and marriage understood as a domestic Church. Finally the sacramental nature of marriage became fully conscious to the Church. This historical path of deepening is also today reflected in the biography of many people. They are first touched by the human dimension of marriage, they are then convinced by the Christian view of marriage in the life of the Church, and from there find their way to the celebration of a sacramental marriage. Just like the historical development of the Church's teaching on marriage took time, so the pastoral approach must give time to people to mature on their way toward sacramental marriage,  and not act according to the principle of “all or nothing”. It is here that the thought of a “dynamic process” developing (FC 9) is to be brought further towards the present, which John Paul II already expounded in Familiaris consortio: “The Church's pastoral concern will not be limited only to the Christian families closest at hand; it will extend its horizons in harmony with the Heart of Christ, and will show itself to be even more lively for families in general and for those families in particular which are in difficult or irregular situations.”  (FC 65) The Church unavoidably finds herself in a situation of tension here, between on the one hand a necessarily clear teaching on marriage and family, and on the other hand the concrete pastoral responsibility to accompany people and convince them, when their lifestyle only partly complies with the basic principles of the Church. With them, the Church must walk on the path towards a life of marriage and family in fullness as the gospel of the family promises. For this a pastoral care is required that is directed at the person, and that includes the normativity of the Church's teaching and the personhood of the human being in equal measure, keeping an eye on a person’s ability to form a conscience and strengthening their responsibility. “For man has in his heart a law written by God; to obey it is the very dignity of man; according to it he will be judged. Conscience is the most secret core and sanctuary of a man. There he is alone with God, whose voice echoes in his depths.“ (GS 16) Furthermore, we request for the final version of the text to consider two aspects: Any impression should be avoided that Holy Scripture is just used as a source of quotations for dogmatic, juridical or ethical convictions. The law of the New Testament is the work of the Holy Spirit in the heart of the faithful (cf. Catechism of the Catholic Church 1965 - 1966). The written word is to be integrated into the Living Word which dwells in the Holy Spirit in the heart of humankind. This gives Holy Scripture an extensive spiritual power. Finally we struggled with the concept of natural marriage. In the history of humankind this natural marriage always is also shaped culturally. The concept of natural marriage can imply that there is a natural form of life for humankind without any cultural imprint. We therefore suggest to write instead: “marriage, as it is based in Creation”. Read more

2015-10-14T21:34:00+00:00

Vatican City, Oct 14, 2015 / 03:34 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- Read below the full text of the report released Wednesday by the German-speaking small group at the Synod on the Family. The reports of the 13 small groups, or circoli minori, were all released Oct. 14 in their own languages: four English, three French, three Italian, two Spanish, and one German. The text below is CNA's translation of the German original:   We extensively debated the concepts – that are, again and again, considered to be opposites – of mercy and truth, of grace and justice, and their theological relationship to each other. In God, they are not opposites: because God is love, in God justice and mercy are one. God's mercy is the foundational divine truth of revelation, which is not in opposite to other divine truths of revelation. Rather, it reveals to us the deepest foundation of revelation, since it tells us, why God emptied himself in his son and why Jesus Christ through his Word and through his sacraments is present and remains for our salvation in his Church. The mercy of God through this reveals to us the reason and the goal of the entire work of Redemption. The justice of God is his mercy, with which he makes us just. We also considered what consequences this interpenetration has for how we accompany marriages and families. It precludes a one-sided, deductive hermeneutic, which subsumes concrete situations under a general principle. In the sense of Thomas Aquinas and also the Council of Trent, the application of foundational principles is expected to be applied with prudence and wisdom to each specific, often complex situation. This is not about exceptions, in which the Word of God would not apply, but about the just and proper application of the words of Jesus – for instance the words on the indissolubility of marriage – in prudence and wisdom. Thomas Aquinas illustrated this necessity of making a concrete application when he says: “to prudence belongs not only the consideration of the reason, but also the application to action, which is the end of the practical reason.“ (STh II-II 47.3: “ad prudentiam pertinet non solum consideratio rationis, sed etiam applicatio ad opus, quae est finis practicae rationis”). Another aspect of our discussion was the topic of gradually leading people to the sacrament of marriage as mentioned repeatedly in the third chapter of the second part [of the instrumentum laboris], from informal relationships to unmarried cohabiting couples to couples married by the state up to ecclesially valid, sacramental marriage. To accompany these people on the different steps pastorally, is a great pastoral responsibility, but also a joy.   It also became clear to us, that in many discussions and perceptions we think too statically and not sufficiently biographically-historically. The Church's teaching on marriage has developed and deepened historically. At first it was about humanizing marriage, which led to the conviction of monogamy. In the light of the Christian faith, the personal dignity of the marriage partners was recognized more deeply and the image of God in man perceived through the relationship of man and woman. In a further step, the ecclesiology of marriage was deepened, and marriage understood as a domestic Church. Finally the sacramental nature of marriage became fully conscious to the Church. This historical path of deepening is also today reflected in the biography of many people. They are first touched by the human dimension of marriage, they are then convinced by the Christian view of marriage in the life of the Church, and from there find their way to the celebration of a sacramental marriage. Just like the historical development of the Church's teaching on marriage took time, so the pastoral approach must give time to people to mature on their way toward sacramental marriage,  and not act according to the principle of “all or nothing”. It is here that the thought of a “dynamic process” developing (FC 9) is to be brought further towards the present, which John Paul II already expounded in Familiaris consortio: “The Church's pastoral concern will not be limited only to the Christian families closest at hand; it will extend its horizons in harmony with the Heart of Christ, and will show itself to be even more lively for families in general and for those families in particular which are in difficult or irregular situations.”  (FC 65) The Church unavoidably finds herself in a situation of tension here, between on the one hand a necessarily clear teaching on marriage and family, and on the other hand the concrete pastoral responsibility to accompany people and convince them, when their lifestyle only partly complies with the basic principles of the Church. With them, the Church must walk on the path towards a life of marriage and family in fullness as the gospel of the family promises. For this a pastoral care is required that is directed at the person, and that includes the normativity of the Church's teaching and the personhood of the human being in equal measure, keeping an eye on a person’s ability to form a conscience and strengthening their responsibility. “For man has in his heart a law written by God; to obey it is the very dignity of man; according to it he will be judged. Conscience is the most secret core and sanctuary of a man. There he is alone with God, whose voice echoes in his depths.“ (GS 16) Furthermore, we request for the final version of the text to consider two aspects: Any impression should be avoided that Holy Scripture is just used as a source of quotations for dogmatic, juridical or ethical convictions. The law of the New Testament is the work of the Holy Spirit in the heart of the faithful (cf. Catechism of the Catholic Church 1965 - 1966). The written word is to be integrated into the Living Word which dwells in the Holy Spirit in the heart of humankind. This gives Holy Scripture an extensive spiritual power. Finally we struggled with the concept of natural marriage. In the history of humankind this natural marriage always is also shaped culturally. The concept of natural marriage can imply that there is a natural form of life for humankind without any cultural imprint. We therefore suggest to write instead: “marriage, as it is based in Creation”. Read more

2015-10-14T20:03:00+00:00

Shrewsbury, England, Oct 14, 2015 / 02:03 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- The English priest St. John Plessington was among dozens martyred because of an anti-Catholic hoax in the seventeenth century. Now a diocese seeks to confirm whether remains long venerated as a martyr’s relics are his. Bishop Mark Davies of Shrewsbury praised the saint’s “faithfulness to the point of death” and his witness to priestly life and mission in the diocese. St. John Plessington was canonized in 1970 by Blessed Paul VI as one of the 40 Martyrs of England and Wales. “As one of England’s 40 martyrs he points to the long continuity of our Catholic faith and our unswerving loyalty to the See of Peter,” the bishop told the Shrewsbury Catholic Voice. “If funds could be found to identify and authenticate his relics it would allow our connection to his heroic ministry and martyrdom to become visible and tangible in a new way for generations to come.” St. John Plessington was born into a recusant family, and was ordained abroad in 1662. He returned to England to minister. In 1679 Titus Oates fabricated evidence of a Catholic conspiracy to kill King Charles II. British authorities believed the hoax and began to enforce strict Elizabethan-era laws that considered being a Catholic priest an offense of high treason. St. John Plessington was charged with being a Catholic priest, and was executed by being hanged, drawn, and quartered. He was among more than 35 Catholics executed as a result of Oate's fictitious “Popish Plot.” Before his execution, the saint wrote down his final testament. He said he was a priest and affirmed he was innocent of treason and plotting; he also said he was willing to die for his faith. Many of the saint’s bodily remains were lost after his execution in Chester, more than 40 miles north of Shrewsbury. In the late 19th century bones were discovered hidden in a pub next to St Winefride’s Well in Flintshire, a Welsh county which borders on Chester. The location was a headquarters of Jesuit missionaries, though Plessington was not a Jesuit. These bones were taken to the Jesuit retreat house of St. Beuno’s and venerated as the relics of an anonymous martyr. Bishop Davies and others hope that DNA testing of the bones can be matched with known relics, to prove they are the remains of St. John Plessington. Forensic scientists who examined the bones and said they are the skull and the right leg of a priest hanged, drawn and quartered. The skull has a hole punctured by a pike pushed through the head. The bones were found in a garment dated to the period of St. John Plessington’s execution. The Diocese of Shrewsbury is appealing for donors to fund research to confirm the identity of the remains. Read more

2015-10-14T18:31:00+00:00

Washington D.C., Oct 14, 2015 / 12:31 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- Planned Parenthood Federation of America announced on Tuesday that its affiliates will no longer accept any reimbursements for fetal tissue donations.   The change comes after a series of videos were released revealing the organization’s role in the donation of fetal tissue from aborted babies for compensation. The group behind the videos, the Center for Medical Progress, argued that the amounts of compensation were illegal, but Planned Parenthood denied that claim, stating that the accusations were part of a “discredited smear campaign.”   “This removes beyond the shadow of a doubt the ludicrous idea that Planned Parenthood has any financial interest in fetal tissue donation,” the organization’s president Cecile Richards stated.   David Daleiden of the Center for Medical Progress called the announcement an “admission of guilt.”   "If the money Planned Parenthood has been receiving for baby body parts were truly legitimate ‘reimbursement,’ why cancel it?” he responded in a statement. “This proves what CMP has been saying all along – Planned Parenthood incurs no actual costs, and the payments for harvested fetal parts have always been an extra profit margin.”   Daleiden has claimed that Planned Parenthood clinics accepted illegal amounts of compensation for fetal tissue of aborted babies they donated to harvesters. Federal law allows for the donation of fetal tissue for “reasonable” compensation, to cover the costs of shipping and handling, but not for “valuable” compensation.   The allegation of law-breaking stems from a series of investigative videos released by CMP starting in July, showing undercover conversations with Planned Parenthood officials, footage taken from inside clinic laboratories, and interviews with the head of a tissue harvesting company StemExpress, which procured tissue from Planned Parenthood clinics.    In one interview, a regional Planned Parenthood doctor said that babies were sometimes delivered at clinics before an abortion procedure could be performed, leaving open the question of whether the babies were left to die.   In a video released in September by CMP, senior Planned Parenthood officials were recorded warning that affiliates should approach the fetal tissue trade for compensation with caution.    Planned Parenthood’s senior medical advisor, Dr. Carolyn Westhoff, said it had “the potential for a huge P.R. issue,” in a conversation with an actor posing as a prospective fetal tissue buyer.    Deborah VanDerhei, national director of the Consortium of Abortion Providers at the Planned Parenthood Federation of America, said that “If they [affiliates] are going to do it, that’s fine, but we want them to think about, really, the New York Times headline.”   Richards has repeatedly responded to the allegations by claiming the organization had broken no laws in accepting compensation for fetal tissue.   Currently two House committees are investigating the organization and its practices. The House Judiciary Committee last week held a hearing on the “medical ethics” at Planned Parenthood clinics.    Susan Thayer, a former center manager at a clinic in Storm Lake, Iowa, testified that her clinic routinely overbilled Medicaid for birth control – $35 a cycle for contraceptives that cost less than $3 – and would even send the full bill to Medicaid for certain services they already partially billed patients for. Those profits from clients they described as voluntary donations.   Thayer also said that when a baby was discovered in a dumpster in her town and the local authorities requested the clinic’s medical records, the clinic used the opportunity to fundraise, claiming that the personal health information of female clients was threatened.    “Planned Parenthood is more concerned about its bottom line than about the health and safety of women,” Thayer stated before the House Judiciary Committee on Oct. 8.   Republicans have also announced that a special committee will be formed to investigate Planned Parenthood’s practices concerning abortions and fetal tissue donations.    Read more

2015-10-14T15:45:00+00:00

Vatican City, Oct 14, 2015 / 09:45 am (CNA/EWTN News).- Numerous bishops voiced alarm over the lack of a clear definition of marriage in the synod’s controversial guiding text, prompting a call for one based on scripture and Church teaching to be added. “The Instrumentum Laboris nowhere defines marriage. This is a serious defect,” group “D” of the four English-speaking circles wrote in their second report, published Wednesday. This lack of definition “causes ambiguity throughout the text,” the group wrote, suggesting a paragraph from the 1965 Second Vatican Council document “Gaudium et Spes” as a correction. The Vatican II document states that marriage between a man and a woman has “been established by the Creator and qualified by His laws, and is rooted in the conjugal covenant of irrevocable personal consent.” “By their very nature, the institution of matrimony itself and conjugal love are ordained for the procreation and education of children, and find in them their ultimate crown,” the document reads. “Thus a man and a woman, who by their compact of conjugal love ‘are no longer two, but one flesh,’ render mutual help and service to each other through an intimate union of their persons and of their actions.” Published Oct. 14, the prelate's observations came in the second round of small group reports released during this year's synod of bishops on the family. Pope Francis officially opened the 14th Ordinary General Assembly of the Synod of Bishops Sunday, Oct. 4, with the event closing on Oct. 25. The gathering is divided into three parts, with each week dedicated to one of the three sections of the instrumentum. So far the bishops have spent the first week of the meeting discussing the document’s first section, titled “Listening to the challenges of the family.” Discussion has moved onto the second part, titled “Discernment of the family vocation,” and will culminate next week with the third, “The mission of the family today.” Divided by language into 13 groups with around 20 members each, small groups are playing a larger role in this year’s synod. While the groups’ individual reports were only published once last year, they are now being published after each of the synod phases. One small group is in German, four in English, three in Spanish, two in Italian and three in French. Groups were determined by both the language of participants and the requests of the synod fathers. Group “D” of the English speaking circles – led by Cardinal Thomas Collins of Toronto and Archbishop Charles Chaput of Philadelphia – said that while the text of the synod’s guiding document has “many good insights on marriage,” it could be clearer. The part dedicated to Catholic doctrine on marriage “stretches over too many paragraphs. It needs to be brought together in a more concise, compelling way,” they said. Likewise, English speaking group “B” – led by Cardinal Vincent Nichols of Westminster and Archbishop Martin Diarmuid of Dublin – said that a “renewed and deeper reflection on the theology of marriage should be one of the fruits of the Synod.” They suggested that the reflection begin with the book of Genesis, “which already provides a definition of marriage as a unique union between a man and a woman, so total and intimate that because of it a man must leave his father and mother in order to be united with his wife.” Along with a clear definition marriage, the passage also provides the three basic qualities of marriage as it was from the beginning, they said, naming the characteristics as “monogamy, permanence, and equality of the sexes.” Many of the groups also expressed concern that the notion of marriage indissolubility was cast in a negative light, and suggested re-phrasing the paragraphs so that the concept is seen more positively, rather than “as a burden,” as group “D” put it. English speaking group “C” – headed by Archbishop Eamon Martin of Armagh and Archbishop Benedict Coleridge of Brisbane – echoed the sentiment,   underlining the need to speak about the indissolubility of marriage “as a gift from God rather than a burden.” They said the Church must find a more positive way of speaking about the topic, “so that people can fully appreciate the gift,” and stressed that while Church teaching on the issue “has been constant,” the way it is articulated has not been. Group “C” also said there is a need to express “heartfelt appreciation” for couples who are already living their marriage as a genuine vocation, and referred to their witness as “a unique service to the Church and the world.” In the reports great attention was also given to the topic of women, specifically their role in the Church and those who face violence in the home. The English group “D” said that violence against women “was a key part of the discussion,” and suggested that the instrumentum laboris “be more sensitive” to women abused either by their husbands or within their families. Other topics touched on by the groups were education and prayer within the family, specifically the importance of participating in Sunday Eucharist together. Groups also pointed to the increasing phenomenon of youth who don't marry, either out of fear or a general lack of confidence in marriage. An increase in references to scripture was also proposed, specifically passages relating to the family such as the books of Tobit, Hosea and Luke Chapters 1-2. Photo credit: www.shutterstock.com. Read more




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