Paris, France, Jan 7, 2015 / 12:32 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- Pope Francis has voiced his “strongest condemnation” of the “horrible attack” on a French satirical newspaper that published insulting cartoons of Islam’s Prophet Moh... Read more
Paris, France, Jan 7, 2015 / 12:32 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- Pope Francis has voiced his “strongest condemnation” of the “horrible attack” on a French satirical newspaper that published insulting cartoons of Islam’s Prophet Moh... Read more
Krakow, Poland, Jan 7, 2015 / 11:28 am (CNA/EWTN News).- The official song for World Youth Day Krakow 2016, inspired by the theme “Blessed are the merciful,” was premiered in the Polish capital on Tuesday. The official debuting of the song took place at the conclusion of the traditional procession of the Magi to mark the Solemnity of the Epiphany. According to the WYD 2016 website, the song was composed by Jakub Blycharz, “a lawyer by education, a musician by passion.” He is the author of other liturgical compositions, including Dobry jest Pan (Good is the Lord), Bonum est praestolari (It is Good to Wait), Uczta Baranka (The Feast of the Lamb), ?wi?ta Dziewico (Oh, Holy Virgin), Amen, Godzien (Worthy) and Nie umr? (I Will Not Die). Scheduled July 25 – Aug. 1, 2016, the upcoming World Youth Day is expected to attract swarms of pilgrims from around the globe. The song for the gathering begins with words from Psalm 121 which convey “the certainty that our Merciful Lord watches over us and will fulfill his promise to be with us 'now and forever.' Already in the first verse – based on the words of the Old Testament – God is defined as merciful,” the website explains. The second verse refers to the parable of the lost sheep in the Gospel of Luke, “giving us the hope that God does not tire of seeking to bring man to the fullness of life. In this parable Jesus assures us that a sinner's conversion brings great joy to heaven.” Reflecting the fifth Beatitude, the chorus picks up the theme of World Youth Day 2016: “Blessed are the merciful, for they will receive mercy.” This is the message of World Youth Day Krakow, the city from which St. Faustina Kowalska spread the Divine Mercy devotion. The third verse is inspired by Psalm 130: “If you should mark our sins, Lord, who could stand? But in you is found forgiveness, that you may be revered.” The fourth verse speaks about salvation in Christ and the need to accept him as Redeemer and Lord, and the bridge is an invitation to have faith and trust in the Lord, who has truly risen. Cardinal Stanislaw Dziwisz of Krakow was present for the performance, along with Blycharz. The initial version of the song is sung by Katarzyna Bogusz, Alexandra Maciejewska and Przemek Kleczkowski, with a 50-voice choir and an orchestra led by Hubert Kowalski. Read more
Vatican City, Jan 7, 2015 / 05:39 am (CNA/EWTN News).- During his general audience Pope Francis lamented how mothers are often under-appreciated in their family role, and said they are key players in fighting against an individualistic, self-centered s... Read more
Amman, Jordan, Jan 7, 2015 / 04:02 am (CNA/EWTN News).- Christians lived in Iraq for nearly two thousand years, but the violent rise of the Islamic State has convinced many Christian refugees they must forever leave their homeland. “No, we wil... Read more
Amman, Jordan, Jan 7, 2015 / 04:02 am (CNA/EWTN News).- Christians lived in Iraq for nearly two thousand years, but the violent rise of the Islamic State has convinced many Christian refugees they must forever leave their homeland. “No, we wil... Read more
Philadelphia, Pa., Jan 7, 2015 / 02:08 am (CNA/EWTN News).- The Archdiocese of Philadelphia observed the feast of St. John Neumann on Monday, and celebrated the year that the city will welcome Pope Francis for the upcoming World Meeting of Families. “St. John Neumann was a humble man of God whose focus on bringing immigrant families to the Church is as important and salient today as it was in the 1850s,” Bishop John McIntyre, Auxiliary Bishop of Philadelphia, said during his homily at the Jan. 5 Mass, said at the saint's shrine. Bishop McIntyre said Mass and blessed the new atrium and time capsule of the National Shrine in North Philadelphia. During the celebration an Italian Christmas carol, ‘Tu Scendi Dalle Stelle’, was performed in honor of the Holy Father’s upcoming visit to the city. Drawing the connection between St. John Neumann and the World Meeting of Families, Bishop McIntyre noted in his homily the similarities between the saint’s legacy of Catholic education and immigration ministry with the mission of the family. “As we prepare for the World Meeting of Families, it is appropriate that St. John Neumann’s home – Philadelphia – serve as host, especially as the issues of immigration and the manifestation of faith in global cultures remain critical to families around the world,” the Bishop stated, saying that the spirit of St. John Neumann would continue to inspire the work in planning for the event. “The Holy Father embodies St. John Neumann’s inviting message to pilgrims just as the World Meeting of Families does,” Bishop McIntyre stated, saying “we look forward to welcoming upwards of 1.5 million people from various cultures and faiths to share in this faithful gathering, which will be a once-in-a-generation event for our Archdiocese, our city, and our state.” Following the celebration of Mass, Mayor Michael Nutter joined Bishop McIntyre for the blessing of the new atrium, which was read in English, Spanish, and Italian to honor the immigrant ministry of St. John Neumann. Together, the mayor and Bishop placed the flags of the U.S., Vatican City, Pennsylvania, and Argentina; students from St. Peter the Apostle School added flags from the countries whence their families had emigrated. The World Meeting of Families started in 1994 as a triennial global event, aimed to strengthen the family and emphasize the value they bring to society. Sponsored by the Pontifical Council for the Family, the World Meeting of Families has previously been held in Rome, Rio de Janerio, Manila, Valencia, Mexico City, and Milan. This year, Philadelphia will host the event in the United States for the first time, Sept. 22-27, with an official theme for the 2015 World Meeting of Families being “Love is our mission: the family fully alive.” More than 10,000 delegates from 150 countries are expected to attend the Congress of the World Meeting of Families at the Pennsylvania Convention Center. Pope Francis’ visit from Sept. 26-27 could draw over 2 million people. Read more
Lisbon, Portugal, Jan 7, 2015 / 12:00 am (CNA/EWTN News).- Pope Francis’ selection of Patriarch Manuel Macario do Nascimento Clemente of Lisbon as a new cardinal will bring to the College of Cardinals a churchman active in academics, culture and communications. Patriarch Clemente was born in Torres Vedras, a municipality north of Lisbon, on July 16, 1948. He was ordained a priest of the Patriarchate of Lisbon in 1979, and consecrated as an auxiliary bishop of the patriarchate in 2000. In 2007, Benedict XVI named him Bishop of Porto, the second-largest city in Portugal. Pope Francis appointed him Patriarch of Lisbon in May 2013, and he was installed in July of that year. He has authored several books on Church history, theology, and the Church in the contemporary world, and he has also worked with several television and radio programs. The cardinal-designate served on the Portuguese bishops’ committee on culture and social communications; he was vice-president of the Portuguese bishops’ conference from 2011 to 2013, and was elected president of the conference in 2013. He has been a member of the Pontifical Council on Social Communications since 2011. In a May 2013 speech at a European Union meeting with religious leaders, Patriarch Clemente spoke of Europe’s “great diversity” and pluralism, while also discussing “the Christian foundation of Europe” as giving Europe a “fundamental” and “innovative” feature that distinguishes between the political and religious fields. “This principle gives freedom to the state and freedom to religious belief, while acknowledging the specific order of each, as well as the desirable mutual collaboration in all that respects and serves the dignity of the citizens, believers or not,” he said, according to the Bishops’ Conferences of the European Community. The patriarch holds a doctorate in theology from the Catholic University of Portugal, where he taught as a professor and served as a member of the university’s scientific society. He was director of the Center of Studies of Religious History at the university, and he has also served as rector of Christ the King Diocesan Seminary at Olivais in Lisbon. Pope Francis will make Patriarch Clemente a cardinal at the 2015 consistory, held Feb. 14-15 at Vatican City. He will be among 20 new cardinals, and is one of the 15 new cardinals eligible to vote in a papal conclave. While the Pope named several cardinals from dioceses which have never before had a cardinal, the Patriarch of Lisbon is traditionally made a cardinal. Patriarch Clemente's predecessor, Jose Policarpo, was made a cardinal in 2001, and died last year at the age of 78. The Lisbon diocese was established in the fourth century, and in 1716 was elevated to the status of a patriarchate by Clement XI. Read more
Boston, Mass., Jan 6, 2015 / 09:07 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- A vandal’s placement of a decapitated pig’s head at a Nativity scene at a Catholic church in Massachusetts shocked locals, but they committed themselves to pray for and to forgive the perpetrator. “When it comes to who did this, or why did they do it? That's something for the police to figure out,” Bishop Robert Hennessey, an Auxiliary Bishop of Boston, said at a Dec. 27 Mass at Sacred Hearts Parish in Haverhill. “They know how to confront crime, but we know how to confront evil. That's why we gather as a Church, together, to pray.” On Christmas morning, the parish’s parochial vicar, Fr. Benjamin LeTran, discovered that the Nativity scene’s statue of the Infant Jesus had been stolen and replaced by a recently decapitated black pig’s head, the Boston Pilot reports. A woman from Haverhill, which is located 35 miles north of Boston, brought another statute of the infant Jesus to replace the stolen statue. Fr. John Delaney, Sacred Hearts' pastor, said the woman’s action was “a sign of hope” on a day of “sadness and hurt.” He said that congregants at the church came “full of love, full of forgiveness.” Fr. LeTran said he saw the Nativity scene as “a great message” of “God’s love for us, the message that Jesus brings into this world.” Bishop Hennessey said the Dec. 27 Mass, then blessed the Nativity scene. Churchgoers then sang “Silent Night.” The bishop expressed support from the Boston archdiocese and Cardinal Sean O’Malley. The vandalism drew condemnation from many. Haverhill mayor James Fiorentini said the vandalism was “an outrage” and contended it had “all the elements of a hate crime,” the Boston Globe reports. “I want to state in the strongest possible way that this does not reflect our community,” said the mayor, who is a former parishioner of the church. Ibrahim Hooper, national communications director for the Council on American-Islamic Relations, said Dec. 26 that American Muslims “stand with the Christian community in condemning this desecration of a religious display and against anyone who would target a house of worship in such an apparently hate-filled manner.” Police on Dec. 30 arrested a 54-year-old homeless woman who allegedly wrote the number “666” 15 times on another Haverhill church, La Iglesia Biblica Bautista. The Boston CBS affiliate WBIZ reports that she was carrying a large metal crucifix. She tried to hit an arresting officer with the crucifix, which police say came from Sacred Hearts Church’s Nativity scene. The woman denied placing the pig’s head in the Nativity scene, but admitted vandalizing the other church. A police detective familiar with the woman has said he believes she may have an “altered mental state” at times, according to the Boston Herald. Police are still investigating whether the woman was involved with the vandalism at the Catholic church. The woman has been ordered to undergo a 20-day psychiatric evaluation before her next court appearance. Read more
Vatican City, Jan 6, 2015 / 05:24 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- Like the Magi who followed the star from the East, Christians are called to follow the light of the Gospel attentively, tirelessly, and courageously, said Pope Francis during his Epiphany Angelus address. “The experience of the Magi evokes the journey of every man toward Christ,” the Pope said on Jan. 6 to the thousands gathered in Saint Peter's Square. Like that of the Magi, he said, our search for God also “means to walk.... staring at the sky and seeing, within the visible sign of the star, the invisible God who speaks to our hearts.” By coming to adore the Child Jesus, the Holy Father said, the Magi gave witness of His coming to earth “to save, not only one people, but all people.” For this reason, the feast of the Epiphany is an occasion for “our gaze to extend to the horizons of the entire world,” celebrating the “expression” of God's love. The Pope added that this love is for all, and not reserved for a few privileged persons. “Even those who seem far from the Lord,” he said, “are followed – even 'chased' – by His impassioned love, by his faithful love” which is “also humble.” Reflecting on the Gospel account of Magi coming from the East, the Pope observed their attentiveness to the signs which led them to their destination, as well as their tirelessness and their courage. This is the Christian life, he said: “To walk attentively, tirelessly, and courageously.” The star which guides “every man to Jesus,” Pope Francis said, is the Word of God – the “light which guides our journey, nourishes our faith, and renews it.” Pope Francis encouraged the faithful, as he has done on previous occasions, to carry a copy of the Bible with them to read and meditate upon each day. In doing so, the Word of God may become “like a flame which we carry within us to illuminate our steps, as well as [the steps] of those walking beside us, who are perhaps struggling to find the path to Christ.” The Pope extended his greeting to Eastern Christians, Catholic and Orthodox, many of whom celebrate Christmas on Jan. 7, the day after the Epiphany. The Holy Father then recalled that Jan. 6 coincides the World Day of Missionary Childhood, and encouraged “educators to cultivate in little ones a missionary spirit, in order that there may arise from among them witnesses of God's tenderness and proclaimers of the Gospel.” Before leading the crowds in the Angelus prayer, Pope Francis concluded his address, calling on the Virgin Mary to grant “her protection on the universal Church,” in order that the Gospel, which is “the light of every people,” might spread throughout the whole world. Read more
New York City, N.Y., Jan 6, 2015 / 05:15 pm (National Catholic Register).- Mario Cuomo, the three-time governor of New York who sought to justify Catholic lawmakers’ tolerance of abortion rights, died on Jan. 1; he was 82. A self-identified Catholic who quoted Thomas Aquinas, challenged Ronald Reagan’s optimistic vision of economic opportunity in America and cited Church moral doctrine as he vetoed legislation enacting the death penalty, Cuomo’s policy positions and rhetoric often resonated with his fellow believers. Cuomo served as the governor of New York from 1983 to 1995 and emerged as the standard bearer of his party’s liberal wing. But he resisted efforts to make him a candidate for president and also turned down President Bill Clinton’s proposal that he be nominated for a seat on the U.S. Supreme Court. Yet, even as the New York governor inspired intense loyalty from the Democratic Party base, he also drew criticism from Catholic and pro-life leaders for his stance on abortion, articulated in a landmark 1984 speech at the University of Notre Dame. “Approval or rejection of legal restrictions on abortion should not be the exclusive litmus test of Catholic loyalty,” Cuomo stated in his address at Notre Dame. “We should understand that whether abortion is outlawed or not, our work has barely begun: the work of creating a society where the right to life doesn’t end at the moment of birth; where an infant isn’t helped into a world that doesn’t care if it’s fed properly, housed decently, educated adequately.” Marking the news of Cuomo’s death, Cardinal Timothy Dolan of New York set aside his controversial record on abortion and offered heartfelt condolences to his family. “Although he was governor of New York long before I arrived here as archbishop, I had the pleasure of meeting and corresponding with Mario Cuomo on numerous occasions and always found him to be a keen observer of the issues facing our city, state and country,” said Cardinal Dolan in the statement released after Cuomo’s death was announced. “My prayerful condolences go out to his loving wife, Matilda, and the family. We thank them for sharing their husband and father with the city, state and nation, and we praise God for the 82 years we had him.”The 1984 Abortion Comments But Cuomo’s death did not discourage criticism of his fateful decision to justify support for abortion rights. Cuomo’s 1984 Notre Dame speech was “the single most influential statement about abortion by any Catholic figure since Roe v. Wade,” R.R. “Rusty” Reno, editor of First Things, told the Register. “With a reputation as a serious Catholic, Cuomo’s justification for abortion rights effectively ended the debate about abortion in the Democratic Party. His speech implied that no thinking Catholic concerned about the common good would object to unrestricted legal access to abortion.” Reno also suggested that Cuomo’s argument “empowered abortion-rights advocates to silence what remained of Catholic dissent in the Democratic Party. Bob Casey could be prohibited from speaking to the 1992 Democratic convention in large part because Cuomo had provided the ‘official’ Catholic Democratic pro-abortion position.” Cuomo defended his tolerance for legal abortion, in part, by arguing that Roe v. Wade secured a new consensus, and, consequently, he felt could not impose his religious beliefs on nonbelievers in clear violation of the constitutional principles he had sworn to uphold. This moral reformulation was articulated by a compelling public speaker who sought to lead his party on matters of economic justice. “He was a tenacious debater and a spellbinding speaker at a time when political oratory seemed to be shrinking to the size of the television set,” noted Cuomo’s obituary in The New York Times, which cited Cuomo’s riposte to President Reagan’s “description of America as ‘a shining city on a hill.’” “Mr. President,” said Cuomo during his keynote address at the 1984 Democratic Party Convention, “you ought to know that this nation is more a ‘tale of two cities’ than it is just a ‘shining city on a hill.’”Catholic Criticism But Cuomo’s detractors argued that the governor had adopted a selective, morally inconsistent, approach to hot-button social issues. He opposed capital punishment, despite strong support for the practice among his constituents in New York state; yet he still insisted that respect for public consensus had led him to accommodate legal abortion. Msgr. William Smith, the late moral theologian who taught at St. Joseph’s Seminary in the New York Archdiocese, identified the logical deficiency at the heart of Cuomo’s reasoning. “Human rights do not rest on consensus. Respect for the human rights of blacks, Jewish people — any minority — does not rest on consensus,” stated Msgr. Smith. “This is why we call them inalienable rights. He relied on the 15-year-old rhetoric of Planned Parenthood [that] we’re trying to impose our morality on others. The Supreme Court didn’t establish a consensus; it destroyed one.” In 1984, then-Archbishop John O’Connor of New York challenged Cuomo’s stance. “You have to uphold the law, the Constitution says,” said Archbishop O’Connor. “It does not say that you must agree with the law or that you cannot work to change the law.” Msgr. Smith and Archbishop O’Connor’s critiques are cited in an article by George Marlin, “John Cardinal O’Connor, Mario Cuomo, Religion v. Politics,” published in the fall 2014 issue of The Human Life Review, a leading pro-life journal. Maria Maffucci, the editor of The Human Life Review, expressed a measure of unease that the journal’s print issue, with Marlin’s article, was released at the time of Cuomo’s death, though the article was posted online in September 2014. “I don’t wish him ill at all,” Maffucci told the Register. “But his legacy in this area has been a dangerous one” for the unborn. Different Strategy Today Marlin’s article concludes with the observation that the head-turning exchange between Cuomo and Archbishop O’Connor was less likely to be repeated today, with Church officials often choosing a different strategy for responding to statements by self-identified Catholic politicians who back abortion rights. Last year, for example, when Mario Cuomo’s son, Andrew Cuomo, the present New York governor, attacked pro-lifers during a radio interview as “extreme conservatives” who “have no place in New York state,” Cardinal Dolan chose to respond indirectly. The passionate, but respectful, debate between Mario Cuomo and Cardinal O’Connor is “almost quaint,” compared with the contemporary low standard of discourse in the public square, said The Human Life Review’s Maffucci, who observed that Andrew Cuomo chose to demonize the pro-life community rather than engage its arguments. In truth, Mario Cuomo’s brand of public Catholicism marked the growing chasm between Church doctrine and cultural values in American society. And perhaps for that reason Catholic leaders see his 1984 address at Notre Dame as a critical moment in the history of Catholicism in the United States. If Cuomo, as the liberal standard bearer of his party, had made the defense of the unborn intrinsic to his vision of social justice, the partisan divide on abortion might well be different. But Catholic thinkers also acknowledge that the logic of Cuomo’s “personally opposed, but” argument was anchored in the legacy of the nation’s first Catholic president, John F. Kennedy, who vowed in a campaign speech that he would not allow his faith to dictate his policy positions. “The Kennedy compromise seemed to work pretty well, as long as the ‘religious pressures’ faced by Catholic elected officials involved issues like divorce, federal aid to Catholic schools or diplomatic relations with the Holy See,” observed then-Archbishop Charles Chaput of Denver in a 2004 column. “Each of these issues was important, surely, but none involved life and death. None was jugular.” Roe v. Wade introduced a new reality that forced Catholic lawmakers to navigate American politics more cautiously, with repercussions for the politicians and their party. Summarizing the message of the “Kennedy-Cuomo legacy,” Archbishop Chaput explained it this way: “It’s okay to be Catholic in public service as long as you’re willing to jettison what’s inconveniently ‘Catholic.’" Read more
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