2014-08-28T06:02:00+00:00

Rome, Italy, Aug 28, 2014 / 12:02 am (CNA/EWTN News).- Reacting to an internet campaign launched by ISIS threatening the life of U.S. journalist Steven Sotloff, Catholic leaders stressed that evil is not the final verdict and encouraged faithful to adhere to Christ. “We oppose the genocide with the beauty of witness. In front of the superficiality of political leaders we propose actions, petitions, to invoke popular commitment to the chaotic succession of news we are striving to pray for ourselves, for the whole world,” Luca Volonte, president and founder of Catholic organization Novae Terrae, told CNA Aug. 26. “The world and reality, even the most terrible, changes from our adherence to Christ. This certainty must always accompany us,” he said, “especially in the 'vast sea' of the mass media and social network, above all now that this 'sea' is plagued by terrible corsairs and pirates.” According to New York-based news agency Vocativ, the hashtag “#StevensHeadInObamasHands” was issued by ISIS over the weekend, and is part of a calculated campaign that was launched in Arabic in an online forum called al-Manbar, where ISIS affiliates often post publications and instructions. A directive for the campaign appeared Sunday morning at 7 a.m. Eastern time, dictating that it be launched exactly one hour later. Through the social media initiative ISIS has rallied their supporters on Twitter and Facebook to both create public pressure on president Obama and to instill fear in the American public until their demands are met. Coming just one week after the chilling video entitled “A Message to America” was posted to YouTube showing the beheading of American journalist James Foley, the campaign follows a threat made to President Obama at the end of the video, stating that “his next move” would decide Sotloff's fate. “From our point of view as Christians, I think that we have a dual duty,” Volonte observed, explaining that “The first is to inform, to verify the sources with particular attention in these cases.” “The second, as always for us Christians and Catholics in particular, is to not determine ourselves by evil.” Volonte went on to emphasize how atrocities such as this campaign, which are “a sign of absolute evil,” can't be “the only news because also thanks to it we must search for the beautiful and true, in this case of the humble and heroic martyrdom of Christians in Iraq.” “The news, even the most terrible that comes to us and affects us through the internet or social media, should be for us an occasion to propose the good, true and beautiful.” Kidnapped in Aleppo last year, the 31-year-old Sotloff wrote for several publications, including Time and Foreign Policy. He had been unaccounted for until his appearance in the final seconds of the video portraying Foley's execution last week. Vocativ reports that in one forum post ISIS provided 13 pre-formulated phrases for their non-English speakers to be published and tweeted using the #StevensHeadInObamasHands hashtag, and offered a variety of images relating to the threat. Tweets for the campaign are frequently cross-tagged with other popular hashtags so that they pop up in conversations happening in certain demographics, the agency states. As an example, the agency cited numerous images they saw where the hashtag appeared alongside others relating to this weekend's earthquake in California, as well as others tagged with #AskRicky, which often refers to teen YouTube star Ricky Dillon – who has over 1.6 million YouTube followers and similar numbers on Twitter and Instagram. Speaking on the jihadist's use of social media to promote their terror campaign, Benjamin Harnwell, founder of the Catholic Dignitatis Humanae Institute, prayed for Sotloff's “safe delivery.” He told CNA Aug. 26 that “Sadly his name currently stands to be associated with the first case of terrorism being waged through the new 'social media.'” “Not the actual terrorism in itself, but the most insidious part of it: the threat of violence. Hashtags deployed as paramilitary warfare.” Social media outlets aid the terrorists' agenda “the same way as a dry haystack lends itself to a flame,” he said, due to their immediacy, anonymity and their “potential for instantaneous exponential multiplication of communication.” “But there is no reason this transmission must all be one way. Those who value liberty can have the resolve to use their 'silent majority' status to be a little less silent.” The same social media sites being used to promote the gruesome campaign can also be employed “to lobby those in government to affirm their resolve in never appeasing terrorism,” Harnwell said. “My belief is that even if some dynamics of contemporary terrorism have adapted, the accidentals, if I can put it like that; the underlying substance remains the grubby same, and therefore our response in the face of the threat of violence must be what it has always been. We do not negotiate with terrorists.” Although it’s not certain what the exact ransom or actions ISIS is asking for in return for sparing Sotloff’s life are, it is thought the group is seeking the suspension of U.S. airstrikes against ISIS in Iraq, as well as the payment of several million dollars and the release of numerous high-profile prisoners.Alan Holdren and Andrea Gagliarducci contributed to this report. Read more

2014-08-28T02:02:00+00:00

Roswell, Ga., Aug 27, 2014 / 08:02 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- The evangelization group Catholics Come Home is set to premiere a 13-episode television series that fosters engagement in the “New Evangelization” and interviews people who have recent... Read more

2014-08-27T23:20:00+00:00

Rome, Italy, Aug 27, 2014 / 05:20 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- Bishop William Shomali of Jerusalem hopes the new indefinite ceasefire in Gaza will hold, cautioning that victory cannot come from violence and that compromise is vital on both sides for it to last. “This time we are much more hopeful for one important reason: no one is victorious after two months. Two are losers I believe, no one is victorious even if someone says 'I won.' No one won,” Bishop Shomali, auxiliary bishop of the Latin Patriarchate of Jerusalem, told CNA Aug. 27. Each has “finally understood that no one can destroy the other” and that “there is a need for a compromise” as well as “a comprehensive solution to the problem,” he said. The long-term ceasefire between Israel and Palestinian militants in the Gaza Strip was negotiated by Egypt, and took effect at 7 p.m. (4 p.m. GMT) Tuesday, ending seven weeks of fighting which has left more than 2,200 people dead, most of them Palestinians. According BBC News, Palestinian officials stated that the ceasefire proposal called for an indefinite end to hostilities, an immediate opening of Gaza's access to Israel and Egypt, and an extension of the area’s Mediterranean fishing zone. The agency reports that immediately Israel is to end its blockade of Gaza in order to allow aid and building materials in. Further discussion on issues of greater tension, such as Israel's call for a disarming of militant groups in Gaza, and the release of Hamas prisoners in the West Bank, are set to begin in Cairo within a month. Israel originally launched their Operation Protective Edge July 8 with the stated goal of ending rocket fire from Hamas. To date, at least 2,140 people, most of them civilians, have been killed in Gaza, BBC reports, while 11,000 have been injured. U.N. officials state that more than 17,000 buildings in the area have either been destroyed or severely damaged, and that there are at least 475,000 internally displaced persons (IDPs), which is over a quarter of the territory's population. Of all the needs Gaza citizens are currently facing after 50 days of intense fighting, Bishop Shomali explained that “The greatest need is humanitarian. Medical needs for the wounded, hospitals which are overcrowded.” “There is also the need for food nourishing these people” and “in the future we need special psychological treatment for traumatized children.” Currently the situation “is difficult because of the big number of victims,” he said, stating that “Many, many homes were destroyed, many families lost everything; their house, maybe they lost their dear ones in the house. It’s tragic.” Explaining how patriarchate opened their schools to those seeking shelter and fleeing from the ongoing attacks, Bishop Shomali noted that at least 1,000 people sought refuge there. Now they are preparing for a new academic year, but there is a lot of work to do in restoring the schools after the presence of so many who were homeless. “We have to refurnish it, paint it, renew the windows and the doors. It’s been a mess,” he said, revealing that they will also “dispensate” families “from paying any fees because they have no money. So we take care of all of the scholarships of the students, this is a big amount.” Noting how the Holy See has been helping relief efforts through numerous Catholic aid organizations such as Caritas Jerusalem and Catholic Relief Services, the bishop explained that “we thank the Holy See because they are very aware of the situation.” “The Holy Father was very close to us, very close to the parish priest of Gaza, so we are really consoled by the proximity of the Catholic Church with us.” Read more

2014-08-27T22:04:00+00:00

Vatican City, Aug 27, 2014 / 04:04 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- A South Korea-based U.S. missionary who frequently crosses the border to North Korea to bring medicine and support says that Pope Francis' visit advanced efforts to heal a divided country.   Father Gerard Hammond, an 81-year-old Maryknoll missionary, has lived in South Korea since 1960 and has made 51 trips to North Korea since 1995. His mission: to stop deaths from Multi-Drug Resistant Tuberculosis in North Korea.   “Due to do the security laws in South Korea, it is very difficult to send humanitarian aid to North Korea without the agreement of the Ministry of Reunification,” the priest told CNA.   Fr. Hammond can enter North Korea thanks to the Eugene Bell Foundation, a U.S.-based organization allowed admission to enter the country to give humanitarian aid, which includes a “slot” for Catholic missionaries. The latest trip took place this spring from Apr. 21-May 6.   Their work is well-known in the Vatican, and Pope Francis had been informed about them.   “He met each one of the 14 Maryknollers in our Seoul House. When Pope Francis met me, he spoke two words, 'North Korea-tuberculosis' and squeezed my arm,” Fr. Hammond recounted.   He stressed that “the visit of our Holy Father was a great blessing for all of us especially for the Korean people that have suffered so much. His visit left a tremendous impression on all Koreans, Catholic and non-Catholic.”   “Now we have to implement the challenge to heal a divided country, society and church,” he said. “I hope the visit of the Holy Father to be the spark for the beginning a move toward Peace on the Peninsula and for Reconciliation for the peoples of North and South Korea.”   Fr. Hammond will return to North Korea for a trip this fall from Oct. 13-Nov. 4, saying that “there is no shortage of places and people that need help, whether it is through medicine, diagnostic machines, or other critical supplies.”   Until now, “we delivered medical supplies to patients in 12 treatment centers. Starting early in the morning, we work ceaselessly to make sure all the patients waiting at each center could be tested and we could enroll as many new people as possible.”   Fr. Hammond explained CNA that the missionaries are able to use six Gene X-perts – state-of-the-art medical devices “that allow us to diagnose Multi Drug Resistant Tuberculosis within 2 hours and deliver medicine to critically-ill patients without having to wait 6 months until our next trip.” “On each trip we treat a 1,000 Multi Drug Resistant tubercolosis patients.”   Until now, the missionaries have cured more than 70 percent of their patients, compared with a worldwide cure rate of only 48 percent.   Fr. Hammond recounted that “for the past few years, we have been providing nutritional assistance to patients to supplement their diet and aid in their quick recovery.”   “Patients receiving nutritional assistance have gained weight, energy, and are better prepared to finish their difficult multi-drug resistant treatment.”   He said he has been “happy to see patients who once had difficulty just holding up their boxes of medicine now happily talking about how they had put on extra pounds.” For the majority of patients in North Korea who have been “suffering for years” from the condition, “there is no option for treatment” and “reliable testing for MDR-TB is not yet widely available.”   “For the sake of the unreached people of North Korea, we must keep fighting to bring medicine,” Fr. Hammond said. Read more

2014-08-27T19:38:00+00:00

Mobile, Ala., Aug 27, 2014 / 01:38 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- A student group at the University of South Alabama is challenging the university administration after being told its pro-life display must be limited to the school’s small “speech zone... Read more

2014-08-27T17:48:00+00:00

Orlando, Fla., Aug 27, 2014 / 11:48 am (CNA/EWTN News).- Amidst increasing violent religious persecution in the Middle East and Africa, it is vital for Christians in the U.S. to remain on guard of their own freedoms, said Archbishop William Lori of Baltimore. “I'm not given to apocalyptic predictions, but I do believe that we have to be vigilant,” Archbishop Lori said. “It's easy to see that the threats to religious liberty in the West are starting to constrict religion more and more.” Archbishop Lori serves as chairman of the U.S. bishop conference's ad hoc committee on religious freedom as well as the supreme chaplain of the Knights of Columbus. He spoke with CNA in early August at the Knights of Columbus Supreme Convention in Florida. There are two main challenges in regards to religious freedom in the United States, he said, and the first is the increasingly popular view of seeing religion as a purely private affair. “(Religion is seen) as reducible simply and solely to freedom of worship, the sentiment that as long as you're in church, do what you want, but don't think about bringing religious values into public, into your place of work, into the political discussion,” he said. This “freedom of worship” mentality is the root of the problem of religious freedom in the West, the archbishop said, and the other major challenge is the diminished view of the human person. “One's relationship with God and with the faith is thought to be a limitation, is thought to be a sort of an imposition of the human person,” he explained, “and that in order to be free, you need to be free of God and free of religion, therefore religious freedom in society is no longer a value.” These root problems then take on many forms, from federal and state mandates restricting conscience rights regarding contraception to various threats posed by “gay marriage” advances, he said. The importance of being vigilant and aware of potential domestic religious persecution can be difficult to see when it takes on a much more violent and visible form in other countries, he acknowledged. “It’s a hard sell,” the archbishop said, “because churches are open here, Catholic Charities is functioning, nobody’s being imprisoned, so people will say, 'Where's the problem here?'” But although there has been little to no physical violence in the West, the problems facing religious freedom here are no less real, he said. “The threats are more subtle (in the West), many people don’t even perceive them, they happen bureaucratically, or legislatively, or judicially,” he said. “Whereas in other parts of the world…it’s bloody, violent, overt, but in both cases it’s a denial of the rights of conscience, it’s a denial of the fundamental freedom to relate to one’s own God.” “We have to keep the flame of faith and freedom alive as an act of solidarity with those who are suffering so terribly around the world.”   Read more

2014-08-27T16:13:00+00:00

San Diego, Calif., Aug 27, 2014 / 10:13 am (CNA/EWTN News).- The Diocese of San Diego has announced that Bishop Cirilo Flores is now being treated for prostate cancer, as he continues dealing with effects of a stroke that occurred four months ago. &... Read more

2014-08-27T11:04:00+00:00

Vatican City, Aug 27, 2014 / 05:04 am (CNA/EWTN News).- During his weekly general audience Pope Francis spoke on the unity and holiness of the Church, stating that despite the fact we are sinners, we are called to live as a community centered on Christ. “In a Christian community division is one of the most serious sins, because it does not allow God to act,” the Pope said in his Aug. 27 general audience address. “What God wants is that we be welcoming, that we forgive and love each other so as to become more and more like Him, who is communion and love.” Addressing the thousands of pilgrims gathered in St. Peter’s Square, the Roman Pontiff explained that as Catholics “we affirm in the Creed that the Church is one and that she is holy.” “One because she has her origin in the Triune God, mystery of unity and full communion. Holy since she is founded by Jesus Christ, enlivened by his Holy Spirit, and filled with his love and salvation.” We continue to refer to the Church as “one” and “holy” despite the fact that “we know by experience that it is also composed of sinners and that there is no shortage of divisions,” he said, recalling how the night before he was arrested Jesus “asked for the unity of his disciples: ‘that all be one.’” “We trust in his desire that unity will be one of the characteristic features of our community,” the Pope continued, noting that “While we, the members of the Church, are sinners, the unity and holiness of the Church arise from God and call us daily to conversion.” Observing how “We have an intercessor in Jesus, who prays…for our unity with him and the Father, and with each other,” the Bishop of Rome drew attention to the sins that often cause division. “Sins against unity are not only schisms,” he said, “but also the most common weeds of our communities: envies, jealousies, antipathies...talking bad about others. This is human, but it is not Christian.” These sins “which occur even in our parish communities,” Pope Francis continued, “come about when we place ourselves at the center.” “God’s will, however, is that we grow in our capacity to welcome one another, to forgive and to love, and to resemble Jesus.” Explaining how “It's the devil who separates, destroys relationships, sows prejudices,” the Pope affirmed that “the holiness of the Church” is “to recognize the image of God in one another.” “The holiness of the Church consists of this: reproducing the image of God, rich in mercy and grace.” Concluding his address, the Roman Pontiff prayed that all might “examine our consciences and ask forgiveness for the times when we have given rise to division or misunderstanding in our communities, and may our relationships mirror more beautifully and joyfully the unity of Jesus and the Father.” Following his reflections Pope Francis greeted groups of pilgrims present from around the world, giving special notice to several Cuban bishops who have come for the enthronement of the Virgin of Charity of Cobre, patroness of Cuba, in the Vatican Gardens tomorrow. “I greet with affection all of the bishops from Cuba, who came to Rome for this occasion,” he said, “while at the same time I ask you to convey my closeness and blessing to all of the Cuban faithful.” Read more

2014-08-27T10:10:00+00:00

Vatican City, Aug 27, 2014 / 04:10 am (CNA/EWTN News).- The international community must view suffering Iraqi refugees not as a collective group, but as individual persons, each with his or her own story and needs, the Pope’s envoy to the country... Read more

2014-08-27T08:01:00+00:00

Denver, Colo., Aug 27, 2014 / 02:01 am (CNA).- The release of the complete adult faith formation series “Symbolon: the Catholic Faith Explained” hopes to offer a profound way of encountering the truths of the Catholic Church. “Symb... Read more




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