The 16th annual National Catholic Prayer Breakfast is dividing Catholics along partisan lines because it will honor President Trump’s attorney general a little more than a month before the November election.
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Papal safeguarding commission meets online and in Rome
Father Zollner said the working group he belongs to, on education and formation, talked about the four webinars on safeguarding that were held over the summer and sponsored by the women’s International Union of Superiors General.
Aid making its way to flooded communities in northeastern Africa
“Tens of thousands of homes have been damaged or destroyed,” Persiana Kamberaj, head of programs for Catholic Relief Services in Khartoum, said, adding that flooding has ignited an urgent need for humanitarian aid.
Pope Francis: Coronavirus vaccine must be for everyone, not just the wealthy
Pope Francis proposed “to globalize treatment” and said all people should be given access to life-saving medicine.
Cardinal likens fading Christian presence in Middle East to a sinking ship
“We ask you, Lord, through the intercession of our Mother Virgin Mary, the star of the sea in the storm, to lead our homelands, our churches and our people to the port of safety,” Cardinal Rai pleaded.
U.S. Secretary of State Pompeo visits Catholic-run refugee center in Brazil
Pompeo visited sites aiding the Venezuelans in northern-most Roraima state, where many refugees have landed. Since 2015, more than 260,000 Venezuelans have crossed the border into Brazil.
Two Catholic women top short list as possible Supreme Court nominees
The judges are Amy Coney Barrett, a federal appellate court judge in Chicago, and Barbara Lagoa, a federal appeals court judge in Atlanta.
Breaking: Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg dies at 87
Ginsburg died at her home in Washington of complications from metastatic pancreatic cancer.
As federal fiscal year nears, refugee resettlement agencies fear the worst
Even as the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees pleaded with countries to take in more of the 79.5 million displaced people worldwide, the Trump administration has consistently lowered the refugee cap each year.
Black sisters urge U.S. Catholics, church leaders to do more to end racism
“We are holding up the light,” the sisters said, “against the sin of racism that is still alive and well in the Catholic Church today.”
