An official with Caritas Mexico, the church’s charitable arm, says the storm left a mess in parts of the dioceses serving the western states of Colima, Jalisco and Nayarit with flooding and property damage, but mostly impacted small settlements and rural areas—which were being provided with assistance from parishes diocesan collections.
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St. Louis faith, civic leaders unclear of motivation behind church fires
The arson, at St. Joseph specifically and at the churches in general, left Father Wunderlich with “question marks. I don’t know what else to say. The first question that comes to my mind is, ‘Why would anybody want to do it.’ I’m sure that’s on the mind of police officers and arson specialists. What would be the motivation for something like this?”
Peruvian-based Catholic movement pledges inquiry after claims of abuse
Allegations of abuse were described in a new book, “Mitad Monjes, Mitad Soldados” (“Half Monks, Half Priests”), by Pedro Salinas, a former member of Sodalitium Christianae Vitae, who interviewed about 30 other former members.
Bishops from around the world plead for climate change action
The appeal, addressed to negotiators preparing for the U.N. Climate Change Conference in Paris Nov. 30-Dec. 11, was a response to Pope Francis’ letter on the environment and an expression of “the anxiety of all the people, all the churches all over the world” regarding how, “unless we are careful and prudent, we are heading for disaster.”
At congressional hearing, stronger global response urged for Europe’s refugee crisis
CRS’ Sean Callahan urged Congress to consider additional funding relief along with the Middle East Refugee Emergency Supplemental Appropriations Act that will make $1 billion available to refugee aid and resettlement.
Could this Congress pass criminal-justice reform?
“We welcome this modest bipartisan first step to reform our nation’s broken criminal justice system,” Catholic leaders wrote to Congress.
U.S. bishops seek humanitarian response for migrants at the U.S. border
“If we do not respond justly and humanely to this challenge in our own backyard, then we will relinquish our moral leadership and moral influence globally.”
Significant gains for Pope Francis following September U.S. visit
Among practicing Catholics, 90 percent now say they view Pope Francis favorably, up from 83 percent in August, one month before his visit. Among all Americans, the pope’s numbers jumped from 58 percent to 74 percent.
Racial motive in string of fires at black churches?
The American Civil Liberties Union of Missouri and the Anti-Defamation League suggested a racial motive may be at play in fires set at six St. Louis-area churches. In a prepared statement, the ACLU of Missouri’s executive director, Jeffrey Mittman, called the fires “domestic terrorism.”
Vatican spokesman says claims pope has tumor ‘entirely unfounded’
After checking with the pope himself and other sources, Father Lombardi told reporters “the pope enjoys good health” and that the unsubstantiated news report was “a serious act of irresponsibility, absolutely unjustifiable and unspeakable.”
