The second of two talks on the complementary nature of men and women
News
Illinois Bishop Braxton Frames Approach on U.S. Racial Divide
Catholics asked to try to better understand the everyday issues faced by nonwhites.
Cardinal George Touched Nation, World with His Intellect, Leadership
To say that Cardinal Francis E. George was an intellectual would be an understatement. To try to quantify his impact on the Catholic Church in the United States and in the world would be an underestimation."He's the closest thing in recent American church history to what you would think of
Pope Francis: Church is Made of Martyrs
“The blood of our Christian brothers and sisters is a testimony which cries out to be heard by everyone who can still distinguish between good and evil.”
Pope Francis Accepts Resignation of Kansas City’s Bishop Finn
Pope Francis has accepted the resignation of Bishop Robert W. Finn of Kansas City-St. Joseph, Missouri, who was convicted in 2012 on one misdemeanor count of failing to report suspected child abuse.The Vatican announced the bishop's resignation April 21, specifying it was under the terms of the
Catholics in South Africa Urge End to Xenophobia Violence
The Catholic Church in South Africa has called on faith and other communities to use their influence to stop xenophobic violence and urged help for its victims.Attacks on foreign nationals have left at least seven people dead, more than 5,000 displaced, and shops looted and razed. They started in Du
World Remains Silent About Bishops Missing in Syria
Commemorating the second anniversary of the kidnapping of two Syrian bishops, the Greek Orthodox patriarch lamented the indifference of the international community about their fate."We hope that the bishops are alive, but unfortunately the world is silent and nobody has provided physical eviden
Supreme Court Order Temporarily Stops Contraception Mandate at Two Dioceses
Pittsburg bishop calls stay “a welcome but interim step” in pursuit of religious freedom
Half of U.S. States Consider ‘Right-to-Die’ Legislation
More than a dozen states, plus the District of Columbia, are considering controversial medically assisted death legislation this year.The laws would allow mentally fit, terminally ill patients age 18 and older, whose doctors say they have six months or less to live, to request lethal drugs.Oregon wa
Parents of Martin Richard Want Life for Boston bomber
Their 8-year-old boy killed in the Boston Marathon bombings of April 2013.
