Loading...
Loading...
Click here if you don’t see subscription options
A person walks past a memorial for victims of the London Bridge terror attacks in London, on June 6. Archbishop Peter Smith of Southwark, the archdiocese that covers London south of the River Thames, offered prayers for the victims, survivors and first responders. (CNS photo/Will Oliver, EPA)
Politics & SocietyNews
Simon Caldwell - Catholic News Service
Archbishop Peter Smith of Southwark offered prayers for the victims and survivors of the June 3 attack that claimed 7 lives and injured 48 people.
A man carries a European Union flag in London on June 24, a day after voters in the United Kingdom decided to leave the EU. (CNS photo/Neil Hall, Reuters) 
Politics & SocietyNews
Simon Caldwell - Catholic News Service
The bishops of England and Wales have put the post-Brexit future of the United Kingdom at the top of a list of priority issues for Catholic voters to consider.
Activists of the collective Yellow Safety Jacket take part in an anti-euthanasia protest on Feb. 11, 2014, in Brussels. (CNS photo/Julien Warnand, EPA)
Politics & SocietyNews
Simon Caldwell - Catholic News Service
The Brothers of Charity Group stated that it would allow doctors to perform euthanasia in any of its 15 centers, which provide care to more than 5,000 patients a year, subject to carefully stipulated criteria.
Cardinal Vincent Nichols of Westminster, England, is seen at the Vatican in this 2014 file photo. In a program to be aired on ITV, he apologized to unmarried women pressured by the church to hand over their children for adoption. (CNS photo/Paul Haring)
FaithNews
Simon Caldwell - Catholic News Service
Over three decades 500,000 British women were encouraged to give up their babies for adoption.
Syrian refugees arrive at a refugee camp in early May at the Jordan border with Syria. The Catholic Church in England and Wales has joined a government project to resettle an estimated 20,000 refugees from the Syrian war. (CNS photo/Jamal Nasrallah, EPA)
News
Simon Caldwell - Catholic News Service
A parish in the Diocese of Salford will be the first to welcome a family from a refugee camp in the Middle East as part of a sponsorship plan.
Protesters stage a sit-in at Faslane Naval Base in Helensburgh, Scotland, on April 13, 2015. (CNS photo/Joey Kelly, EPA)
News
Simon Caldwell - Catholic News Service
Bishops argue that use of the Trident weapons would result in massive and indiscriminate loss of human life.
News
Simon Caldwell - Catholic News Service
Polls show a small majority of British voters are ready to leave the EU.
News
Simon Caldwell - Catholic News Service
Cardinal Vincent Nichols of Westminster has welcomed a U-turn by the British government over the resettlement of child refugees.He said he was "very happy" with a May 4 announcement by Prime Minister David Cameron that the U.K. will accept an unspecified number of unaccompanied children wh
News
Simon Caldwell - Catholic News Service
"A voice of protest is needed," especially when the lives of children were at stake.
News
Simon Caldwell - Catholic News Service
"I visited every bedside and every victim, of whatever faith. It was truly difficult because I saw so many children...who had been wounded or killed by this terrible attack."