Friday, April 26, 2024

Saturday Saint of the Day

 

St. Zita




Zita (1218-1272) + Servant and miracle worker. Born at Monte Sagrati, Italy, she entered into the service of the Fratinelli family, wool dealers in Lucca, at the age of twelve. Immediately disliked by the other servants for her hard work and obvious goodness, she earned their special enmity because of her habit of giving away food and clothing to the poor including those of her employers. In time, she won over the members of the household. According to one tradition, the other servants were convinced when one day they found an angel taking Zita's place in baking and cleaning. Throughout her life she labored on behalf of the poor and suffering as well as criminals languishing in prisons. She was also credited with a variety of miracles. Canonized in 1696, she is the patroness of servants and is depicted in art with a bag and keys, or loaves of bread and a rosary. Feast day: April 27.

Fox News host, a Catholic, slams the Pope for his CBS interview

 

Pope Francis Slammed by Fox News Host: 'Churches Are Empty'

Story by Ewan Palmer




Fox News host has attacked Pope Francis after the pontiff called out climate change deniers during a television interview.

Rachel Campos-Duffy, co-host of Fox & Friends Weekend, questioned why Pope Francis discussed climate change during an interview with CBS News when "churches are empty."

During the exclusive interview with CBS Evening News anchor Norah O'Donnell, his first with a U.S. TV network, Pope Francis hit out at "foolish" climate change deniers who don't believe the evidence for human-caused global warming.

"There are people who are foolish and foolish even if you show them research, they don't believe it," he said. "Why? They don't understand the situation or because of their interest, but climate change exists."

In a post on X, formerly Twitter, Campos-Duffy suggested there are more pressing issues that the leader of the Catholic Church should have discussed.

"Pope Francis used 1st US TV interview to talk climate change??!! I am in Italy now. The churches are empty (Mass attendance WAY down under his papacy) & I rarely see children in Italy," Campos-Duffy wrote. "Birth rate collapsing. Woke Francis has failed the Church."

The Vatican's press office has been contacted for comment via email.

Pope Francis has frequently spoken out about the dangers of climate change.

In an April 22 social media post to correspond with Earth Day, the official Pope Francis X account wrote: "Our generation has bequeathed many riches, but we have failed to protect the planet and we are not safeguarding peace. We are called to become artisans and caretakers of our common home, the Earth which is 'falling into ruin.'"

Elsewhere during his CBS News interview, Pope Francis called for worldwide peace amid ongoing wars in Ukraine and Gaza.

"Please. Countries at war, all of them, stop the war. Look to negotiate. Look for peace," the pope said via a translator.

Pope Francis added that Palestinians are suffering from "horrifying levels of hunger and suffering" amid Israel's war on the militant group Hamas, while noting children in Ukraine are also suffering amid Russia's invasion.

"Those kids don't know how to smile," the pope said. "I tell them something, but they forgot how to smile. And this is very hard when a child forgets to smile. That's really very serious. Very serious."

Pope Francis also had a message for those who say they cannot see a place in the Catholic Church for themselves anymore.

"I would say that there is always a place, always. If in this parish the priest doesn't seem welcoming, I understand, but go and look elsewhere, there is always a place," he said. "Do not run away from the Church. The Church is very big. It's more than a temple…you shouldn't run away from her."

An extended version of CBS News' interview with Pope Francis will be broadcast on 60 Minutes on Sunday, May 19, at 7 p.m. ET.

Robert F Kennedy Jr on EWTN discusses Catholic faith, and his campaign to be President

 

Robert F. Kennedy Jr. talks Catholic faith, abortion, Title IX in exclusive EWTN interview

Robert F. Kennedy Jr. opened up to veteran EWTN News anchorman Raymond Arroyo about his family’s strong faith growing up, how his faith helped him overcome drug addiction and how it impacts him in his day-to-day life in the travails of U.S. presidential politics. | Credit: EWTN News "The World Over with Raymond Arroyo" / Screenshot

Independent presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. discussed the importance of his Catholic faith in his daily life, his plan to reduce abortions without federal restrictions, and his opposition to biological males playing in women’s sports during an exclusive interview on “The World Over with Raymond Arroyo” Thursday night.

Kennedy, son of the late Sen. Robert F. Kennedy and nephew of former President John F. Kennedy, is running a vigorous independent campaign to be the next president of the United States. He launched an independent bid for the White House last October after initially challenging incumbent President Joe Biden for the Democratic presidential nomination.

In the interview, the presidential hopeful opened up about his family’s strong faith growing up, how his faith helped him overcome drug addiction, and how it impacts him in his day-to-day life.

“The centerpiece of our lives [growing up] was Catholicism,” Kennedy told Arroyo.

“We said the rosary at least once a day, oftentimes three times a day,” Kennedy said. “We prayed before and after every [meal]. We read the Bible every night. We read the lives of the saints. We went to church, sometimes twice a day. We would go to the 7 o’clock Mass and 8 o’clock Mass in the summers. It was our whole family, and it was really our whole community. It was part of me growing up.”

At age 15, following his father’s assassination, Kennedy expressed that he struggled with his faith. He became addicted to drugs, including heroin, until he was 28 years old.

“During that period of time, I wouldn’t say I lost my faith, but when you’re living against conscience, which you have to do if you’re addicted to drugs, you push God out over the periphery of your horizon,” Kennedy said. “So the concept of God was, although it never was erased from me, it was just a distant concept that was not part of my day-to-day life.”

He credits “a profound spiritual realignment” for his recovery from addiction in early adulthood, which he said has been “the centerpiece of my life ever since.” 

“I had a spiritual awakening very early in my recovery, which I was lucky about because I no longer had to struggle with the compulsion to take drugs,” Kennedy explained. “That was lifted away from me. But you can’t live off the laurels of a spiritual awakening. You have to renew it every day, and you renew it through service to other people.”

He said his faith gives him peace in the midst of the storms of life and cited his favorite saints, specifically St. Francis and St. Augustine.

Reducing abortions without federal restrictions

On the issue of abortion, Kennedy said his family has been divided on the issue and that he does not see himself as a “doctrinaire on either side.”

Kennedy said he disagrees with former President Donald Trump’s plan to leave abortion policies up to the states. Although he acknowledged that “every abortion is a tragedy,” he said decisions “should be up to the mother” and that he does not “trust government officials and bureaucrats” to be involved in the issue.

Rather than implementing restrictions on abortion, Kennedy has proposed a plan to subsidize day care “to make sure that no American mother ever has an abortion of a child that she wants to bring to term because she’s worried about her financial capacity to raise that child.”

“I would like to maximize choice but also minimize the number of abortions that occur every year,” Kennedy said.

The presidential hopeful also said he would not reverse the Biden administration’s approval of expanding access to the abortion pill in stores like CVS and Walgreens. However, he added that “we ought to know what the side effects are, what the risks are, [and] what the benefits [are].”

Opposing biological males in women’s sports

Kennedy said he disagrees with the Biden administration’s recent change to Title IX, which interprets sex discrimination as including discrimination of “gender identity.”

He is opposed to biological males who identify as women being allowed to participate in women’s sports. “I don’t think it’s fair if a boy can walk off a neighboring playing field and say, I’m a girl now, and I’m going to take that spot that you worked for,” the candidate said. “I think we all need to respect people who have sexual differences and protect them, but I don’t believe that people who were born men ought to be able to compete in consequential sports.”

The 2024 presidential election

At this juncture, Kennedy is polling well behind Biden and Trump but has stronger poll numbers than any independent or third-party candidate since Ross Perot in 1992. A compilation of polls from RealClearPolling currently puts him at just under 12%. 

“All we need to do is to get to 33% to win the election,” Kennedy said in the interview. “You don’t need 50%. It’s a three-way race. It’s really a five-way race. All I need is to get to 33%, and I’m close to that in a bunch of states.”

The election is on Tuesday, Nov. 5.

Search warrant executed at the offices of the Archdiocese of New Orleans

 Louisiana State Police Execute Search Warrant At New Orleans Archdiocese For Records On Abuse Handling


New Orleans Archbishop Gregory M. Aymond speaks at St. Louis Cathedral in this file photo dated Feb. 17, 2021. The Archdiocese of New Orleans was ordered by a court April 22, 2024, to turn over years' worth of records on clerical sexual abuse to the Louisiana State Police, part of a widening investigation into how the archdiocese has handled allegations of clerical sex abuse.(OSV News photo/Jonathan Bachman, Reuters)


(OSV News) — Louisiana State Police executed a search warrant on the Archdiocese of New Orleans April 25 for documents related to a widening investigation into how the archdiocese has handled allegations of clerical sex abuse.

Louisiana State Police Trooper Jacob Pucheu, public information officer, told OSV News by email that the search took place “during a meeting with representatives and counsel for the Archdiocese of New Orleans” and the state police’s special victims unit investigators.

“The Archdiocese is actively cooperating with investigators and the terms of the search warrant,” said Pucheu in his statement. “This investigation remains ongoing, and there is no additional information available at this time.”

The Archdiocese of New Orleans had been ordered by a New Orleans criminal court to turn over the records, as part of a long-running criminal investigation involving multiple accused priests.

According to The Guardian, New Orleans Magistrate Juana M. Lombard signed off on the order April 22, allowing Louisiana State Police to obtain from the archdiocese files identifying all priests and permanent deacons who had been accused of sexual abuse with minors.

In addition, the archdiocese was required to account for the dates of initial complaints, and to specify whether any cases had been handed over to the police, said The Guardian, citing “multiple sources with direct knowledge of the matter.”

The newspaper also said that police have requested “copies of all communications” among New Orleans Archbishop Gregory M. Aymond and “his aides, as well as their superiors at the Vatican” regarding abuse.

A spokesperson with the archdiocese told OSV News in an email that “as always, the Archdiocese will continue to cooperate in all law enforcement investigations.”

Pucheu told OSV News by email that the request marked an expansion of the investigation into retired New Orleans priest Msgr. Lawrence Hecker.

State troopers provided a sworn statement to Lombard April 22 stating they suspected the archdiocese knew about, but failed to properly report, widespread abuse. Lombard’s order, a copy of which OSV News has requested, did not name any archdiocesan officials — including Archbishop Aymond — as being under criminal investigation, according to The Guardian.

The 92-year-old Msgr. Hecker was indicted by a grand jury in September 2023 for aggravated rape, aggravated kidnapping, aggravated crime against nature and theft. According to New Orleans Police Department reports, Msgr. Hecker raped and kidnapped a victim, who was not named, between Jan. 1, 1975, and Dec. 31, 1976.

A team of forensic psychiatrists recently said the 92-year-old priest is unfit to stand trial due to short-term memory loss, according to The Guardian, citing a report reviewed by its team and local television station WWL.

In response to an OSV News inquiry at the time of Hecker’s arrest, the Archdiocese of New Orleans said in a statement that Msgr. Hecker “has not had priestly faculties since 2002,” and that he was “included on the list of clergy removed from ministry for abuse of a minor in 2018.”

The archdiocese also told OSV News at the time that it had “reported Lawrence Hecker to law enforcement authorities in different jurisdictions multiple times since 2002,” and had “fully cooperated and will continue to cooperate with any law enforcement investigation” into the retired priest.

Pucheu told OSV News that in 2022 the Louisiana State Police Bureau of Investigations Special Victims Unit had “initiated an investigation into the Archdiocese of New Orleans following numerous complaints of child sexual abuse.

“Since the inception of the investigation, investigators have executed a search warrant and arrested former Priest, Lawrence Hecker,” said Pucheu. “As part of the ongoing investigation, on Monday, April 22, 2024, SVU investigators obtained an additional search warrant to collect information and documents from the Archdiocese of New Orleans.”

Pucheu noted that the archdiocese “is cooperating with investigators to fulfill the terms of the search warrant,” adding, “This investigation remains ongoing with no further information available at this time.”

In a 1999 statement made to the archdiocese, Msgr. Hecker himself had acknowledged committing “overtly sexual acts” with at least three underage boys in the late 1960s and 1970s. He also confessed to having close relationships with four other boys into the 1980s.

In August 2023, The Guardian and WWL conducted a surprise interview with Msgr. Hecker at his apartment complex, with the disheveled-looking priest chalking his abuse up to the sexually permissive behavior of the time.

A few weeks later, during a brief Aug. 24, 2023, phone call with OSV News, Msgr. Hecker denied his admission of abuse.

“Things get twisted around,” he said before hanging up.

However, in January, prosecutors said that Msgr. Hecker had admitted under oath that he views child pornography.

Gina Christian is a multimedia reporter for OSV News. Follow her on X (formerly Twitter) at @GinaJesseReina.

Reflecting back on the canonization of Sts. John XXIII and John Paul II

 

The images of John Paul II and John XXIII hanging from the facade of St Peter's during the canonization Mass in 2014The images of John Paul II and John XXIII hanging from the facade of St Peter's during the canonization Mass in 2014 

John XXIII and John Paul II: Pastors in the midst of the people

Ten years ago, Pope Francis canonized Pope John XXIII and Pope John Paul II during Mass in St Peter’s Square. Living in times of great historical upheaval, the beloved pontiffs bore witness to the hope and joy that comes from an encounter with Jesus.

By Alessandro Gisotti

Who are the saints? First of all, they are not “supermen”, as Francis has so often reminded us. Yet in the collective imagination, even of non-believers, holiness is synonymous with exceptionality. If your name is on the calendar – one could say facetiously – it is certainly due to a life lived in an extraordinary way.

Pope Francis, however, speaking precisely on this point, has emphasized – in an Apostolic Exhortation that would perhaps repay further and deeper study – that all the baptised are called to holiness, to be “saints next door”, who are far more numerous than those included on the Church’s calendar. Holiness, the Pontiff wrote in Gaudete et exsultate, is seen “in the patience of God’s people: in those parents who raise their children with immense love, in those men and women who work hard to support their families, in the sick, in elderly religious who never lose their smile”.

John XXIII and John Paul II believed wholeheartedly in this holiness of the People of God, a patient people who know how to entrust themselves to the Father and let themselves be guided by Him, and on 27 April ten years ago they were proclaimed saints in a St Peter’s Square packed with the faithful.

Angelo Roncalli and Karol WojtyÅ‚a – in Venice and Krakow respectively, and later during their Petrine ministry in Rome – were “shepherds with the smell of sheep”, as Jorge Mario Bergoglio would say today. They lived as shepherds in the midst of the people without fear of touching the wounds of Christ, wounds visible in the sufferings of sisters and brothers who make up that Body that is the Church. The Second Vatican Council – born from the docile and courageous heart of John XXIII and which had in the young bishop Karol Wojtyla one of its most passionate supporters – has put the image of the Body of Christ back at the centre of ecclesial life, linking it to the springtime experience of the first Christian community related in the Acts of the Apostles.

We are living in a time of great upheaval: in recent years, first the pandemic, then the war in Ukraine, and now the new conflict in the Middle East have come together, sowing pain, fear, and a sense of turmoil that, thanks to globalisation, now seems to be a constitutive dimension of humanity as a whole. Yet the times in which Roncalli and WojtyÅ‚a lived were no less complex, no less marked by fear of the annihilation of the human race. John XXIII, elderly and ill, was faced with the Cuban Missile Crisis in the opening days of the Council. John Paul II, who as a priest had experienced the Nazi horror in his native Poland and as a bishop the suffocating Communist dictatorship, as Pope faced, with prophetic tenacity, the confrontation between the two blocs of the Cold War leading up to the dramatic dissolution of the Soviet Union and the consequent illusion of the “end of history”.

These two 20th-century popes did not respond to the tragedies of their time with resignation and pessimism. They did not join the litany of the “prophets of doom” who then, as now, seemed to prefer to complain about what is wrong rather than roll up their sleeves to help make things better. As Pope Francis emphasised in the homily of the Mass for their canonisation, in John XXIII and John Paul II “faith was more powerful – faith in Jesus Christ the Redeemer of man and the Lord of history”, a faith that manifested itself in the joy and hope that only those who have encountered Christ in their lives can testify.

“Such were the hope and the joy which these two holy popes had received as a gift from the risen Lord,” Pope Francis noted in his homily, “and which they in turn bestowed in abundance upon the People of God, meriting our eternal gratitude”. That gratitude to the two saints does not fade with the passing of the years, but rather grows in the conviction that now from Heaven they can intercede for the Church, for the People of God, whom in their earthly lives they served with love and self-denial.

Thursday, April 25, 2024

This Saint was the 3rd Pope of the Catholic Church

 

St. Cletus



St. Cletus was the third bishop of Rome, and succeeded St. Linus, which circumstance alone shows his eminent virtue among the first disciples of St. Peter in the West. He sat twelve years, from 76 to 89. The canon of the Roman mass, (which Bossuet and all others agree to be of primitive antiquity,) Bede, and other Martyrologists, style him a martyr. He was buried near St. Linus, on the Vatican, and his relics still remain in that church.

From Deacon's Bench: The quick reversal by Catholic Answers on AI Father Justin

 

BREAKING: ‘FATHER JUSTIN’ LAICIZED




It started with a bang. And ended with a whimper. Thus ends one of the shortest religious vocations on record. The good “Padre” ended up being defrocked as a result of “helpful feedback” and will now be just “Justin.”

Catholic Answers released the following statement late Wednesday:

A MESSAGE FROM CHRISTOPHER CHECK, PRESIDENT OF CATHOLIC ANSWERS

“There are no bad things, only bad uses of things,” G.K. Chesterton reminds us. As a media apostolate, we feel very strongly about finding new ways to share the gospel—as our founder, Karl Keating, did many years ago when he started Catholic.com to put that wild new technology of the Internet to the service of Catholic truth.

Recently, my colleagues and I at Catholic Answers have received a good deal of helpful feedback concerning another new technology: our AI app, “Fr. Justin.” Prevalent among users’ comments is criticism of the representation of the AI character as a priest. We chose the character to convey a quality of knowledge and authority, and also as a sign of the respect that all of us at Catholic Answers hold for our clergy. Many people, however, have voiced concerns about this choice.

We hear these concerns; and we do not want the character to distract from the important purpose of the application, which is to provide sound answers to questions about the Catholic faith in an innovative way that makes good use of the benefits of “artificial intelligence.”

We have therefore decided to create, with all wary speed, a new lay character for the app. We hope to have this AI apologist up within a week or so. Until then, we have rendered “Fr. Justin” just “Justin.” We won’t say he’s been laicized, because he never was a real priest! He’ll be available to visitors to Catholic.com, thousands of whom have already used the app with great profit. Furthermore, with the help of user input, we will continue to refine and improve the app by identifying any deficiencies (we didn’t anticipate that someone might seek sacramental absolution from a computer graphic!), which we quickly correct.

I thank you for your prayers for Catholic Answers and for the good work of our staff.

Stay tuned.

Pope Francis addresses 50,000 members of Italy's Catholic Action; with "open arms"

 

Children from Italian Catholic Action hold hands as they walk up to meet the PopeChildren from Italian Catholic Action hold hands as they walk up to meet the Pope  (ANSA)

Pope to Catholic Action: Embracing one another can prevent wars

Pope Francis addresses Italian Catholic Action and emphasizes the importance of embracing others through reflections on missing, saving, and life-changing embraces.

By Francesca Merlo

Pope Francis greeted some 50,000 members of Italian Catholic Action in St Peter's Square on Thursday 25 April as they gathered for their meeting between parents, grandparents, and children. 

Speaking of the theme of the meeting, "With Open Arms", the Pope noted that "embrace is one of the most spontaneous expressions of human experience" and that it is through an embrace that life begins. 

For this reason, the Pope introduces three points of reflection: three types of embrace: the missing embrace, the saving embrace, and the life-changing embrace.

The missing embrace

Speaking first of the missing embrace, Pope Francis noted that sometimes, "the enthusiasm that you express so joyfully today is not welcomed in our world". At times, he continued, "it encounters closures and resistances, becoming not vehicles of brotherhood, but of rejection and confrontation, often violent."

Often, Pope Francis noted, "wars originate from missing embraces" and this leads to prejudices and misunderstandings that lead you to see someone else as the enemy. We see this all over the world, said the Pope, but "with your presence and your work, you can testify to everyone that the path of the embrace is the path of life".

The saving embrace

Speaking then of the saving embrace, Pope Francis noted that "humanly embracing means expressing positive and fundamental values ​​such as affection, esteem, trust, encouragement, and reconciliation" but that this becomes "even more vital when experienced in the dimension of faith".

Pope Francis noted that at the centre of our existence is the merciful embrace of God that saves, "the embrace of the good Father revealed in Christ Jesus, whose face is reflected in every one of His gestures".

The reason this is shown to us, the Pope continued, is "so that we also learn to do the same".  Let us allow ourselves to be embraced by the Lord, said the Pope, as, "in the embrace of the Lord, we learn to embrace others".

The life-changing embrace

Going on to speak of the third embrace, the life-changing embrace, Pope Francis turned to the saints, many of whose lives have been "decisively marked by an embrace". "If this was valid for them, it is also for us", said the Pope.

Pope Francis went on to tell all those gathered that they will themselves be the presence of Christ "the more you know how to embrace and support every needy brother with merciful and compassionate arms". In this way, he continued, you will be capable of making concrete signs of change.

Synod

Although Pope Francis had finished speaking of his three previous points, he chose to dwell on one final topic: the Synod. "Seeing all of you here together reminds me of the Synod," he said. To advance in synodality "there is a need for people shaped by the Spirit," and for this reason "I invite you to be athletes and standard bearers of synodality, in the dioceses and parishes to which you belong, for a full implementation of the path up to now".

Finally, Pope Francis thanked each person for what they "are" and for what they "do" before invoking the Madonna to accompany them, always. 

Pope Francis interviewed by CBS news; calls for peace and an end to wars

 

File photo of Pope Francis during an interviewFile photo of Pope Francis during an interview 

Pope: 'A negotiated peace is better than an endless war'

In an interview with CBS, Pope Francis calls for an end to the wars in Ukraine, Gaza, and around the world. He says there is room for everyone in the Church pointing out that if a parish priest doesn't seem welcoming, one can look elsewhere: “There is always a place, don't run away from the Church.”

By Vatican News

Referring in particular to the wars in Ukraine, in Gaza and others that continue to ravage the world, Pope Francis said " Please, countries at war, all of them… Stop the war. Look to negotiate. Look for peace. A negotiated peace is better than a war without end."

The Pope was speaking during an interview granted to the US radio-television broadcaster CBS, on Wednesday afternoon at Casa Santa Marta.

Some excerpts from the hour-long interview conducted by Norah O'Donnell, director of "CBS Evening News," were broadcast shortly after. An extended version of the conversation will be aired on Sunday, May 19, on the eve of World Children's Day, which will take place in Rome on May 25 and 26.

The Pope, who has invited all countries at war to stop the conflicts and choose the path of negotiation was asked to comment on the term "genocide" being used by some in relation to what is happening in Gaza. The Pope repeated the word and said he maintains daily contact with that reality. "I pray a lot" for a ceasefire in Gaza, he said, recalling that every evening at 7:00 pm he calls the only Catholic parish in the Strip for news: “There are about 600 people there. And they tell me what's going on. It's very hard. Very, very hard. Food goes in, but they have to fight for it. It's very hard."

Asked about the consequences for children of the Russian invasion of Ukraine, Pope Francis replied: "Those children don't know how to smile. I tell them something, but they have forgotten how to smile. And this is very hard when a child forgets to smile. That's really very serious. Very serious."

Pope Francis also spoke about climate change, which "exists," and regarding World Children's Day, he said: "Children always bear a message. They bear a message. And it is a way for us to have a younger heart." To a question about his health, he replied with a smile: "I'm fine."

And reiterating that there is room for everyone in the Church he said: " I would say that there is always a place, always. If in this parish the priest doesn't seem welcoming, I understand, but go and look, there is always a place. Do not run away from the Church. The Church is very big. It's more than a temple. ... You shouldn't run away from her."