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WASHINGTON (AP) -- President Donald Trump is picking simple over swanky this weekend....
Then they throw down the challenge and run out for the ....
Vatican City, Jun 15, 2017 / 11:02 am (CNA/EWTN News).- Pope Francis, in a foreword to a work by Cardinal Peter Turkson, has said corruption infects the world like a cancer, and the Church must combat it by working together with society, infusing it with mercy.“We must all work together, Christians, non-Christians, people of all faiths and non-believers, to combat this form of blasphemy, this cancer that weighs our lives,” the Pope wrote.“It is urgent to take notice of it, and this is why we need education and a merciful culture, we need cooperation on the part of everyone according to their own possibilities, their talents, their creativity.”Hi words on corruption were written in a foreword for Corrosion, a book-length interview of Cardinal Peter Turkson, prefect of the Dicastery for Promoting Integral Human Development, published June 15.The interview was conducted by Vittorio V. Alberti, a member of the Cardinal Turkson's dicastery.The book was present...
Indianapolis, Ind., Jun 15, 2017 / 01:07 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- Pope Francis’ representative to the United States encouraged the nation’s bishops this week to promote solidarity and listen to those on the margins of society.“Despite the various advances in technology and social communications, it seems that the mission of evangelization is stifled because often we only speak with those with whom we agree and do not listen enough to those at the margins of the Church and of society,” Archbishop Christophe Pierre, Apostolic Nuncio to the United States, told a gathering of the U.S. bishops on Wednesday.True solidarity, he said, “demands recognizing the common, inherent human dignity of each person” like welcoming the migrant “fleeing persecution or ‘certain death,’ as is the case with so many migrants.”The nuncio welcomed the bishops at their annual spring general assembly, held in Indianapolis on June 14-15.At their meeting, th...
Indianapolis, Ind., Jun 15, 2017 / 01:57 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- The U.S. bishops voted on Thursday to make their Ad Hoc Committee on Religious Liberty a permanent committee of the national bishops’ conference.“The very idea of religious freedom and its root in human nature is challenged” today, said Archbishop Lori, chair of the ad hoc committee, at a meeting of the U.S. bishops Thursday.He added, “how important it is that we remain in the public square through advocacy” for the freedom of religious institutions to fight poverty, provide health care and education, serve immigrants, and protect human life.In 2011, the ad hoc committee was formed for a period of three years, as the “bishops were deeply concerned about a broad trend” of threats to religious freedom on the local and national level, Archbishop Lori noted, speaking at the annual spring general assembly of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops in Indianapolis.Pope Benedict XVI, in ...
IMAGE: CNS photo/Sean Gallagher, The CriterionBy John ShaughnessyINDIANAPOLIS(CNS) -- At a time when an estimated 50 percent of Catholics 30 and younger nolonger identify with their religion, the U.S. bishops June 14 discussed theneed to reverse that trend and why the consultation process for the October 2018Synod of Bishops on youth and vocations is crucial to that effort.Onthe first day of the bishops' spring meeting in Indianapolis, Cardinal JosephW. Tobin of Newark, New Jersey, and Archbishop Charles J. Chaput ofPhiladelphia opened the discussion with a presentation on the consultations andquestions for the bishops to consider in preparing for the synod."Thesynod indeed comes at a critical time," Cardinal Tobin told his fellow bishopsin his opening remarks. "We know that there are both challenges andopportunities here in the U.S. The increased amount of disconnected millennialsis certainly a concern for us, as is the decline and the delay of marriageamong young people. Still the...
SALT LAKE CITY (AP) -- Polygamous sect leader Lyle Jeffs has been captured in South Dakota while apparently living out of his pickup truck after nearly a year on the run, authorities said Thursday....
LONDON (AP) -- London firefighters combed through a burned-out public housing tower Thursday in a grim search for missing people as police and the prime minister launched investigations into the deadly inferno, with pressure building on officials to explain the disaster and assure that similar buildings around the country are safe....
WASHINGTON (AP) -- Police in the U.S. capital issued arrest warrants for a dozen Turkish security agents accused of attacking protesters during a visit by President Recep Tayyip Erdogan last month, prompting an angry denunciation by Turkey's leader Thursday....
LONDON (AP) -- The official cause may not be known for months. The death toll is unclear - and rising. No one has said exactly where the fire started. But experts suspect recent renovations at the Grenfell Tower, including newly installed external cladding, played a tragic role in spreading the fire so quickly....
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