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Gallup poll finds jump in belief that religious influence is growing (Washington Times)

A new Gallup poll reports a sharp increase in the number of Americans who believe that the influence of religious faith is growing.

Gallup found that 34% of adults in the US see religious influence as on the rise, as against only 20% who felt the same way last year.

Although a majority of Americans (59%) say that the influence of faith is in decline, that number is down dramatically from the results of a similar survey last year, in which 75% of respondents saw religion in decline.

Congressmen include USCCB, Catholic Charities in immigration investigation (CatholicVote)

A Congressional investigation is seeking information about more than 200 organizations—including the US Conference of Catholic Bishops and Catholic Charities USA—about how those groups were involved in the handling of immigrants during the Biden administration.

Congressmen Mark Green and Josh Brecheen—the chairmen, respectively, of the Homeland Security Committee and Oversight Committee of the House of Representatives—sought information from non-government organizations (NGOs) that had worked with the government in resettling immigrants. The goal of the investigation is to determine if government funds were used “to facilitate illegal activity.”

In their letter to the NGOs, the lawmakers explained their concern that the Biden administration had encouraged illegal immigration “by signaling to those who arrived illegally or without proper documentation that they could expect such assistance, all expensed to American taxpayers, once they arrived in the United States.”

Bl. Carlo Acutis, Pier Giorgio Frassati to be canonized September 7 (Vatican Press Office)

Pope Leo XIV will preside at the canonization of Blessed Carlo Acutis and Blessed Pier Giorgio Frassati on September 7, the Vatican has announced.

The canonization of Blessed Carlo Acutis had been scheduled for April 27, the Jubilee for Teenagers, but was postponed because of the death of Pope Francis. The canonization of Blessed Pier Giorgio Frassati had been set of November 20.

The scheduled canonizations were announced at a consistory of cardinals on June 13. The same consistory also approved the canonizations of:

  • Peter To Rot, a lay catechist martyred in Papua New Guinea in 1945;
  • Bartolo Longo, a Satanic priest who converted to Catholicism;
  • Ignazio Choukrallah Maloyan, the Armenian Catholic Archbishop of Mardin, a martyr who died in 1916, during the Armenian genocide, when he refused to embrace Islam; and
  • María del Monte Carmelo Rendiles Martínez, founder of the Congregation of the Servants of Jesus;
  • Maria Troncatti, professed religious sister of the Congregation of the Daughters of Mary Help of Christians; and
  • José Gregorio Hernández Cisneros, a Venezuelan doctor who died in 1919.

Archbishop of Tehran pleads for peace (AsiaNews)

Cardinal Dominique Joseph Mathieu of Tehran issued a call for prayer “that peace through dialogue based on a consensus will prevail” after a series of Israeli air strikes against Iran.

“It is with regret that we observe in these last few hours, once again, that peace is sought through preventive attacks instead of committing to dialogue around the negotiating table,” the cardinal wrote in a message to the AsiaNews service.

Cardinal Mathieu recalled that last year, in a meeting with Iranian Muslim leaders, Pope Francis had said that the cardinal’s role in Iran was “to integrate, include and be in contact with the nation.” There are about 22,000 Catholics in Iran, of a population of over 84 million. The entire Christian population accounts for less than 1% of the people in the overwhelmingly Islamic nation.

Diversity is cause for strength, not division, pope tells Rome clergy

VATICAN CITY (CNS) -- The cultural and pastoral diversity among clergy is not a burden but a gift that should enrich communion within the church rather than fragment it, Pope Leo XIV told the priests and deacons of the Diocese of Rome.

"Ours is truly a particular diocese," the pope said during a June 12 audience with clergy ministering in the Diocese of Rome. "Many priests come from different parts of the world, especially for reasons of study; this implies that pastoral life -- I think especially of the parishes -- is marked by this universality and the mutual hospitality it entails."

The gathering marked the pope's first official meeting with the clergy of the diocese he serves as bishop.

"I have desired to meet you to get to know you more closely and to begin walking together with you," he told them. "Thank you for your life given in service to the kingdom, for your daily labors, for your generosity in ministry, for all that you live in silence, and which at times is accompanied by suffering or misunderstanding."

Pope Leo XIV speaks to clergy ministering in the Diocese of Rome.
Pope Leo XIV speaks to clergy ministering in the Diocese of Rome during a meeting in the Paul VI Audience Hall at the Vatican June 12, 2025. (CNS photo/Vatican Media)

Greeting the pope at the start of the meeting, Cardinal Baldassare Reina, papal vicar for Rome, offered a snapshot of the vast and varied clergy in the Italian capital, where more than 8,000 priests and deacons are present, he said, many of whom, however, are pursuing their studies and are not in active ministry.

"The Roman clergy is generous, with a strong sense of belonging and a very marked pastoral passion," the cardinal said. "In the face of difficulties, it reacts positively -- candid in acknowledging problems or critical issues, with a pronounced sense of humor and always ready to begin again for the good of the church and each community."

In his address, Pope Leo emphasized the need for unity among the clergy in today's age.

"The priest is called to be a man of communion so that he himself may live it and continuously nurture it," he said. "We know that this communion today is hindered by a cultural climate that favors isolation or self-referentiality. None of us is exempt from these snares which threaten the solidity of our spiritual life and the strength of our ministry."

While shared housing in seminaries and rectories helps foster fraternity in Rome, the pope said deeper unity requires more than physical proximity. "I ask you for a push in priestly fraternity, which draws its roots from a solid spiritual life, from the encounter with the Lord and listening to his word."

"Let us strive to live relationships of friendship," he said, "outdoing one another in showing esteem."

Turning to personal witness, Pope Leo asked that all the clergy "commit ourselves to being credible and exemplary priests!"

He acknowledged human weakness but stressed the high demands of the priestly calling. "We are aware of the limits of our nature, and the Lord knows us deeply; but we have received an extraordinary grace, we have been entrusted with a precious treasure of which we are the ministers, servants. And a servant is asked to be faithful."

Pope Leo XIV receives a decorative shawl from a priest.
Pope Leo XIV receives a decorative shawl from a priest during a meeting with clergy ministering in the Diocese of Rome in the Paul VI Audience Hall at the Vatican June 12, 2025. (CNS photo/Vatican Media)

"The city, with its countless offerings, could also distance us from the desire for a holy life," he warned. "Let yourselves once again be drawn by the call of the master, to feel and live the love of the first hour, the one that moved you to make strong choices and courageous sacrifices."

Pope Leo also reminded clergy that the world's many problems are not distant realities to be ignored, but that they are present in the heart of Rome and challenge the church's ministers to live charitably.

"We are worried and pained by all that happens every day in the world: we are wounded by the violence that generates death; we are challenged by inequalities, by poverty, by so many forms of social exclusion, by a widespread suffering that now spares no one," he said. "And these realities do not only happen elsewhere, far from us, but also concern our city of Rome, marked by multiple forms of poverty and by serious emergencies such as that of housing."

"The Lord wanted us precisely in this time full of challenges that can seem bigger than our strength," the pope said. "We are called to embrace these challenges, to interpret them evangelically, to live them as opportunities for witness. Let us not run away in the face of them!"

Pope Leo then invoked the words of St. Augustine speaking on the Good Shepherd to urge the clergy to "love this church, remain in this church, be this church."

Deacons serve an invaluable role in bringing the hope of the Gospel

WASHINGTON – “Deacons serve an invaluable role in bringing the hope of the Gospel to all members of society,” said Bishop Earl Boyea of Lansing. “By their witness in the local Church, within their families, at the workplace, and while serving the poor, the life of a deacon displays the servant heart of Christ in their faithful, and often hidden, acts of charity.” 

The U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops’ (USCCB) Committee on Clergy, Consecrated Life and Vocations has released its annual survey, A Portrait of the Permanent Diaconate in 2025: A Study for the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops. Since 2005, the Center for Applied Research in the Apostolate (CARA) at Georgetown University has conducted this survey which provides important statistics and forecasting trends on the state of the permanent diaconate in the Church in the United States.  

“With the release of this survey, I ask for continued prayers for deacons and for an increase in vocations to the permanent diaconate within the United States,” said Bishop Boyea, who serves as chairman of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops’ (USCCB) Committee on Clergy, Consecrated Life and Vocations.  

The survey utilized contact information from the National Association of Diaconate Directors (NADD) and was sent to the Office of the Permanent Diaconate in the Latin and Eastern Rite (arch)dioceses and eparchies. In total, CARA received responses from 140 of the 185 (arch)dioceses/eparchies whose bishops are members of the USCCB and have an active Office of Deacons, for a 76% response rate.  

The full survey conducted by CARA may be accessed here

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Pope Leo encourages traditional June devotion to the Sacred Heart of Jesus (CWN)

At the conclusion of his June 11 general audience, Pope Leo encouraged devotion to the Sacred Heart of Jesus during June, the month dedicated to the Sacred Heart.

Jun. 12 Thursday of the Tenth Week in Ordinary Time, Weekday

The Roman Martyrology commemorates St. Basilides (d. 304), an early Roman martyr under the persecutions of Diocletian. Tradition holds he was born to the imperial Roman nobility and a soldier, possibly an officer.

Pope thanks priests of Rome diocese, encourages unity (Vatican News)

“I thank you for your lives given in service to the Kingdom,” Pope Leo XIV told the priests and deacons of the Rome diocese at a June 12 meeting.

In an upbeat address, the Holy Father emphasized the need for unity in the lives of the clergy: unity with Jesus Christ, with each other, and with the Church. He recognized that “this communion is today hindered by a cultural climate that promotes isolation or self-reference.”

Pope Leo assured the clerics of Rome that “I would like to help you, to walk with you, so that each one may regain serenity in his ministry; but precisely for this, I ask you for a renewed effort in priestly fraternity, which is rooted in a solid spiritual life, in the encounter with the Lord and in listening to His Word.”

‘Offer it Up’: 4 Simple Ways to Make Suffering Redemptive in Daily Tasks

"God, I invite You into this suffering, or I give this suffering to You, use it for good."