Browsing News Entries
US bishops elect new president, VP (USCCB)
Posted on 11/12/2025 05:11 AM (CatholicCulture.org - Catholic World News)
The bishops also affirmed the advancement of the cause of beatification and canonization of Father Richard Thomas, SJ (1928-2006).
OSV News and The Pillar have been providing extensive coverage of the November 10-13 gathering.
Nov. 12 Memorial of St. Josaphat, Bishop and Martyr, Memorial
Posted on 11/12/2025 00:00 AM (Catholic Culture Liturgical Year)
8 Powerful Prayers for the Poor Souls in Purgatory Every Catholic Should Know
Posted on 11/11/2025 23:57 PM (ChurchPOP)
Fraternity is essential to Christianity, Pope tells audience (Vatican News)
Posted on 11/11/2025 22:11 PM (CatholicCulture.org - Catholic World News)
Christ’s Sacrifice “encourages us to invest in goodness,” the Pope said. The Christian is inspired to recognize all men as brothers. Without that sense of fraternity, Pope Leo said, “The ‘other’ is reduced to someone from whom we can take, without ever being truly willing to give, to offer ourselves.”
The sense of fraternity, the Pope continued, is “an essential feature of Christianity.” He recalled that St. Francis of Assisi addressed everyone as “Omnes Fratres,” and Pope Francis set the example, with his encyclical Fratelli Tutti.
AI poses risk of human extinction: Cardinal Parolin (Vatican News)
Posted on 11/11/2025 22:11 PM (CatholicCulture.org - Catholic World News)
“Are we standing at the threshold of a new era, or will human beings sooner or later bring about their own extinction through the introduction of artificial forms of life?” the Vatican Secretary of State asked.
US bishops to consecrate nation to Sacred Heart (USCCB)
Posted on 11/11/2025 22:11 PM (CatholicCulture.org - Catholic World News)
The formal consecration will be made in June 2026, as a part of celebrations for the 250th anniversary of the nation.
Creators of ‘Monster Summer’ Drop New Animated Series to Inspire Boys in Heroic Virtue
Posted on 11/11/2025 22:06 PM (ChurchPOP)
Churches should be joyful places of sharing gift of faith, pope says
Posted on 11/11/2025 09:30 AM (USCCB News Releases)
ROME (CNS) -- Pope Leo XIV was given the keys to the Church of St. Anselm on Rome's Aventine Hill, a church whose history is closely tied to his namesake.
In 1888, Pope Leo XIII entrusted a Benedictine archbishop with reopening the former College of St. Anselm and building a church, which was dedicated Nov. 11, 1900.
Abbot Jeremias Schröder, abbot primate of the international Benedictine Confederation, gave Pope Leo XIV the keys when the pope went to celebrate an evening Mass there and mark the 125th anniversary of the church's dedication Nov. 11.
In his homily, Pope Leo said his predecessor was convinced the Benedictines "could greatly contribute to the good of the entire People of God at a time full of challenges, such as the transition from the 19th to the 20th century."
"In our own time, too, there is no shortage of challenges to face," the pope said. "The rapid changes we are witnessing provoke and question us, raising problems previously unknown."
The Benedictines and members of other monastic orders have a role to play in helping people deal with those challenges while keeping their hearts, minds and lives firmly anchored on Christ, he said.
Celebrating the anniversary of the dedication of a church, he said, "marks the solemn moment in the history of a sacred building when it is consecrated to be a place of encounter between space and time, between the finite and the infinite, between humanity and God: an open door toward eternity."
A church building, the pope said, is called to be "a place of joy where we experience the beauty of sharing with others what we have freely received."
The Benedictines have a history of doing that, he said.
"Monasticism from its very beginnings has been a 'frontier' reality, prompting courageous men and women to establish centers of prayer, work and charity in the most remote and difficult places," the pope said. Often their efforts transformed "desolate areas into fertile and rich lands, agriculturally and economically, but above all, spiritually."
Monasteries have been places of "growth, peace, hospitality and unity, even in the darkest periods of history," he said.
Like St. Peter, St. Benedict and other saints, the pope said, "we too can respond to the demands of our vocation only by placing Christ at the center of our lives and mission, beginning with that act of faith which leads us to recognize him as the savior, and translating it into prayer, study and the commitment to a holy life."
The center of life at the monastery, he said, is the liturgy and the prayerful reading of Scripture, but also the academic research of the monks, the pastoral care they offer and the creation of a community with monks who come from all over the world.
Pope Leo prayed that the monastery and its connected university, liturgical institute and pastoral outreach would continue to be "an authentic school of the Lord's service," helping all Catholics be "the people God has made his own, that we may proclaim the marvelous works of him who called us out of darkness into his wonderful light."
U.S. Bishops Elect New Conference President and Vice President at Plenary Assembly
Posted on 11/11/2025 09:30 AM (USCCB News Releases)
BALTIMORE – The U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) is meeting in Baltimore this week for their plenary assembly. Earlier today, Archbishop Paul S. Coakley of Oklahoma City, was elected as Conference president, and Bishop Daniel E. Flores of Brownsville was elected as Conference vice president. They succeed Archbishop Timothy P. Broglio, the Archbishop for the Military Services, USA, and Archbishop William E. Lori of Baltimore, who are concluding their terms as Conference president and vice president, respectively.
The president and vice president were elected from a slate of 10 nominees. Archbishop Coakley was elected president with 128-109 votes over Bishop Flores in a runoff on the third ballot. In the vote for vice president, Bishop Flores was elected vice president on the first ballot from the remaining nine candidates. Both bishops will assume their respective new offices for a three-year term after the adjournment of the plenary assembly on Thursday.
Archbishop Coakley currently serves as Conference secretary, a position he has held since 2022 when he was elected to complete the term left vacant when Archbishop Broglio, who had been serving as Conference secretary was elected as president. Archbishop Coakley was then re-elected to serve a full three-year term as Conference secretary through November 2027. The bishops will vote tomorrow for a Conference secretary to complete the term that will be vacant as a result of Archbishop Coakley assuming the presidency.
Read Archbishop Coakley’s biography.
Read Bishop Flores’ biography.
###
U.S. Bishops Affirm Advancement of a Cause of Beatification and Canonization of Father Richard M. Thomas, SJ
Posted on 11/11/2025 09:30 AM (USCCB News Releases)
BALTIMORE - At their November Plenary Assembly, the bishops of the United States held a canonical consultation on a possible cause of beatification and canonization for Reverend Richard M. Thomas, a priest of the Society of Jesus. Bishop Thomas John Paprocki, chairman of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops’ (USCCB) Committee on Canonical Affairs and Church Governance, and Bishop Peter Baldacchino of Las Cruces, facilitated the discussion by the bishops. With 206 votes in favor, 4 votes against, and 1 abstention, the bishops affirmed their support for the advancement of the cause of beatification and canonization on the diocesan level.
The following brief biography of Father Richard Thomas, SJ, was drawn from information provided by the Diocese of Las Cruces:
Richard Thomas was born on March 1, 1928, in Seffner, Florida. He was educated in Catholic schools and graduated from Jesuit High School in Tampa. He entered the Jesuit order in 1945, and was ordained to the priesthood in San Francisco, California in 1958. In 1964, he was assigned to lead Our Lady’s Youth Center in El Paso, Texas, a ministry to the poor in south El Paso. He expanded the reach of Our Lady’s Youth Center to New Mexico and across the border to areas of Juarez, Mexico.
On Christmas Day in 1972, prompted after reading Luke 14:12-14 where Jesus tells his followers to invite the poor - not their rich friends - to dine, Father Thomas invited a prayer group from El Paso to join him in serving dinner to the poor who lived and worked at a garbage dump in Juarez, Mexico. While Father Thomas and his group only took enough food to feed 150 people, more than 300 people came to dinner and each was served a full meal. With leftovers that were donated to three orphanages after the dinner, the group later realized that the Lord had multiplied the food; the event prompted the group to not only return to the garbage dump on a regular basis, but also led them to advocate for better income for the trash pickers, and start additional ministries to the poor such as food banks, a prisoner outreach program, a medical and dental clinic, and student scholarship assistance. It is said that while Father Thomas believed in miracles such as what happened at the Christmas dinner in 1972, he did not assign them a central place in his work or his message; instead, he chose to see them as ways that God would occasionally intervene to encourage and guide Christians to do His will. Father Thomas considered it the duty of every Christian to share with the poor and preached on Catholic social teaching and living out the Gospel values taught by Christ.
As a gifted preacher and teacher, Father Thomas was a sought-after speaker and gave talks at conferences, seminars, and workshops around the world, and had a special charism in mobilizing lay people to get involved in the Church and in helping the poor in their local area. Father Thomas lived the virtue of fortitude heroically, having the courage of his convictions and courageously facing the opposition that arose as he did what he felt God was calling him to do. He also lived the virtue of justice in an extraordinary way. Working for a just society and championing people who were victims of inequality or oppression was an ever-present emphasis of his ministry. In trying to live a just life and work for justice for others, Fr. Thomas lived an ascetic lifestyle, profoundly exemplifying the virtue of temperance: he slept on an army cot or on the floor, lived without heating or cooling in the houses or cars he used, wore his clothes until they were threadbare, and gave away many things of his that the poor needed.
Father Richard Thomas died on May 8, 2006, in Las Cruces, after several years of declining health including a battle with cancer. He was laid to rest in the Jesuit plot of Concordia Cemetery in El Paso and leaves behind a legacy of a strong commitment to social justice and an unwavering obedience to God's word.
###