Ailing pope to miss Lenten retreat
Pope Francis said Sunday he will not take part in his annual Lenten retreat with the Roman Curia in Ariccia…
The post Ailing pope to miss Lenten retreat appeared first on The Catholic Thing.
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Posted by bcadmin | Mar 2, 2020 | In the News, News |
Pope Francis said Sunday he will not take part in his annual Lenten retreat with the Roman Curia in Ariccia…
The post Ailing pope to miss Lenten retreat appeared first on The Catholic Thing.
Read MorePosted by bcadmin | Mar 2, 2020 | Homily of the Day, News |
The readings today get down to the basics of the spiritual life. As a matter of fact, however, the basics appear to be quite advanced: “Be holy, for I, the Lord, your God, am holy.” The measure of our holiness is to be the holiness of God. Holiness in the Old Testament connotes not piety […]
Read MorePosted by bcadmin | Mar 2, 2020 | "Transjacking" Sports, 2020, Brad Miner, Catholic Church, Catholicism, Colin M. Wright and Emma N. Hilton, Columns, Congregation for Catholic Education, genetics, Lysenko at the Olympics, male and female He made them, News, Save Women’s Sports, Soviet Union, The Catholic Thing, Tokyo Games, Tom Wolfe's Radical Chic & Mau-Mauing the Flak Catchers, Trofim Lysenko, USSR, XX and XY, XXXII Olympic Summer Games |
Brad Miner on male-to-female “transgender” athletes. In genetics, XY can’t really become XX. Thus activists reject “sex” and insist on “gender.”
The post Lysenko at the Olympics appeared first on The Catholic Thing.
Read MoreHistorically today is the feast of Blessed Charles the Good, the Danish prince, son of the holy king Canuto IV, gained the crown of the Count of Flanders from his maternal lineage. After an initial brief interval, his reign was marked by peace and just…
Read MorePosted by bcadmin | Mar 2, 2020 | News, Quote of the Day |
“There is one aim only: to please God. Anything else will be a diversion…There must be one motive-force only: love.”
-Raoul Plus, SJ, Holy Simplicity
Read MorePosted by bcadmin | Mar 2, 2020 | News, Today's Saint |
Chad, also known as Ceada, was born in Northumbria around 620 A.D. He was the youngest of four brothers: Cedd, Cynibild, Caelin, and Chad. All the brothers became priests. Cedd later was made bishop of East Saxons (London). Chad entered the monastery at Lindisfarne and studied under St. Aidain. St. Aidain encouraged his students to […]
By Joseph Pronechen | With an upcoming special section on the sacrament of confession, and because confession pertains to everyone, we’re hoping you have an experience you are willing to share with readers. Who knows? It might…
Read MoreBy Joseph Pearce | Conversion is like stepping across the chimney piece out of a Looking-Glass world, where everything is an absurd caricature, into the real world God made; and then begins the delicious process of exploring it…
Read MoreBy Jim Graves | Teams of Our Lady (www.teamsofourlady.org) is a Catholic lay movement which helps married couples improve their spiritual lives and strengthen their marriages. It began in France 80 years ago and has since become…
Read MoreIrene Thomas Hospice in British Colombia has forfeited $1.5 million in funding because it will not offer patients an option for physician-assisted suicide.
Read MoreCardinal Joseph Zen has replied to a rebuke from Cardinal Giovanni Battista Re, and escalated his criticism of Cardinal Pietro Parolin. He charged that Cardinal Parolin, the Secretary of State, “manipulates the Holy Father.” To Cardinal Re&…
Read MoreCardinal Giovanni Battista Re, the dean of the College of Cardinals, scolded Cardinal Joseph Zen for his criticism of the Vatican-Beijing diplomatic accord. Cardinal Re said that the Chinese cardinal did not properly understand the agreement, and insis…
Read MoreOfficials of the Marian sanctuary at Lourdes have closed down the pools in which pilgrims traditionally bath, as a measure to curb the spread of the coronavirus. Pilgrims will still be welcome at the sanctuary, with officials saying that they are adopt…
Read MoreChurch leaders in the United Kingdom are urging the government to change policies that cut welfare support for families that have more than two children. The policy, in effect since 2017, allows tax credits for only two children in a family.
Read MoreTen Catholic churches in China’s Fujian province have been shut down, as the government continues its campaign against churches that have not registered with the Patriotic Association.
Read MoreRome, Italy, Mar 1, 2020 / 07:03 pm (CNA).- Several Catholic colleges and universities with study abroad programs in Italy have ended the semester early and are sending students back to the United States amid the coronavirus outbreak.
One of these schools is The University of Notre Dame, which announced Friday it had canceled the remainder of its Rome Global Gateway program and was flying the 106 students back to the U.S. as soon as possible.
The university also asked students to self-quarantine at home for 14 days, and to receive a doctor’s clearance, following their re-entry to the U.S.
Christendom College, based in Front Royal, Va., decided Feb. 29 to suspend its Rome-based study abroad program beginning March 6.
Amanda Graf, director of the school’s program in Rome, wrote that the “decision was not made lightly, and it breaks our hearts that the students will not be able to experience the entire Rome semester.”
“Ultimately it is our care and concern for the students that motivates us to make this decision.”
She said while the students were likely not at a high risk for infection or physical harm, “the safety and quality of life concerns are too great to risk the variables that would come should the city in fact experience a viral outbreak.”
Indiana-based St. Mary’s College has also suspended its Rome program.
Benedictine College, which has a study abroad program in Florence, last week gave students the choice between staying or returning to the U.S. early. Reportedly 14 of the 52 students decided to leave Italy and continue their courses online, according to KQ2.com.
The University of Dallas, whose Italy campus is about 13 miles southeast of Rome, has not yet made the decision to cancel the semester.
The school has around eight students taking extra precautionary measures after they traveled to Milan, one of the cities in the area most affected by the virus.
According to the university’s news website, the students are required to wear masks on campus, eat meals separately, and to sleep in an area apart from the other students.
The university’s president, Thomas S. Hibbs, said the university is monitoring the coronavirus situation.
Late last week the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention raised the travel warning for Italy to a level three, advising people to avoid non-essential travel to the country due to the spread of Covid-19.
According to Italian health authorities Italy had counted 1,577 cases of the novel coronavirus, mostly in the northern regions of Veneto and Liguria. There have been 13 cases registered in Tuscany, where Florence is located, and six in Rome’s region of Lazio.
Nearly 800 of the people with novel coronavirus are being treated at home, while 140 are in intensive care. Thirty-four people have died from the virus in Italy.
Covid-19 is a new strain of coronavirus, which can cause fever, cough, and difficulty breathing. In some cases, it can lead to pneumonia, kidney failure, and severe acute respiratory syndrome.
Novel coronavirus, or Covid-19, originated in the Hubei province of China.
Posted by bcadmin | Mar 2, 2020 | News, The Dispatch |
MPAA Rating: PG USCCB Rating: A -II Reel Rating: 3 out of 5 reels “The Lord said, “It is not good for the man to be alone; I will make him a helper suitable for […]
Read MoreDialogue on the occasion of Diaconia 2020
The post Diaconia of Beauty : Philippe and the Pope, ‘This kiss changed my life’ appeared first on ZENIT – English.
Read MorePosted by bcadmin | Mar 1, 2020 | Health and Healthcare, News |
Cardinal Turkson’s Message for 13th Day of Rare Diseases
The post Vatican Calls for Fair and Efficient Health System appeared first on ZENIT – English.
Read More‘The journey of renewal has not ended, because the change of mentality in individual persons and in an institution requires much time for assimilation’
The post Pope Francis Sends Message to Legionaries of Christ, Regnum Christi appeared first on ZENIT – English.
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