Assessing Amy Coney Barrett’s Sterling Character and the Road to the Supreme Court
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CNA Staff, Oct 3, 2020 / 08:45 am (CNA).- Pope Francis signed his new encyclical, Fratelli tutti, Saturday during a visit to Assisi.
In his first official trip outside Rome since the pandemic struck Italy, the pope celebrated Mass at the tomb of …
Read MorePosted by bcadmin | Oct 3, 2020 | Assisi, Fratelli Tutti, lead, News, Pope Francis, St. Francis of Assisi, Vatican |
In his first trip outside of Rome since the coronavirus pandemic began, Pope Francis celebrated Mass at the tomb of his namesake, St. Francis of Assisi, and signed his new encyclical on human fraternity.
Read MoreDenver Newsroom, Oct 3, 2020 / 06:26 am (CNA).- The canonization cause is progressing for Father Patrick Ryan, a priest who sacrificed his life in a nineteenth century yellow fever epidemic to serve the sick. Bishop Richard Stika of Nashville, Tenn., has launched an official tribunal to continue the inquiry into whether he should be declared ‘venerable.’
“Father Patrick Ryan did not abandon Chattanooga when the yellow fever struck her and leave town as so many did,” Deacon Gaspar DeGaetano, diocesan postulator for Ryan’s cause, said in a Sept. 27 homily.
“May we through the intercession of the Servant of God Patrick Ryan, ‘the brave and faithful priest’ of the yellow fever epidemic of 1878 see a quick end to the pandemic of our own time,” DeGaetano said.
Servant of God Patrick Ryan was born in 1845 near Nenagh in County Tipperary, Ireland. His family was forced to emigrate to the United States after suffering eviction from their home, and they settled in New York.
Ryan later studied for the priesthood at St. Vincent’s College in Cape Girardeau, Missouri. In 1869, he was ordained a priest at Nashville’s Catholic cathedral. Later, he was sent to Chattanooga, where he opened the town’s oldest private school.
During a yellow fever epidemic in 1878, some 80% of Chattanooga residents fled the city. Ryan did not.
An eyewitness said that the priest would go “from house to house in the worst-infected section of the city to find what he could do for the sick and needy,” according to a biography of Ryan on the website of Sts. Peter and Paul Basilica.
After Ryan died of yellow fever on Sept. 28, 1878, the priest was first buried among his flock, as he had desired. In 1886, his remains were transferred to Olivet Cemetery in a horse and buggy procession.
The description of Ryan as a “brave and faithful priest” comes from a Nov. 12, 1886 Chattanooga Times editorial by Jewish journalist Adolf Ochs, who reflected on Ryan’s life, according to Deacon DeGaetano’s homily.
Since 2016, the diocese’s historical commission on Ryan’s cause for canonization has been investigating his life, with a view towards evaluating his possible beatification and canonization.
On Sept. 28 Bishop Stika officially began an inquiry phase, headed by a tribunal with members he had appointed. The tribunal’s episcopal delegate is Father J. David Carter, while Father John Orr, Ph.D is promoter of justice. The notary is Deacon Hicks Armor, with adjunct notaries Rebecca Dempsey and Jennifer Morris.
Jim Wogan, director of communications for the Diocese of Knoxville, told CNA Oct. 1 that the official diocesan tribunal can now begin its investigation. This includes in-depth interviews with witnesses, including “members of the historical commission, those who feel they may have been aided by the intercessory power of Father Ryan, and those who know of, or might be connected in some way, to Father Ryan.
“The tribunal hopes to conclude its work within a year and turn its findings over to the Vatican which will then make a determination if Father Ryan can receive the designation and title as venerable,” Wogan told CNA.
The tribunal held its first session of inquiry on Sept. 28. There, chancellor of the Knoxville diocese Deacon Sean Smith presented various documents required to proceed, including the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops’ vote on the cause’s advisability and the declaration from the Holy See that nothing obstructed the cause, Wogan said.
Bishop Stika then celebrated a Memorial Mass for Father Ryan at Chattanooga’s Basilica of Saints Peter and Paul. In attendance were Cardinal Justin Rigali, Archbishop emeritus of Philadelphia, and Bishop J. Mark Spalding of Nashville. U.S. Rep. Chuck Fleischmann, (R-Tenn.) also attended.
Father Carter told the Chattanooga Times Free Press that the arrival of the coronavirus pandemic in 2020 made the priest’s life and death seem much more relevant.
“All of a sudden we get hit with a global pandemic that affects our every moment,” Carter said. “It shut downs our society. It isolates people. People start to hurt. Then we see this great witness of this priest that ministered and served during the times of greatest need.”
“It is amazing how God in a time of crisis reminds us of how good he has been in the past and how he works through us as human beings so that his grace may be concrete and help people in need,” Carter said.
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CNA Staff, Oct 3, 2020 / 06:10 am (CNA).- Cardinal Pietro Parolin defended the Vatican’s controversial deal with China Saturday, saying that all recent popes hoped for such an agreement on the appointment of bishops.
Speaking in Milan, Ital…
Read MoreA Mississauga Catholic school has received a shipment of brand-new musical instruments, courtesy of Toronto Raptors’ head coach Nick Nurse and Canadian rock band the Arkells.
Arkells’ lead singer Max Kerman caught wind of St. Aloysius Gonzaga Secondar…
Read MoreVatican City, Oct 3, 2020 / 05:00 am (CNA).- The Vatican on Thursday published a 2019 financial report on the Holy See, citing calls for greater transparency in how the Roman Curia has used the money at its disposal.
But with a Church-wide collection …
Read MorePosted by bcadmin | Oct 3, 2020 | Catholic Issues, Moral/Sexual Issues, News, ProLife & Family Issues, Teaching & Suggestions |
We Catholics often think we should sit back and let the bishops and priests do everything. We should look to them to save our Church. But Archbishop Fulton Sheen has a word of exhortation for us: “Who is going to save our Church? Do not look to the priests. Do not look to the bishops. […]
Read MoreRome, Italy, Oct 3, 2020 / 04:00 am (CNA).- “I never thought he would be made pope,” said Mario Notari, speaking about Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI.
To Notari, the quiet and gentle Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger was just another patron at the lit…
Read MoreReading 1 JB 42:1-3, 5-6, 12-17
Job answered the LORD and said:
I know that you can do all things,
and that no purpose of yours can be hindered.
I have dealt with great things that I do not understand;
things too wonderful for me, w…
Posted by bcadmin | Oct 3, 2020 | 2020 election, Ambassador Miguel Diaz, Catholic Church, Catholic News Service, Catholic politicians, Catholics and politics, Church in the US, faith and politics, News |
The incivility that was front and center during the first presidential debate sent Catholics across the country searching for answers about what they can do to calm the seas when people disagree.
Read MorePosted by bcadmin | Oct 3, 2020 | Archbishop Jose H. Gomez, Archdiocese of Los Angeles, Catholic Church, Catholic News Service, Church in the US, News, Rosaries, rosary, USCCB |
Mary’s role in history has been as “a mother bearing a message of hope,” from the first days of the church “when the mother of Jesus was at the center of the apostles’ community in Jerusalem,” said Los Angeles Archbishop José H. Gomez.
Read MorePosted by bcadmin | Oct 3, 2020 | Catholic Church, Catholic News Service, Central America, Church in the Americas, Guatemala, Honduras, immigrants and refugees, Immigration, News |
Catholic migrant ministries in Guatemala are attending to a caravan that formed in Honduras and is heading northward toward the border with Mexico.
Read MorePosted by bcadmin | Oct 3, 2020 | Burkina Faso, Catholic Church, Catholic News Service, Catholic Relief Services, Church in Africa, Mali, News, Niger, Sahel |
The rise in violence in West Africa’s Sahel region is a result of unequal access to wealth rather than clashes of religious beliefs, a new report from Catholic Relief Services said.
Read MorePosted by bcadmin | Oct 3, 2020 | Bishop Michael Barber, Catholic Church, Catholic News Service, Catholic Schools, Church in the US, Coronavirus, COVID-19, COVID-19 pandemic, News, U.S. Congress, USCCB, USCCB Committee on Catholic Education |
The chairman of the U.S. bishops’ education committee said Oct. 1 “it is unconscionable” the HEROES Act stimulus bill proposed in the House is excluding Catholic school students and their families.
Read MorePosted by bcadmin | Oct 3, 2020 | Archdiocese of St. Louis, Associated Press, Catholic Church, Church in the US, Murder, News, St. Louis, trial |
The trial has been delayed for a man accused of killing a woman and injuring two others at a suburban St. Louis Catholic supply store.
Read MorePosted by bcadmin | Oct 3, 2020 | Associated Press, Brazil, Church in the Americas, Evangelicals, Jair Bolsonaro, News |
Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro on Friday nominated a judge with a record of flexible rulings to the country’s Supreme Court, frustrating evangelical members of his conservative base who had been promised one of their own for the opening.
Read MorePosted by bcadmin | Oct 3, 2020 | Catholic Church, Catholic News Service, Church in the US, Coronavirus, Coronavirus pandemic, covid, COVID-19, COVID-19 coronavirus, COVID-19 pandemic, Father John Jenkins, News, University of Notre Dame |
Holy Cross Father John Jenkins, president of the University of Notre Dame, has tested positive for the coronavirus.
Read MorePosted by bcadmin | Oct 3, 2020 | Associated Press, Asylum seekers, Church in the US, deportations, immigrants and refugees, Methodists, News |
A federal judge on Friday blocked the deportation of an Indonesian immigrant who was detained last month on the grounds of a Maryland church, a space considered a “sensitive location” in which immigration authorities generally avoid enforcement actions.
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