Nicaraguan judge sentences priest to 49 years for rape
A judge in Nicaragua sentenced a Roman Catholic priest to 49 years in prison Friday for the rape of a 14-year-old girl.
Read MoreSelect Page
Posted by bcadmin | Sep 3, 2022 | Associated Press, Church in the Americas, News, Nicaragua, Rape |
A judge in Nicaragua sentenced a Roman Catholic priest to 49 years in prison Friday for the rape of a 14-year-old girl.
Read MorePosted by bcadmin | Sep 3, 2022 | Middle East - Africa, News |

Rome Newsroom, Sep 3, 2022 / 12:30 pm (CNA).
Pope Francis’ representative in Syria has said people are losing hope as the Syrian civil war continues and widespread poverty explodes.
“I’ve seen so many people die, I’ve seen young people die too, now I see hope dying,” Cardinal Mario Zenari told CNA Sept. 2.
“It is clear that hope is there, but it is far away. Sooner or later there will also come a future for Syria but currently it is so complicated, isn’t it?” he said. “And hope is lacking, hope is dying.”
Zenari, apostolic nuncio in Syria since 2008, met Pope Francis Sept. 3 with members of AVSI, a nonprofit supporting Project Open Hospitals in Syria.
Pope Francis praised the initiative, which supports free services through three Syrian hospitals and four walk-in clinics, calling it “the ‘creativity of charity,’” a phrase of Saint John Paul II.
“International observers tell us that the crisis in Syria continues to be one of the most serious worldwide, in terms of destruction, growing humanitarian needs, social and economic collapse, and poverty and famine at dire levels,” the pope said Sept. 3.
“In the face of such immense suffering,” he said, “the Church is called to be a ‘field hospital’ and to heal wounds both physical and spiritual.”
Speaking to CNA a day ahead of the papal meeting, Zenari explained that while “fewer bombs are falling,” especially in the north of Syria, another, noiseless, bomb has detonated, that of a poverty crisis.
The nuncio said more than 90% of the population is living under the poverty threshold and statistics show that many children are going hungry or are malnourished.
In his speech Saturday, Pope Francis thanked the group for the gift of an icon of Jesus the Good Samaritan.
“The man in the Gospel parable, beaten, robbed and left half-dead by the side of the road, can serve as another tragic image of Syria, beaten, robbed and abandoned for dead on the roadside,” Francis said.
Yet Syria has not been forgotten or abandoned by Christ, he continued, nor by the many “Good Samaritans” — individuals, associations, and institutions — which have lended a hand.
Cardinal Zenari recalled that “some of these Good Samaritans,” as many as a few hundred according to the United Nations, were killed while working or volunteering in Syria.
“And these are beautiful signs of hope,” he said.
A priest and Franciscan friar belonging to the Custody of the Holy Land told CNA Friday that Syria is in need of people who work with the sick, the hungry, traumatized children, and those suffering from depression because of the civil war.
“So right now we need Good Samaritans in Syria,” Father Fadi Azar said.
Azar has been serving in Syria since 2015. For the last three years he has been based in the port city of Latakia, where his parish has grown from 200 to 750 families, he said, due to the influx of Syrians fleeing other parts of the country.
The priest, who was born and raised in Jordan to Palestinian parents, understands the plight of refugees.
Father Azar also helps run one of the walk-in medical clinics supported by Project Open Hospitals.
“Everyday life is becoming more difficult for the people and a lot of them are dying because they cannot afford to buy their medications,” he explained, calling Project Open Hospitals “an intervention of Divine Providence,” and “a miracle.”
“Our work as religious should be only spiritual,” Azar said, “but right now we are operating in humanitarian [needs].”
Pope Francis said: “When we think of Syria, there comes to mind the verse of the Book of Lamentations: ‘Vast as the sea is your ruin; who can heal you?’ (2:13). Those words refer to the sufferings of Jerusalem, but they also make us think of the suffering endured by the Syrian people in these twelve years of violent conflict.”
“If,” he said, “we consider the number of the dead and wounded, the destruction of entire quarters and villages, as well as important infrastructures, including healthcare institutions, it is natural to ask: ‘Syria, who can now heal you?’”
Read More
Cardinal Albino Luciani, Patriarch of Venice, visits with a fellow cardinal / John Paul I Vatican Foundation
Denver Newsroom, Sep 3, 2022 / 11:00 am (CNA).
A letter written on the eve of the conclave that elected him Bishop of Rome shows that A…
Posted by bcadmin | Sep 3, 2022 | News, Nota in Brevis |
A recital, and brief commentary, on Gerard Manley Hopkins’ 1877 poem, which provides a parable on the proper care for creation, and, perhaps, a lesson for the Schwaub, Thunberg, Trudeau and the WEF crowd:
The post Gerard Manley Hopkins and God’ Grandeur appeared first on Catholic Insight.
Read MorePosted by bcadmin | Sep 3, 2022 | Afghanistan, Catholic Charities, Catholic News Service, Church in the US, Congress, News, Refugees |
Two Catholic agencies have joined a call by the chairman of the U.S. bishops’ Committee on Migration for passage of a bipartisan bill that would provide newly arrived Afghans the opportunity to become lawful permanent U.S. residents.
Read MorePosted by bcadmin | Sep 3, 2022 | Cardinal Anders Arborelius, Catholic News Service, News, Roman Curia, Sweden, Vatican |
The prophecies and revelations of St. Bridget of Sweden were known for their direct reprimands to popes and princes alike, calling for an end to corruption and the start of reform within the Catholic Church.
Read More
Former Celtics player Enes Kanter Freedom will be the keynote speaker at the March for the Martyrs, / Freedom: Erik Drost, CC BY 2.0, via Wikimedia Commons; Martyrs: Screenshot from the National Catholic Register
Boston, Mass., Sep 23, 2022 / 1…
Read MorePosted by bcadmin | Sep 3, 2022 | Catholic News Service, Church in the US, Laudato Si, News, West Virginia |
As the pastor of Francis Xavier Church in Moundsville, West Virginia, Father That Son Nguyen has his ears tuned to hearing about the needs of the world all around.
Read MorePosted by bcadmin | Sep 3, 2022 | Catholic News Service, Church in the US, labor movement, News, Tennessee |
Local representatives of the Catholic Labor Network, a national nonprofit membership organization, are encouraging Tennesseans to educate themselves about an upcoming vote to add a Right to Work clause to the Tennessee State Constitution.
Read MoreIn less than four years, the Catholic Church has suffered 190 attacks and desecrations, including a fire in the Cathedral of Managua
Read MorePosted by bcadmin | Sep 3, 2022 | California, Catholic News Service, Church in the US, Farm workers, News |
Thousands of marchers lined up in a Sacramento park Aug. 26 to finish the last mile of a 23-day farmworker march.
Read More
Pope John Paul I in an undated file photo. / Vatican Media/CNA.
Rome Newsroom, Sep 3, 2022 / 07:45 am (CNA).
The young woman who was miraculously healed through the intercession of Pope John Paul I will not attend his beatification in Rome Sund…
Posted by bcadmin | Sep 3, 2022 | Catholic News Service, Church in the US, Faith, News, wildfires |
Joe Ybarra reached for his rosary as the wildfire raged across the Idaho mountainside, threatening his life and the lives of seven other U.S. Forest Service firefighters.
Read MorePosted by bcadmin | Sep 3, 2022 | Art exhibit, Catholic News Service, Church in the US, COVID-19, Dominican Sisters, News, Religious Sisters |
During the peak of the COVID-19 pandemic, the community of Adrian Dominican Sisters was a microcosm of the suffering and loss inflicted by the coronavirus.
Read MoreHow the Church became truly global
Read MoreFrance marks 450th anniversary of the widespread killing of Protestants (Huguenots) by Catholic mobs
Read MoreGospel reflection for the Twenty-third Sunday in Ordinary Time (Lk 14, 25-33)
Read MoreUkrainians, much like Canadians, know what it’s like to contend with tough winter seasons.
Read More
Recent Comments