‘Democracy Has Won,’ Bishop Says After Broad Voter Rejection of New Chilean Constitution
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Posted by bcadmin | Sep 6, 2022 | Boris Johnson, Cardinal Vincent Nichols, Conservative Party, Featured, Focus on poor, Liz Truss, News, Prime Minister, Queen Elizabeth II, Thérèse Coffey, U.K. prime minister, U.S. & World News, United Kingdom |
Cardinal Vincent Nichols of Westminster congratulated the United Kingdom’s new prime minister, Liz Truss, and urged her to immediately halt the country’s declining living standards.
Read MorePosted by bcadmin | Sep 6, 2022 | Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception, Bishop Michael Burbidge, Catholic University, Catholic University of America, Featured, Holy Spirit, News, Peter Kilpatrick, U.S. & World News, Votive Mass, Votive Mass of the Holy Spirit |
The annual Votive Mass of the Holy Spirit at the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception Sept. 1 launched the new school year for students and faculty members at The Catholic University of America.
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President Gabriel Bóric of Chile votes in a Sept. 4, 2022, election for proposed changes to the country’s constitution. / Photo credit: Press Presidency of Chile
Denver Newsroom, Sep 6, 2022 / 13:15 pm (CNA).
Bishop Isauro Covili Linfati of Iqu…
Posted by bcadmin | Sep 6, 2022 | 55th anniversary, Fort Wadsworth, Grunt Padre, Maryknoll Father Vincent Capodanno, New York, News, Picks, Staten Island, U.S. & World News, Vietnam, Vincent Capodanno |
On the 55th anniversary of his death in Vietnam, Maryknoll Father Vincent Capodanno was remembered at a Mass celebrated in his hometown in a chapel that bears his name.
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Outreach, “an LGBTQ Catholic Resource” created by the Jesuit-run America Magazine, recently ran an article by a Protestant Biblical scholar claiming that we should read the Bible to be—surprise!—more inclusive and welcoming of LGBTQ people. We’ll take apart the article on today’s Crisis Point.
Posted by bcadmin | Sep 6, 2022 | Last Week in the Church, News |
In this episode: the Pope dissolves the Order of Malta’s leadership, conservative cardinal calls for limits to conclaves, Gorbachev and Pope John Paul II, Pope John Paul I beatified, and the Pontifical Academy for Life responds to Twitter trolls.
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Visitors attend mass in the Vitus Church in Hilversum, Netherlands, on Oct. 11, 2020. / Photo by JEROEN JUMELET/ANP/AFP via Getty Images
CNA Newsroom, Sep 6, 2022 / 10:00 am (CNA).
A diocese in the Netherlands says it will no longer offer Mass …
The World Council of Churches, which concludes its 11th Assembly on Thursday, has focused on “reconciliation” as war continues between two Christian nations in Eastern Europe
Read MoreOrganizers hope the special week will highlight not only the harshness of violence but also resistance and courageous efforts by peace workers
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Rome Newsroom, Sep 6, 2022 / 09:03 am (CNA).
A Kazakh artist is creating possibly the first-ever painting of Mary and the Child Jesus as native Kazakhs; it will be displayed in Kazakhstan’s only Marian shrine.
It is hoped that the icon, in the form of a triptych, will be blessed by Pope Francis during his Sept. 13-15 visit to the Central Asian country, where more than 70% of the population is Muslim.
The artist, Dosbol Kasymov, told EWTN News in Almaty, Kazakhstan, on Aug. 5 that his inspiration for the image came from his culture’s love and reverence for mothers.
Mother is “a common image,” uniting mankind, Kasymov said. “We are all born, we all came into this world thanks to our mothers.”
Titled “The Mother of the Great Steppe,” the large icon was commissioned by Archbishop Tomasz Peta, the head of Kazakhstan’s Catholic diocese, Maria Santissima in Astana.
The Kazakh Steppe is a treeless, semi-desert grassland covering the northern part of the country, south of the Ural Mountains.
Peta told EWTN News last month that the image of the Kazakh Mary and Jesus is intended for Kazakhstan’s only Marian shrine, Mary Queen of Peace, in the town of Ozernoe, about 68 miles southeast of Nur-Sultan.
The painting depicts the Virgin Mary as a Kazakh woman dressed in traditional clothing. In her arms, she holds her baby son, the Child Jesus, held in the robe of an adult man, a sign of his future death and the Roman tunic he will wear on his way to the cross.

EWTN News spoke to the artist ahead of Pope Francis’ visit to Kazakhstan, while the painting was still a work in progress. Kasymov spoke about some of the traditional Kazakh symbols he incorporated into the icon.
“The Kazakh ornaments, like all the ornaments in the world, have their own symbols. The nimbus, it’s made in the form of a star. On one side is a flower, on the other side is a star, and on the other side is a part of the Kazakh carpet ‘Tuskeiz,’” he explained.
Kasymov said the Child Jesus’ halo is in the form of a shanyrak, the emblem of Kazakhstan and a common cultural symbol based on the shape of a cross.
Ethnic Kazakhs are predominantly Sunni Muslims, the most commonly practiced religion in the country. According to a 2009 national census, the second most practiced religion is Russian Orthodox Christianity, at more than 20%. The country, which has approximately 250,000 Latin-rite Catholics, according to 2008 statistics, is also home to many immigrants.
The nationally-acclaimed painter said he hopes his work will be received by the people of Kazakhstan “with love, with warmth, because, above all, it is the image of the mother.”
“Here is my personal opinion: I think that Kazakhs are very tolerant, they easily accept any culture,” he said.

The finished icon is expected to include a panel on each side depicting an ethnically Kazakh angel playing traditional musical instruments.
After the image is blessed in Nur-Sultan by Pope Francis, who will visit the city for the VII Congress of Leaders of World and Traditional Religions, it will be placed in a new prayer chapel at the Mary Queen of Peace Shrine in Ozernoe.
Peta said the new chapel would be built in the shape of a yurt, the traditional round tent used by nomadic groups in Central Asia. The shrine is also getting a new pilgrim welcome center dedicated to St. John Paul II.
The new chapel “is for all people, regardless of faith and nationality; this yurt will be a meeting place with Mary, and through Mary, with Jesus,” Peta said.

Kasymov said he faced a difficult decision when Peta asked him to create an icon of Mary and the Child Jesus, given that he himself is not Christian, nor even particularly religious.
“When the offer came in to write this work, of course I had my doubts,” he said. “But then I talked to my relatives, brothers, friends and they said, ‘Of course you should write it, it’s our common culture.’”

Kasymov said he is also interested to see how his depiction of Our Lady of the Steppe interacts with the many European images of the Blessed Virgin Mary.
“I want to praise our beauty, too, and I want the beauty of our women, the beauty of our mothers to be understandable,” he said.
He explained that Mary is shown looking away because “Kazakhs consider it not quite right or polite for a woman to look directly into the face of her interlocutor.”
“We say in Kazakh, ‘Tygylyp Karama,’ do not stare straight ahead,” he said. “A woman should not look at the spectator directly, she looks a little into the distance. It’s a trait of modesty and part of etiquette.”
The Virgin Mary’s gaze can also be interpreted to mean that she is thinking about the future, that “she senses what is going to happen to her son,” he said.

The Christ Child, who is looking the other way from his mother, “has a mixture of feelings,” the artist noted. “It is as if on the one hand, he does not want to separate from his mother, but on the other hand … somewhere in his depths, in his young subconsciousness, there is also an understanding that he has a path, as each of us has our own path.”
Alexey Gotovsky contributed to this report.
Read MoreThe pope has appointed a Spanish layman, Luis Herrera Tejedor, to head the Holy See’s newly-created “Human Resources Department”
Read MorePosted by bcadmin | Sep 6, 2022 | Catholic News Service, Church in Europe, German bishops, German Church, German synodal path, Germany, News, synodality |
The plenary assembly of the German Synodal Path meeting in Frankfurt Sept. 8-10 will start by debating a 32-page text on sexual morality which could be adopted at the meeting.
Read MoreCardinal Louis Raphaël I Sako praises Muqtada al-Sadr for his “human and national responsibility” and for going on a hunger strike until violence by his supporters end
Read MorePeople who took part in the diocesan phase of the synod in the West African nation say they want such consultations with the laity to be a regular feature of the Church
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