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Vatican issues statement, says COVID-19 vaccines are ‘morally acceptable’ when no alternatives are available…

Vatican City, Dec 21, 2020 / 10:50 am MT (CNA).- The Vatican Congregation for the Doctrine of Faith stated Monday that it is “morally acceptable” to receive COVID-19 vaccines produced using cell lines from aborted fetuses when no alternative is available. In a note issued Dec. 21, the CDF said that in countries where vaccines without ethical problems are unavailable to physicians and patients — or where their distribution is more difficult due to special storage or transport conditions — it is “morally acceptable to receive Covid-19 vaccines that have used cell lines from aborted fetuses in their research and production process.” This does not in any way imply a legitimation of the grave evil of the practice of abortion or that there is a moral endorsement of the use of cell li...

Pope’s Sunday Angelus: ‘Consumerism has stolen Christmas. Prepare your hearts to be ready to receive God’…

Vatican City, Dec 20, 2020 / 06:05 am MT (CNA).- Pope Francis advised Catholics on Sunday not to waste time complaining about coronavirus restrictions, but to focus instead on helping those in need. Speaking from a window overlooking St. Peter’s Square Dec. 20, the pope encouraged people to imitate the Virgin Mary’s “yes” to God at the Annunciation.  “What, then, is the ‘yes’ we can say?” he asked. “Instead of complaining in these difficult times about what the pandemic prevents us from doing, let us do something for someone who has less: not the umpteenth gift for ourselves and our friends, but for a person in need whom no one thinks of!”  He said that he wished to offer another piece of advice: that in order for Jesus to be born in us, we should devote time to prayer. “Let us n...

Bishop of Syracuse, New York, revives traditional Ember Days, calls for prayer and fasting…

Denver Newsroom, Dec 18, 2020 / 12:01 pm MT (CNA).- In a revival of an historic custom of the Church, Bishop Douglas Lucia of Syracuse has invited Catholics of his diocese to participate in the Ember Days, traditional days of fasting and prayer, for the intention of an increase in vocations. The bishop established the Ember Days for a diocesan year of vocations, and granted a partial indulgence to their observance, in a Nov. 19 decree. Fr. Christopher Seibt, the Diocese of Syracuse’s liturgy director, told CNA that the idea came about because the diocese is also observing a year of prayer for vocations, and Ember Days have traditionally been days of prayer for vocations. “Ember Days are days of prayer and fasting that mark the changing of times and seasons in order to bring about dee...

Pope Francis names new bishop for Diocese of Greensburg, Pennsylvania…

Vatican City, Dec 18, 2020 / 05:05 am MT (CNA).- Pope Francis appointed Friday a new bishop of Greensburg, Pennsylvania. The pope named Msgr. Larry J. Kulick Dec. 18 as the sixth bishop of the diocese founded in 1951. Kulick, a 54-year-old canon lawyer, has served as diocesan administrator since Sept. 15, when he was elected to the post by the diocese’s College of Consultors. He took up the role following the July 16 appointment of Bishop Edward C. Malesic, the fifth bishop of Greensburg, to lead the Diocese of Cleveland. In a statement on the website of Greensburg diocese, the bishop-elect said: “I would like to express my gratitude to the Holy Father for his confidence and trust in appointing me as bishop of the Diocese of Greensburg. Western PA has always been my home.” “I feel honored ...

Ex-nuncio to France given suspended 8-month prison sentence…

CNA Staff, Dec 16, 2020 / 09:00 am MT (CNA).- A Paris criminal court on Wednesday gave a former nuncio to France an suspended 8-month prison sentence for sexual assault. The court found Archbishop Luigi Ventura guilty of placing his hands on the buttocks of five men while conducting his public diplomatic duties.  He was ordered to pay 13,000 euros ($15,800) to four of the men and 9,000 euros ($10,900) in legal costs, reported AFP. Ventura’s lawyer, Solange Doumic, told the French newspaper Le Figaro that the Italian archbishop was considering an appeal. Ventura was absent for the trial, which took place Nov. 10. A doctor said it was too dangerous for the 76-year-old Ventura, who is living in Rome, to travel to Paris while the coronavirus was surging in France. He was not pre...

“Hideous,” “abhorrent,” “disgrace” — Post-modern Vatican Nativity scene provokes wave of criticism…

VATICAN CITY — This year’s Vatican Nativity scene has drawn fierce criticism for its post-modern artistic look, which critics say radically breaks with traditional Nativity scenes and fails to evangelize or inspire others about the mystery of the Incarnation.  The Christmas presepio in St. Peter’s Square contains 20 modernistic ceramic objects, including the main figures in the story of the Nativity but with toy-like faces alongside the presence of an astronaut and a morbid, satanic-looking executioner — but no manger. The figures, which include Our Lady depicted with blonde, curly hair, are spaced out on a minimalist stage with no landscape, cave, trees or streams that characterize usual Nativity scenes.  Reaction on social media and elsewhere has mostly ranged from “hideous,” “...

Pope’s Gaudete Sunday Angelus: Christian joy is not easy, but with Jesus it is possible…

Vatican City, Dec 13, 2020 / 06:25 am MT (CNA).- Arriving at Christian joy is no cakewalk, but if we put Jesus at the center of our lives, it is possible to have a joyful faith, Pope Francis said on Sunday. “The invitation to joy is characteristic of the season of Advent,” the pope said in his Angelus address Dec. 13. “This is joy: to point to Jesus.” He reflected on the day’s Gospel reading from St. John, and encouraged people to follow the example of St. John the Baptist — in his joy and in his testimony to the coming of Jesus Christ. St. John the Baptist “undertook a long journey to come to bear witness to Jesus,” he pointed out. “The journey of joy is not a walk in the park. It takes work to always be joyful.” “John left everything, from a young age, to put God first, to listen t...

Pope Francis: The image of Our Lady of Guadalupe points us to God’s ‘gift, abundance, and blessing’…

Vatican City, Dec 12, 2020 / 05:00 am MT (CNA).- The Virgin Mary teaches us about God’s gift, abundance, and blessing, Pope Francis said Saturday on the Feast of Our Lady of Guadalupe. “Looking at the image of the Virgin of Guadalupe we somehow also have the reflection of these three realities: abundance, blessing and gift,” he said in a homily Dec. 12. Pope Francis offered Mass in Spanish for a limited number of people in St. Peter’s Basilica to mark the Feast of Our Lady of Guadalupe, patroness of the Americas and the unborn. Mary, is “blessed” among women, the pope noted, and the vessel who brought us the gift of Jesus. God is “the Blessed one by nature” and she is “the Blessed one by grace,” he said. “The gift of God was presented to us as a blessing, in the Blessed by nature and in th...

Gallup survey: Only frequent churchgoers avoided downward mental health trend in 2020…

CNA Staff, Dec 11, 2020 / 12:09 am MT (CNA).- Americans who attend religious services weekly are the only demographic group appearing to show improved mental health in 2020, despite the stresses of the coronavirus pandemic and other events, says a new survey. The survey otherwise shows significant self-reported mental health declines among those previously in excellent health. In 2019, about 42% of those who reported attending religious services weekly told Gallup that their mental health was excellent. In 2020, 46% said the same, an increase of 4 percentage points. Only 35% of those who attend services nearly weekly or monthly reported excellent mental health, down 12 percentage points from last year. Among those who attend seldom or never, 29% reported excellent mental health, down 13 pe...

Vatican congregation issues new norms for ecclesiastical institutions of higher learning…

Archbishop Zani said that the instructions aimed to promote a missionary spirit among ecclesiastical higher education institutions. VATICAN CITY — The Vatican’s Congregation for Catholic Education issued Wednesday three new instructions on ecclesiastical institutions of higher education.  The congregation issued the new norms concerning the affiliation, aggregation, and incorporation of such institutions Dec. 9, in Italian, French, Spanish and Polish. Archbishop Vincenzo Zani, the congregation’s secretary, told Vatican News that the instructions sought to strengthen the worldwide network of ecclesiastical institutions.  The instructions state that ecclesiastical institutions of higher education must apply to the congregation when seeking a change regarding affiliation, aggregatio...

Pope’s Wednesday audience: ‘Even death trembles when a Christian prays’…

VATICAN CITY — Prayer is so powerful that “even death trembles when a Christian prays,” Pope Francis said at the general audience Wednesday. In his address Dec. 9, the pope said that this was the case because Christ triumphed over death at the resurrection.  “Even death trembles when a Christian prays, because it knows that everyone who prays has an ally stronger than it has: the Risen Lord,” he said. “Death has already been defeated in Christ, and the day will come when everything will be final, and it will no longer scorn our life and our happiness.” In his audience address, the pope continued his cycle of catechesis on prayer, which he began in May. He dedicated the address to the prayer of petition, which the Catechism of the Catholic Church recognizes as one of the principal form...

Pope makes surprise announcement on Solemnity of the Immaculate Conception, proclaims Year of St. Joseph …

Pope Francis announced a Year of St. Joseph Tuesday in honor of the 150th anniversary of the saint’s proclamation as patron of the universal Church.  The year begins Dec. 8, 2020, and concludes on Dec. 8, 2021, according to a decree authorized by the pope.  The decree said that Pope Francis had established a Year of St. Joseph so that “every member of the faithful, following his example, may strengthen their life of faith daily in the complete fulfillment of God’s will.”  It added that the pope had granted special indulgences to mark the year.  The Dec. 8 decree was issued by the Apostolic Penitentiary, the dicastery of the Roman Curia that oversees indulgences, and signed by the Major Penitentiary, Cardinal Mauro Piacenza, and the Regent, Msgr. Krzysztof Nykiel. In add...