• Home
  • About Us
  • Support
  • Concerts & Events
  • Music & Media
  • Faith
  • Listen Live
  • Give Now

Catholic News 2

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -- Volkswagen reached a deal that will give at least some owners of the remaining 80,000 diesel vehicles caught in the company's emissions cheating scandal the option of a buyback and provide compensation to all of them on top of any repurchase or repairs, U.S. regulators and a federal judge said Tuesday....

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -- Volkswagen reached a deal that will give at least some owners of the remaining 80,000 diesel vehicles caught in the company's emissions cheating scandal the option of a buyback and provide compensation to all of them on top of any repurchase or repairs, U.S. regulators and a federal judge said Tuesday....

Full Article

RIO DE JANEIRO (AP) -- After ceding to the competition in China earlier this year, ride-hailing company Uber is shifting focus to Brazil, Latin America's most populous nation....

RIO DE JANEIRO (AP) -- After ceding to the competition in China earlier this year, ride-hailing company Uber is shifting focus to Brazil, Latin America's most populous nation....

Full Article

KATHMANDU, Nepal (AP) -- A tiny young woman crouches just outside the airport, crying softly into her thin shawl. It's cold out, but her sleeping toddler is heavy and warm in her arms....

KATHMANDU, Nepal (AP) -- A tiny young woman crouches just outside the airport, crying softly into her thin shawl. It's cold out, but her sleeping toddler is heavy and warm in her arms....

Full Article

BERLIN (AP) -- The Islamic State group claimed responsibility Tuesday for a truck attack on a crowded Berlin Christmas market that German authorities said came right out of the extremist group's playbook, inflicting mass casualties on a soft target fraught with symbolic meaning....

BERLIN (AP) -- The Islamic State group claimed responsibility Tuesday for a truck attack on a crowded Berlin Christmas market that German authorities said came right out of the extremist group's playbook, inflicting mass casualties on a soft target fraught with symbolic meaning....

Full Article

TULTEPEC, Mexico (AP) -- A powerful chain-reaction explosion ripped through Mexico's best-known fireworks market on the northern outskirts of the capital Tuesday, killing at least 29 people, injuring scores more and sending a huge plume of charcoal-gray smoke billowing into the sky....

TULTEPEC, Mexico (AP) -- A powerful chain-reaction explosion ripped through Mexico's best-known fireworks market on the northern outskirts of the capital Tuesday, killing at least 29 people, injuring scores more and sending a huge plume of charcoal-gray smoke billowing into the sky....

Full Article

IMAGE: CNS photo/iconographer Vivian Imbruglia, courtesy Archdiocese of Denver By DENVER (CNS) -- DenverArchbishop Samuel J. Aquila Dec. 18 formally opened the sainthood cause ofJulia Greeley, a former slave who spent her days caring for the poor, during aMass at the Cathedral Basilica of the Immaculate Conception in downtown Denver.Born into slavery in Missouri inthe 1840s, Julia Greeley gained her freedom after the Civil War and worked as ananny. She moved to Denver, where she was employed to care for the children ofWilliam Gilpin, the first territorial governor of Colorado.Known for her love of childrenand the poor, Greeley also was a known for her piety, often passing out prayercard devotions to the Sacred Heart. She was a convert to Catholicism.Despite working long hourstaking care of children, cooking and cleaning, she would often be seen walkingat night through the streets of Denver pulling a small wagon of food andsupplies, which she would deliver to poor families. She was k...

IMAGE: CNS photo/iconographer Vivian Imbruglia, courtesy Archdiocese of Denver

By

DENVER (CNS) -- Denver Archbishop Samuel J. Aquila Dec. 18 formally opened the sainthood cause of Julia Greeley, a former slave who spent her days caring for the poor, during a Mass at the Cathedral Basilica of the Immaculate Conception in downtown Denver.

Born into slavery in Missouri in the 1840s, Julia Greeley gained her freedom after the Civil War and worked as a nanny. She moved to Denver, where she was employed to care for the children of William Gilpin, the first territorial governor of Colorado.

Known for her love of children and the poor, Greeley also was a known for her piety, often passing out prayer card devotions to the Sacred Heart. She was a convert to Catholicism.

Despite working long hours taking care of children, cooking and cleaning, she would often be seen walking at night through the streets of Denver pulling a small wagon of food and supplies, which she would deliver to poor families. She was known as Denver's "Angel of Charity."

In November, Archbishop Aquila presented the case for Greeley's potential sainthood at the annual fall general assembly of the U.S. bishops in Baltimore. As part of the episcopal consultation in the Catholic Church's process for causes, the bishops Nov. 15 approved by voice vote that her sainthood cause should go forward.

Once a cause has officially begun, the candidate is declared a servant of God and a postulator is named. The next step is a diocesan inquiry on the life of the person. The Vatican Congregation for Saints' Causes then reviews the gathered information, and if he or she is found to have led a heroic life of Christian virtues, the church bestows the title "Venerable."

The next steps would be beatification and canonization. In general, two miracles determined to have occurred through the candidate's intercession are needed for sainthood -- one for beatification and the second for canonization.

At a conference in Rome in September sponsored by the Denver Archdiocese and the Pontifical Commission for Latin America, Greeley was recognized in a group of evangelizers and missionaries in the church in the Americas that included Jesuit Father Eusebio Kino, who served in the U.S. Southwest, and Franciscan Father Antonio Margil de Jesus, a missionary who evangelized North and Central America.

Greeley's ministry to the poor on the streets of Denver and her piety is all "evidence of a beautiful life ... of a saintly life," said Martha Reichert, who is president of Endow, an apostolate dedicated to educating Catholic women and girls.

Reichert said Greeley's life shared "a striking connection" with the Year of Mercy because it was an example of the "enduring power of mercy." Despite her sufferings at the hands of white people, Greeley held no grudge, Reichert said, and she went out of her way to help all poor people, no matter what their race.

The Julia Greeley Guild, headed by Mary Leisring, has been working to spread awareness of Greeley since 2011. As the director of black Catholic ministry for the Denver Archdiocese, Leisring said she is thrilled at the possibility of Greeley's canonization.

"She's a model for me," Leisring said in a statement. "We're all called to be saints, and it just goes to show that an ordinary person can become extraordinary. For some of us, she's already a saint."

- - -

Editors: More information about the life of Julia Greeley can be found on the website of the Julia Greeley Guild, http://juliagreeley.org.

- - -

Copyright © 2016 Catholic News Service/U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops. www.catholicnews.com. All rights reserved. Republishing or redistributing of CNS content, including by framing or similar means without prior permission, is prohibited. You may link to stories on our public site. This copy is for your personal, non-commercial use only. To request permission for republishing or redistributing of CNS content, please contact permissions at cns@catholicnews.com.

Full Article

OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) -- The last few years have been grindingly tough for state government in Oklahoma as plunging oil prices decimated tax revenues, forcing agencies to lay off employees, shutter offices and scale back services....

OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) -- The last few years have been grindingly tough for state government in Oklahoma as plunging oil prices decimated tax revenues, forcing agencies to lay off employees, shutter offices and scale back services....

Full Article

BEIRUT (AP) -- The Latest on the development in the Syrian civil war and the aftermath of the assassination of Russia's ambassador to Turkey (all times local):...

BEIRUT (AP) -- The Latest on the development in the Syrian civil war and the aftermath of the assassination of Russia's ambassador to Turkey (all times local):...

Full Article

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Donald Trump's children may see his move to the White House as a way to raise money for their favorite causes....

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Donald Trump's children may see his move to the White House as a way to raise money for their favorite causes....

Full Article

HONOLULU (AP) -- President Barack Obama on Tuesday designated the bulk of U.S.-owned waters in the Arctic Ocean and certain areas in the Atlantic Ocean as indefinitely off limits to future oil and gas leasing....

HONOLULU (AP) -- President Barack Obama on Tuesday designated the bulk of U.S.-owned waters in the Arctic Ocean and certain areas in the Atlantic Ocean as indefinitely off limits to future oil and gas leasing....

Full Article

Facebook Twitter Instagram YouTube Soundcloud

Public Inspection File | EEO

© 2015 - 2021 Spirit FM 90.5 - All Rights Reserved.