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Catholic News 2

HANGZHOU, China (AP) -- The United States is skeptical an agreement with Russia to decease violence in Syria can work but will keep pursuing it nonetheless, President Barack Obama said Sunday as negotiators from both countries edged toward a deal....

HANGZHOU, China (AP) -- The United States is skeptical an agreement with Russia to decease violence in Syria can work but will keep pursuing it nonetheless, President Barack Obama said Sunday as negotiators from both countries edged toward a deal....

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DETROIT (AP) -- Criticized for urging black voters to support him while speaking to mostly white audiences, Donald Trump visited a predominantly black church to call for a "civil rights agenda for our time."...

DETROIT (AP) -- Criticized for urging black voters to support him while speaking to mostly white audiences, Donald Trump visited a predominantly black church to call for a "civil rights agenda for our time."...

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HANGZHOU, China (AP) -- European Union leaders called Sunday for China to take action on its bloated steel industry and defended an order to Ireland to collect taxes from Apple, highlighting the trade tensions looming over a global economic summit....

HANGZHOU, China (AP) -- European Union leaders called Sunday for China to take action on its bloated steel industry and defended an order to Ireland to collect taxes from Apple, highlighting the trade tensions looming over a global economic summit....

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LOS ANGELES (AP) -- Lena Dunham is apologizing to New York Giants wide receiver Odell Beckham Jr. for making "narcissistic assumptions" about his motivations in an article published Friday on her website Lenny Letter....

LOS ANGELES (AP) -- Lena Dunham is apologizing to New York Giants wide receiver Odell Beckham Jr. for making "narcissistic assumptions" about his motivations in an article published Friday on her website Lenny Letter....

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MINNEAPOLIS (AP) -- The remains of Jacob Wetterling, an 11-year-old boy kidnapped from a rural Minnesota road nearly 27 years ago, were identified Saturday, authorities said, providing long-awaited answers to a mystery that has captivated residents and sparked changes in sex offender laws....

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) -- The remains of Jacob Wetterling, an 11-year-old boy kidnapped from a rural Minnesota road nearly 27 years ago, were identified Saturday, authorities said, providing long-awaited answers to a mystery that has captivated residents and sparked changes in sex offender laws....

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HANGZHOU, China (AP) -- The Latest on the G-20 summit in China (all times local):...

HANGZHOU, China (AP) -- The Latest on the G-20 summit in China (all times local):...

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Washington D.C., Sep 3, 2016 / 04:55 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- Abortion during the late teen and early adult years raises a woman’s risk of mental health problems and may be linked to almost one in ten cases of these women’s mental disorders, a new study says.“Evidence from the United States confirms previous findings from Norway and New Zealand that, unlike other pregnancy outcomes, abortion is consistently associated with a moderate increase in risk of mental health disorders during late adolescence and early adulthood,” said the study’s abstract.The study, conducted by sociology professor Donald Paul Sullins of The Catholic University of America, was published July 22, 2016 in the peer-reviewed Sage Open Medicine journal.After adjusting for demographic differences and other factors, the study found that abortion during these years elevated a woman’s risk of mental health disorder by 45 percent.“One-eleventh of the prevalence of mental disorder...

Washington D.C., Sep 3, 2016 / 04:55 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- Abortion during the late teen and early adult years raises a woman’s risk of mental health problems and may be linked to almost one in ten cases of these women’s mental disorders, a new study says.

“Evidence from the United States confirms previous findings from Norway and New Zealand that, unlike other pregnancy outcomes, abortion is consistently associated with a moderate increase in risk of mental health disorders during late adolescence and early adulthood,” said the study’s abstract.

The study, conducted by sociology professor Donald Paul Sullins of The Catholic University of America, was published July 22, 2016 in the peer-reviewed Sage Open Medicine journal.

After adjusting for demographic differences and other factors, the study found that abortion during these years elevated a woman’s risk of mental health disorder by 45 percent.

“One-eleventh of the prevalence of mental disorders examined over the period were attributable to abortion,” the study’s abstract said.

The study sought to examine any links between pregnancy outcomes like birth, abortion or miscarriage and mental health outcomes for U.S. women during the transition to adulthood. It drew on a national study of 8,005 women that surveyed them three times at average ages of 15, 22 and 28.

Involuntary pregnancy loss was associated with a 24 percent elevated risk of mental disorder, while childbirth was “weakly associated” with reduced risk of mental disorder.

Students for Life of America said the study showed the need for better data about the risks of abortion.

“Abortion activists have repeatedly denounced attempts to link abortion with any adverse events,” the group said Aug. 23. “In medical schools across the country, students are taught that there are no long-term consequences of abortion, and that abortion is a safe procedure. However, these statements are misleading at best.”

Students for Life said that each state sets its own reporting laws. States like California do not require any reporting of abortion statistics. Reported statistics may be unreliable, given that pro-abortion research organizations like the Guttmacher Institute consistently report abortion rates as much as 30 percent higher than Centers for Disease Control reports.

Only 16 states require reporting on abortion complications, and only eight publish abortion complications in their public abortion reports. Four states inquire about maternal mortality after abortion, while only one state asks about follow-up care to women who have had abortions.

 

 

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IMAGE: CNS/Paul HaringBy Junno Arocho EstevesVATICAN CITY (CNS) -- Turning your head away from the sufferingof others is a grave sin, and simply saying some prayers or going to Mass does not make a good Christian of someone who ignores those in need , Pope Francis said.The plight of those whosuffer in the world today is a modern-day Calvary that "spurs us on tooffer ever new signs of mercy," the pope said Sept. 3 at a special audiencefor people engaged in the works of mercy, as well as for pilgrims in Rome forthe canonization of Blessed Teresa of Kolkata. "I will never tire ofsaying that the mercy of God is not some beautiful idea but rather a concreteaction," Pope Francis said. "There is no mercy without concreteness.Mercy is not doing something good while passing by; it means involving yourselfthere where there is evil, where there is sickness, where there is hunger,where there is human exploitation."Making his way around thesquare in his popemobile, the pope invited six blue-shi...

IMAGE: CNS/Paul Haring

By Junno Arocho Esteves

VATICAN CITY (CNS) -- Turning your head away from the suffering of others is a grave sin, and simply saying some prayers or going to Mass does not make a good Christian of someone who ignores those in need , Pope Francis said.

The plight of those who suffer in the world today is a modern-day Calvary that "spurs us on to offer ever new signs of mercy," the pope said Sept. 3 at a special audience for people engaged in the works of mercy, as well as for pilgrims in Rome for the canonization of Blessed Teresa of Kolkata.

"I will never tire of saying that the mercy of God is not some beautiful idea but rather a concrete action," Pope Francis said. "There is no mercy without concreteness. Mercy is not doing something good while passing by; it means involving yourself there where there is evil, where there is sickness, where there is hunger, where there is human exploitation."

Making his way around the square in his popemobile, the pope invited six blue-shirted girls from a choir to ride with him.

The special audience began with testimonies. With his voice breaking with emotion, Roberto Giannone, an Italian, told about how he served time in prison for crimes he didn't commit. His experience, he said, led him to dedicate his life to visiting and assisting the imprisoned with the Society of St. Vincent de Paul.

The pope and thousands of pilgrims sat on the edge of their chairs listening to the testimony of Missionaries of Charity Sister Mary Sally, the sole member of Mother Teresa's order who survived a brutal attack at a nursing home Yemen in March.

Four Missionaries of Charity and 12 other people were killed by uniformed gunmen, who entered the home the sisters operated for the elderly and disabled in Aden. A Salesian priest who worked with the sisters was kidnapped and his whereabouts are still unknown.

With shortages of food, water and medicine and the increasing violence going on around them in Yemen, Sister Mary Sally said her heart was "filled with greater love and enthusiasm."

"We beg God to continue using our nothingness to make the church present in the world today through the mission entrusted to us by our Mother Teresa, even amid dangerous surroundings," she said.

In his talk, the pope reflected on St. Paul's call to live with a love, which "bears all things, believes all things, hopes all things, endures all things."

"The love of which the apostle speaks is not something abstract or vague," the pope said. "Rather, it is a love that is seen, touched and experienced first-hand."

The culmination of this love is Jesus' death on Calvary, a love that can be seen today in those who suffer due to poverty, sickness and evil, he said. The church "cannot look away and turn her back on the many forms of poverty that cry out for mercy," he said.

Pope Francis thanked Catholic volunteers, saying their work in giving "shape and visibility to mercy" makes them "among the most precious things in the church."

By making those who suffer feel loved, the volunteers are the "extended hand of Christ" and defy the individualism in today's culture that causes people to think only of themselves and "to ignore the brother or sister in need."

"The world stands in need of concrete signs of solidarity, especially as it is faced with the temptation to indifference," the pope said.

On the eve of the Sept. 4 canonization of Mother Teresa, the pope called on the volunteers to follow her and other saints in making "the love of Christ visible."

"Let us also imitate their example, as we ask to be humble instruments in God's hands in order to alleviate the world's sufferings and to share the joy and hope of the resurrection," the pope said.

At the end of the audience, Pope Francis led the volunteers in a moment of silent prayer for the "suffering, for those who are discarded by society and for the volunteers who go in search of the flesh of Christ."

The pope also prayed for those "who look the other way; who in their hearts hear a voice that says, 'It is not my concern; I don't care.'"

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Follow Arocho on Twitter: @arochoju.

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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.

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GREEN BAY, Wis. (AP) -- Rafael Gaglianone kicked a 47-yard field goal with 3:47 left, and Wisconsin staved off No. 5 LSU's desperate last-ditch drive for a 16-14 win on Saturday in a game that dealt an early blow to the fifth-ranked Tigers' national title hopes....

GREEN BAY, Wis. (AP) -- Rafael Gaglianone kicked a 47-yard field goal with 3:47 left, and Wisconsin staved off No. 5 LSU's desperate last-ditch drive for a 16-14 win on Saturday in a game that dealt an early blow to the fifth-ranked Tigers' national title hopes....

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LOS ANGELES (AP) -- A new skyscraper in downtown Los Angeles has become the tallest building west of the Mississippi River....

LOS ANGELES (AP) -- A new skyscraper in downtown Los Angeles has become the tallest building west of the Mississippi River....

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