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Catholic News 2

(Vatican Radio) Today the Lord invites us to make a serious examination of conscience, Pope Francis said Thursday at a special Jubilee audience at St Peter’s Square in Rome. It’s one thing to talk mercy but quite another to live it, he said. Mercy is not an abstraction or a lifestyle and, paraphrasing the words of St James the Apostle, mercy without works is dead in itself.Listen to Alexander MacDonald's report: Pope Francis used the text of Matthew 25:31 as a launching point for discussing acts of mercy toward others. What makes mercy come alive is its dynamism to meet the spiritual and material needs of others, he said. Mercy has eyes to see, ears to listen, hands to help lift.Sometimes we pass by dramatic situations of poverty and it seems that they don’t touch us, the Pope said. We continue as if nothing happened, in an indifference which ultimately makes us hypocrites and without realizing it, leads to a form of spiritual lethargy that numbs the soul and...

(Vatican Radio) Today the Lord invites us to make a serious examination of conscience, Pope Francis said Thursday at a special Jubilee audience at St Peter’s Square in Rome. It’s one thing to talk mercy but quite another to live it, he said. Mercy is not an abstraction or a lifestyle and, paraphrasing the words of St James the Apostle, mercy without works is dead in itself.

Listen to Alexander MacDonald's report:

Pope Francis used the text of Matthew 25:31 as a launching point for discussing acts of mercy toward others. What makes mercy come alive is its dynamism to meet the spiritual and material needs of others, he said. Mercy has eyes to see, ears to listen, hands to help lift.

Sometimes we pass by dramatic situations of poverty and it seems that they don’t touch us, the Pope said. We continue as if nothing happened, in an indifference which ultimately makes us hypocrites and without realizing it, leads to a form of spiritual lethargy that numbs the soul and leaves life barren.

Those who have experienced mercy in their own lives, the Pope continued, cannot remain indifferent to the needs of our brothers. The teaching of the Lord Jesus does not allow for escape routes. “I was hungry and you gave me food; I was thirsty and you gave me drink; I was naked, displaced, sick, in prison and you visited me.”

Pope Francis concluded his catechesis by reflecting on his recent apostolic journey to Armenia, the first nation,  he noted, to have embraced Christianity.  He thanked the President of Armenia and the Catholicos Karekin II, the Partriarch, the Catholic bishops and the people of Armenia for welcoming him as a pilgrim in fraternity and peace.

Finally, Pope Francis said, as Christians we are called to strengthen our fraternal communion and bear witness to the Gospel of Christ.

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(Vatican Radio) On Thursday, Pope Francis held a Special Jubilee Audience, using the text of Matthew 25:35-36 as a launching point. He said that mercy is not an abstraction or a lifestyle but concrete and practical.The English language summary of the Holy Father's catechesis follows:GENERAL AUDIENCE(Thursday, 30 June 2016)CATECHESISWorks of Mercy (Mt 25,31-46)Dear Brothers and Sisters: During this Holy Year of Mercy, we have not only considered the gift of God’s mercy in itself, but also the works of mercy which we are called to practice as part of the Christian life. To paraphrase Saint James, we can say that mercy without works is dead. To be merciful like God our Father demands constant sensitivity to the needs, material and spiritual, of those around us. Jesus himself tells us in no uncertain terms that we will be judged by the mercy we show to the poor: those who hunger and thirst, the naked, the stranger, the sick and those in prison (cf. Mt 25:35-36).  Partic...

(Vatican Radio) On Thursday, Pope Francis held a Special Jubilee Audience, using the text of Matthew 25:35-36 as a launching point. He said that mercy is not an abstraction or a lifestyle but concrete and practical.

The English language summary of the Holy Father's catechesis follows:

GENERAL AUDIENCE

(Thursday, 30 June 2016)

CATECHESIS

Works of Mercy (Mt 25,31-46)

Dear Brothers and Sisters: During this Holy Year of Mercy, we have not only considered the gift of God’s mercy in itself, but also the works of mercy which we are called to practice as part of the Christian life. To paraphrase Saint James, we can say that mercy without works is dead. To be merciful like God our Father demands constant sensitivity to the needs, material and spiritual, of those around us. Jesus himself tells us in no uncertain terms that we will be judged by the mercy we show to the poor: those who hunger and thirst, the naked, the stranger, the sick and those in prison (cf. Mt 25:35-36).  Particularly in our prosperous societies, Christians are called to guard against the temptation of indifference to the plea of so many of our brothers and sisters.  In our rapidly changing and increasingly globalized world, many new forms of poverty are appearing. In response to them, may we prove creative in developing new and practical forms of charitable outreach as an expression of the way of mercy.

This past weekend I made a Pastoral Visit to Armenia, the first nation to embrace the Christian faith and a people which has remained faithful even in the midst of great trials. I also plan to go to Georgia and Azerbaijan in the near future, to affirm the ancient Christian roots of those countries and to support every effort to encourage peace and reconciliation in a spirit of respect for all.  With gratitude for the welcome and fellowship showed me by the Armenian Apostolic Church, I ask the Virgin Mary to strengthen Christians everywhere to remain firm in the faith and to work for a society of ever greater justice and peace.

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Vatican City, Jun 30, 2016 / 03:08 am (CNA/EWTN News).- With the Eastern Orthodox wrapping up their “pan-Orthodox Council” this past weekend, it might be a good time to take a look at the factors that separate Catholics from their sister Churches in the east.The main issues of disagreement are the primacy of the Bishop of Rome and elements of Trinitarian teaching, although conflict also exists over the Immaculate Conception, purgatory and other doctrines.For 1,000 years after Christ, the Churches of east and west were in communion with one another, holding seven ecumenical councils between 325 and 787 to define Christian belief.But throughout this time, the cultures of the Latin-speaking west and Greek-speaking east grew more and more estranged, and there was increasing distrust and hostility between them. Occasional schisms occurred but were healed – such as the Acacian schism of the late fifth century and the Photian schism of the 860s.Primacy of the Bishop of Ro...

Vatican City, Jun 30, 2016 / 03:08 am (CNA/EWTN News).- With the Eastern Orthodox wrapping up their “pan-Orthodox Council” this past weekend, it might be a good time to take a look at the factors that separate Catholics from their sister Churches in the east.

The main issues of disagreement are the primacy of the Bishop of Rome and elements of Trinitarian teaching, although conflict also exists over the Immaculate Conception, purgatory and other doctrines.

For 1,000 years after Christ, the Churches of east and west were in communion with one another, holding seven ecumenical councils between 325 and 787 to define Christian belief.

But throughout this time, the cultures of the Latin-speaking west and Greek-speaking east grew more and more estranged, and there was increasing distrust and hostility between them. Occasional schisms occurred but were healed – such as the Acacian schism of the late fifth century and the Photian schism of the 860s.

Primacy of the Bishop of Rome

But after 1009, the Bishop of Rome did not appear in the diptychs – the list of bishops in communion with the local Church – of Constantinople. And in 1054, a papal delegation to the Patriarch of Constantinople excommunicated the patriarch and were in turn excommunicated by him. Though this schism was as much an issue of personal animosity and misunderstanding as anything else, the schism was never healed, as the earlier schisms had been.

At least as important as the Schism of 1054 was the Sack of Constantinople in 1204. Crusaders from the West, who were supposed to have continued on to Jerusalem to release it from Muslim control, instead spent three days looting and vandalizing the capital of the Byzantine Empire. The sack cemented eastern distrust of and resentment toward the west, preventing any healing of the schism.

The foremost theological-ecclesiological division between Eastern Orthodoxy and Catholicism is the role of the Bishop of Rome, or the Pope. In the west, Church unity was expressed through being in communion with the Bishop of Rome, as the successor of St. Peter. Petrine primary among the apostles was a cornerstone in the west, whereas the east regarded St. Peter and his successors as Bishop of Rome as “first among equals.”

Papal primacy was defined for the Catholic Church at the First Vatican Council, held in 1870. That council, held to be ecumenical by Catholics, taught that the Bishop of Rome has immediate and direct jurisdiction over the whole Church, and that when he speaks ex cathedra he possesses infallibility.

The Eastern Orthodox, on the other hand, have a conciliar model of the Church. For them, unity is through the common faith and communion in the sacraments, rather than a centralized authority. They do not recognize the authority of the Bishop of Rome over all Christians, but rather consider him equal to other bishops, though with a primacy of honor.  

Eastern Orthodoxy favors various forms of conciliarism: classically, this was found in “pentarchy”, the sense of five patriarchates: those of Rome, Constantinople, Alexandria, Antioch, and Jerusalem. Pentarchy has been challenged, however, by the rise of new patriarchates outside the classical Christian world, and their challenges to the historical patriarchates.

Constantinople came to regard itself as a “Second Rome” after the fall of the Roman Empire in the west, but after the city's fall to the Ottomans in 1453, Moscow came to see itself as a “Third Rome.” The theory is attributed to the Russian abbot Philotheus of Pskov, who included it in a letter written in 1510. It was bolstered by Russian Orthodox claims that the Patriarchate of Constantinople had fallen into heresy by accepting the Council of Florence in the fifteenth century, and (albeit briefly) coming into union with the Bishop of Rome.

Conciliarism is known in Russian Orthodoxy as sobornost, a term which denotes the Church as a community of individual diversity in free unity.

Father Sergei Bulgakov, a Russian Orthodox priest, wrote in his 1935 work The Orthodox Church that “integral unity” for the Church “may be realized only in two ways: by Orthodox conciliarity, 'sobornost,' or by the authoritarian monarchy of Catholicism.”

The Filioque

Next to the issue of papal primacy, an obstacle to reunion between the Catholics and Eastern Orthodox is the filioque – “and the Son”, which was added to the text of the Niceno-Constantinopolitan Creed in the west to describe the procession of the Holy Spirit.

The text of the creed was agreed upon at the First Council of Nicaea and the First Council of Constantinople in 325 and 381 respectively, saying that the Holy Spirit proceeds from the Father. But the Catholic Church in Spain added to the creed in the sixth century, to say that that the Holy Spirit proceeds from the Father and the Son, as a way to combat latent Arianism.

The addition of the filioque was slowly adopted throughout the west, but was seen in the east as an innovation that was unnecessary at best, and heretical at worst. According to Metropolitan Kallistos Ware, some Eastern Orthodox believe that the filioque is not heretical in itself, provided it is properly explained and understood, but that it is nonetheless an unauthorized addition to the creed.

The Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian Unity has stated that the doctrine of the filioque “cannot appear to contradict the Monarchy of the Father” nor the Father's role as the sole origin of the Spirit.

And the North American Orthodox-Catholic Theological Consultation in 2003 was able to sign an agreement stating that the filioque need not be a Church-dividing issue. Moreover, Catholics do not always say the filioque in the creed: whenever it is recited in the Greek language, the original text is used, and Eastern Catholic Churches do not now recite it, seeing its use as a latinization.

Indissolubility of Marriage

Of particular importance recently, the Eastern Orthodox and Catholics also disagree about the indissolubility of marriage. The Catholic Church believes that a sacramental marriage that has been consummated can be dissolved only by death, whereas while the Eastern Orthodox recognize indissolubility as a characteristic of marriage and an ideal at which to aim, they generally accept that divorce-and-remarriage can occur.

Eastern Orthodox acceptance of divorce is linked to the historical subordination of the Church to the emperor in the Byzantine Empire, according to Archbishop Cyril Vasil', secretary of the Congregation for the Oriental Churches. It was the emperor Justinian II who reintroduced divorce to the Byzantine Empire around the year 700, and because of the close links between the Patriarchate of Constantinople and the empire, this novelty was slowly permitted in the east.

Nevertheless, it is hard to find a common answer for the Eastern Orthodox on the doctrine of marriage, and there are certainly many opponents of divorce among them.

Purgatory, the Immaculate Conception, and other disagreements

Purgatory is another topic of disagreement. While the Eastern Orthodox pray for the faithful departed and thus have some notion of their being in a situation requiring our intercession, the notion of purgatory has not been as clearly developed in the east as it has in the west.  

In addition, most Eastern Orthodox reject the Immaculate Conception. While highly venerating the Blessed Virgin Mary, they see her as the goal and fulfillment of salvation history. According to Father Alexander Schmemann of the Orthodox Church in America, the Eastern Orthodox reject her Immaculate Conception “precisely because it make Mary a miraculous 'break' in this long and patient growth of love and expectation, of this 'hunger for the living God' which fills the Old Testament.”

According to Father Andrew Louth, a Russian Orthodox priest, the Eastern Orthodox do not believe in “original sin” as it was conceived by St. Augustine of Hippo and received by the Church in the west. Rather, they have a notion of “ancestral sin.” Because the belief in inherited original sin is rejected, this means that the Eastern Orthodox also are not bound to believe in Adam and Eve. But Venerable Pius XII, in his 1950 encyclical Humani generis, taught that after Adam no men could not take their origin through natural generation from him, nor could Adam represent “a certain number of first parents.”

Since the seven ecumenical councils that are recognized by both the Catholic Church and the Eastern Orthodox Church, the Catholic Church has held 14 more councils which it regards as ecumenical. The Eastern Orthodox have held several councils since the Second Council of Nicaea in 787, but none of these are (universally) recognized as having been ecumenical.

Rather, there have been local councils, and letters from individual bishops. The most recent is the pan-Orthodox Council held last week – though four of the 14 autocephalous Orthodox Churches declined to participate.

Lesser issues on which the Catholic Church and the Eastern Orthodox disagree are the date of Easter; the use of unleavened bread for the Eucharist; the portrayal of Christ as a lamb; and the ordination of married men.

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Vatican City, Jun 30, 2016 / 05:10 am (CNA/EWTN News).- In his Jubilee general audience for the month of June, Pope Francis focused his speech on the works of mercy and how to put them into action. He also gave thanks for his recent visit to Armenia, and spoke of his coming trips to Georgia and Azerbaijan.“Mercy without works is dead,” the Pope said June 30, quoting St. James. What brings mercy to life, he said, is “it’s constant dynamism for going to meet the needy and the necessities of the many spiritually and materially disadvantaged.”He encouraged pilgrims to make “a serious examination of conscience,” telling them “not to ever forget that mercy is not an abstract word, but a style of life.”“It’s one thing to speak of mercy, but it’s another to live mercy,” he said, noting that a person can either be merciful or unmerciful, but either way “it’s a lifestyle I choose.”The Pope spoke to...

Vatican City, Jun 30, 2016 / 05:10 am (CNA/EWTN News).- In his Jubilee general audience for the month of June, Pope Francis focused his speech on the works of mercy and how to put them into action. He also gave thanks for his recent visit to Armenia, and spoke of his coming trips to Georgia and Azerbaijan.

“Mercy without works is dead,” the Pope said June 30, quoting St. James. What brings mercy to life, he said, is “it’s constant dynamism for going to meet the needy and the necessities of the many spiritually and materially disadvantaged.”

He encouraged pilgrims to make “a serious examination of conscience,” telling them “not to ever forget that mercy is not an abstract word, but a style of life.”

“It’s one thing to speak of mercy, but it’s another to live mercy,” he said, noting that a person can either be merciful or unmerciful, but either way “it’s a lifestyle I choose.”

The Pope spoke to the thousands of pilgrims gathered in St. Peter’s Square for his eighth Jubilee general audience. Typically held on Saturdays once a month for the duration of the Holy Year of Mercy, the Jubilee audience for June was moved to Thursday, since the Pope will take a break from all public meetings and audiences for the month of July.

In his address, Francis noted how not a day goes by that we don’t encounter the many needs of society’s poorest and “most tested.”

At times “we pass in front of dramatic situations of poverty and it seems as if they don’t touch us,” he said. “Everything continues as if there was nothing, in an indifference which eventually renders us hypocrites and, without realizing it, leads to a form of spiritual lethargy that numbs the spirit and renders life sterile.”

People who pass through life without ever becoming aware of the needs of others are people who don’t really live, nor do they know what it means to serve others, he said.

“Remember well: whoever doesn’t live to serve, doesn’t need to live!” the Pope said, explaining that with Jesus, there are no “escape routes.”

He pointed to the Gospel passage from Matthew 25 read aloud at the beginning of the audience in which Jesus tells his disciples that when the sheep and the goats are separated at the end of time, the Lord will tell the sheep to come, because they fed him, gave him something to drink and clothed him when he was hungry, thirsty and naked.
 
“You cannot beat around the bush in front of a person who is hungry: we need to feed them. Jesus tells us this!” Pope Francis said, adding that the works of mercy are not merely theoretical subjects, “but concrete testimonies.”

He encouraged pilgrims to “give space to the imagination of charity” in finding new ways to meet the needs of the spiritually and materially poor in an increasingly globalized world.

Christians, he said, must remain vigilant when faced with the poverty produced by “the culture of well-being.” Doing so, he said, will not only keep their gaze from weakening, but will also allow them to keep their focus on what’s essential.

Looking at the essential, Francis said, means see Jesus “in the hungry, in the prisoner, in the sick, in the naked, and those who don’t have work and have to provide for a family…in those who are only sad, who are mistaken and need advice.”

“These are the works Jesus asks of us: to look at Jesus in them, in these people, because Jesus looks at me, at all of us, like this.”

Pope Francis then turned his focus to his recent trip to Armenia, “the first Christian nation,” where he traveled June 24-26 for an official visit.

Armenians, he said, are “a people who, in the course of their long history, have witnesses to the Christian faith with martyrdom,” and expressed his gratitude for having been welcomed “as a pilgrim of fraternity and peace.”

The Pope noted how he will also visit the Caucasus nations of Georgia and Azerbaijan Sept. 30 – Oct. 2, and said he accepted the invitation to do so for two reasons.

The first, he said, is to “value the ancient Christian roots present in these lands – always a spirit of dialogue and with other religions and cultures,” while the second is to “encourage hope and pathways of peace.”

“History teaches us that the path of peace requires great tenacity and continued steps, beginning with the small ones and gradually making them grow, going toward one another. Because of this my wish is that each person give their contribution for reconciliation,” he said.

Francis closed his address by extending his “embrace” to the bishops, priests, religious and faithful of Armenia, and praying that the Virgin Mary would “help them to remain solid in the faith, open to encounter and generous in the works of mercy.”

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JERUSALEM (AP) -- A Palestinian stabbed an Israeli teenager to death in her bedroom in the West Bank early Thursday before he was shot dead, the Israeli army and a Jerusalem hospital said....

JERUSALEM (AP) -- A Palestinian stabbed an Israeli teenager to death in her bedroom in the West Bank early Thursday before he was shot dead, the Israeli army and a Jerusalem hospital said....

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LONDON (AP) -- The race to become Britain's next prime minister took a dramatic last-minute turn with former London Mayor Boris Johnson - considered a front-runner - ruling himself out of the race after the defection of a key ally on Thursday....

LONDON (AP) -- The race to become Britain's next prime minister took a dramatic last-minute turn with former London Mayor Boris Johnson - considered a front-runner - ruling himself out of the race after the defection of a key ally on Thursday....

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ISTANBUL (AP) -- The three suicide bombers who attacked Istanbul airport were a Russian, an Uzbek and a Kyrgyz, a senior Turkish official said Thursday, hours after police carried out sweeping raids across the city looking for Islamic State suspects. Tuesday's gunfire and suicide bombing attack at Ataturk Airport killed 43 people and wounded more than 230 others....

ISTANBUL (AP) -- The three suicide bombers who attacked Istanbul airport were a Russian, an Uzbek and a Kyrgyz, a senior Turkish official said Thursday, hours after police carried out sweeping raids across the city looking for Islamic State suspects. Tuesday's gunfire and suicide bombing attack at Ataturk Airport killed 43 people and wounded more than 230 others....

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(Vatican Radio) In this week's edition of There's More in the Sunday Gospel Than Meets the Eye, Jill Bevilacqua and Seàn-Patrick Lovett bring us readings and reflections for the Fourteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time. Listen: GOSPEL         Lk 10: 1 - 9At that time the Lord appointed seventy-two otherswhom he sent ahead of him in pairsto every town and place he intended to visit.He said to them,"The harvest is abundant but the laborers are few;so ask the master of the harvestto send out laborers for his harvest.Go on your way;behold, I am sending you like lambs among wolves.Carry no money bag, no sack, no sandals;and greet no one along the way.Into whatever house you enter, first say,'Peace to this household.'If a peaceful person lives there,your peace will rest on him;but if not, it will return to you.Stay in the same house and eat and drink what is offered to you,for the laborer deserves his payment.Do not move abou...

(Vatican Radio) In this week's edition of There's More in the Sunday Gospel Than Meets the Eye, Jill Bevilacqua and Seàn-Patrick Lovett bring us readings and reflections for the Fourteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time. Listen:

GOSPEL         Lk 10: 1 - 9

At that time the Lord appointed seventy-two others
whom he sent ahead of him in pairs
to every town and place he intended to visit.
He said to them,
"The harvest is abundant but the laborers are few;
so ask the master of the harvest
to send out laborers for his harvest.
Go on your way;
behold, I am sending you like lambs among wolves.
Carry no money bag, no sack, no sandals;
and greet no one along the way.
Into whatever house you enter, first say,
'Peace to this household.'
If a peaceful person lives there,
your peace will rest on him;
but if not, it will return to you.
Stay in the same house and eat and drink what is offered to you,
for the laborer deserves his payment.
Do not move about from one house to another.
Whatever town you enter and they welcome you,
eat what is set before you,
cure the sick in it and say to them,
'The kingdom of God is at hand for you.'"

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(Vatican Radio) A Federal Judge in Mexico has temporarily halted the extradition of Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman, the jailed drug lord who has already escaped custody twice and who had been cleared for extradition to the United States. Listen to James Blears' report from Mexico: Two Federal Judges and Mexico`s Foreign Ministry have already approved the extradition to the United States of thrice jailed and twice escaped Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman, who`s back under lock and key in Mexico.  He`s been transferred to a maximum security penitentiary in the Border City of Juarez,  right by El Paso Texas. But his highly paid and experienced lawyers who are well versed in the cumbersome Mexican legal system which is still mired under mountains of paperwork and written submissions, have fulfilled a promise to work up a veritable snowstorm of injunctions. They`re cogently arguing that there`s no direct evidence against the world`s most powerful alleged...

(Vatican Radio) A Federal Judge in Mexico has temporarily halted the extradition of Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman, the jailed drug lord who has already escaped custody twice and who had been cleared for extradition to the United States. 

Listen to James Blears' report from Mexico:

Two Federal Judges and Mexico`s Foreign Ministry have already approved the extradition to the United States of thrice jailed and twice escaped Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman, who`s back under lock and key in Mexico.  He`s been transferred to a maximum security penitentiary in the Border City of Juarez,  right by El Paso Texas. 

But his highly paid and experienced lawyers who are well versed in the cumbersome Mexican legal system which is still mired under mountains of paperwork and written submissions, have fulfilled a promise to work up a veritable snowstorm of injunctions. They`re cogently arguing that there`s no direct evidence against the world`s most powerful alleged drug trafficker, to substantiate the charges of murder and drug trafficking. 

And that the Statute of Limitations has expired on many of those charges. New York, Chicago, San Diego, Miami and others are vying for the rights to try Guzman, who`s  done an interview with US actor Sean Penn, and wants a blockbuster movie to made about his life and times.

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San Francisco, Calif., Jun 30, 2016 / 12:01 am (CNA/EWTN News).- Catholics and other groups that receive grants to care for immigrants are in the sights of the American Civil Liberties Union, which has filed a lawsuit against the Department of Health and Human Services.The legal group’s recent lawsuit says that social agencies that get federal money to care for refugees and undocumented migrants from Central America should be required to offer contraception and abortion, even if they have religious objections.Among the lawsuit’s claims: the federal government’s accommodation of religious beliefs violates the First Amendment’s prohibition on establishment of religion. It also claims a 1997 court settlement and later federal regulations oblige agencies with federal contracts to provide the coverage.Douglas Laycock, a University of Virginia law professor, told the New York Times that he thought the ACLU’s claim is weak due to precedents of federal agencies...

San Francisco, Calif., Jun 30, 2016 / 12:01 am (CNA/EWTN News).- Catholics and other groups that receive grants to care for immigrants are in the sights of the American Civil Liberties Union, which has filed a lawsuit against the Department of Health and Human Services.

The legal group’s recent lawsuit says that social agencies that get federal money to care for refugees and undocumented migrants from Central America should be required to offer contraception and abortion, even if they have religious objections.

Among the lawsuit’s claims: the federal government’s accommodation of religious beliefs violates the First Amendment’s prohibition on establishment of religion. It also claims a 1997 court settlement and later federal regulations oblige agencies with federal contracts to provide the coverage.

Douglas Laycock, a University of Virginia law professor, told the New York Times that he thought the ACLU’s claim is weak due to precedents of federal agencies granting exemptions in their spending programs.

When undocumented, unaccompanied migrants under the age of 18 are detained by federal authorities, the federal Office of Refugee Resettlement places them with private agencies until they are placed with a sponsor or deported.

A large portion of these agencies are run by charitable religious organizations.

According to the ACLU, at least 11 of the more than 30 private agencies that received grants in 2016 to care for undocumented minors are affiliated with the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops or other religious groups that oppose abortion and contraception.

Among those served by these agencies are unaccompanied minors from Central America who were detained at the border. Their numbers surged in the 2014 fiscal year to over 57,000 people.

The ACLU said it knows of about two dozen cases in the last five years in which pregnant girls, many of whom said they had been raped, requested abortions. About one-third of the unaccompanied minors are girls. Many were the victims of sexual abuse at home or during their travel to the U.S.

In several cases, when the girls wanted abortions, they were transferred to different agencies to obtain them.

ACLU lawyer Brigitte Amiri said placement decisions should be based on “what is in the best interest of the child.”

She said that the current system of giving religious exemptions to groups such as the U.S. bishops amounts to authorizing those organizations “to violate the law and impose their religious beliefs on these young women.” She characterized abortion and contraception as “care they desperately need.”

The U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops told CNA it does not comment on pending court cases.

In another case brought by the ACLU, a federal court in Massachusetts ruled in 2012 that federal grants to Catholic bishops for care of sex-trafficking victims violated the establishment clause. That decision was vacated when the contract was not renewed by the Obama administration.

The failure to renew the contract was itself controversial, given that the U.S. bishops’ Migration and Refugee Services was one of the top-rated providers of care for victims. In a September 29, 2011 letter, then-Archbishop Timothy Dolan had warned that the administration was requiring that the refugee program provide “‘the full range of reproductive services’ to trafficking victims and unaccompanied minors in its cooperative agreements and government contracts.”

The ACLU has also worked to force Catholic hospitals to perform abortions and to end religious freedom protections it says are discriminatory.

 

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