Catholic News 2
SEATTLE (AP) -- In progressive Seattle, a presidential order that public schools give transgender students access to the bathrooms matching their gender identity won't require a shift....
MEXICO CITY (AP) -- President Enrique Pena Nieto proposed to legalize same-sex marriage in Mexico on Tuesday, a move that would enshrine on a national level a Supreme Court ruling last year that it was unconstitutional for states to bar such couples from wedding....
PITTSBURGH (AP) -- As the losses piled up one after another, the burden of unmet expectations - no matter how modest - weighed on Fredi Gonzalez....
BAGHDAD (AP) -- A wave of bombings struck outdoor markets and a restaurant in Shiite-dominated neighborhoods of Baghdad on Tuesday, killing at least 69 people, officials said - the latest in a string of attacks in and around the Iraqi capital that have left more than 200 dead in the past week....
WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Amtrak engineer whose speeding train ran off the rails in Philadelphia last year was apparently distracted by word that a train nearby had been hit by a rock, federal investigators concluded Tuesday, pinning most of the blame on him for the wreck that killed eight people....
WASHINGTON (AP) -- Under pressure from Democratic Party leaders to denounce ugly tactics by his supporters, Sen. Bernie Sanders instead struck back with a defiant statement Tuesday that dismissed complaints from Nevada Democrats as "nonsense" and asserted that his backers were not being treated with "fairness and respect."...
WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Latest on Tuesday's primary elections in Kentucky and Oregon (all times local):...
WASHINGTON (AP) -- Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders competed in a closely divided race in Kentucky's presidential primary on Tuesday as the Democratic front-runner aimed to blunt Sanders' momentum ahead of a likely general election matchup against Republican Donald Trump....
Vatican City, May 17, 2016 / 09:59 am (CNA/EWTN News).- In a new interview focused heavily on migration and dialogue with Islam, Pope Francis touched on growing concerns surrounding the hot-button topic of religious freedom.While he admitted that secular governments espousing a separation of Church and state have shown more success throughout history, the Pope also stressed that such policies must be strict in ensuring religious freedom for all.“The right to conscientious objection must be recognized within each legal structure because it is a human right,” the Pope said in a May 9 interview with French newspaper La Croix.“States must be secular. Confessional states end badly. That goes against the grain of history,” he said. However, he also stressed that the separation of Church and state must be “accompanied by a solid law guaranteeing religious freedom,” calling this “a framework for going forward.”“We are all equal as sons (...

Vatican City, May 17, 2016 / 09:59 am (CNA/EWTN News).- In a new interview focused heavily on migration and dialogue with Islam, Pope Francis touched on growing concerns surrounding the hot-button topic of religious freedom.
While he admitted that secular governments espousing a separation of Church and state have shown more success throughout history, the Pope also stressed that such policies must be strict in ensuring religious freedom for all.
“The right to conscientious objection must be recognized within each legal structure because it is a human right,” the Pope said in a May 9 interview with French newspaper La Croix.
“States must be secular. Confessional states end badly. That goes against the grain of history,” he said. However, he also stressed that the separation of Church and state must be “accompanied by a solid law guaranteeing religious freedom,” calling this “a framework for going forward.”
“We are all equal as sons (and daughters) of God and with our personal dignity. However, everyone must have the freedom to externalize his or her own faith,” he said.
“If a Muslim woman wishes to wear a veil, she must be able to do so. Similarly, if a Catholic wishes to wear a cross. People must be free to profess their faith at the heart of their own culture not merely at its margins.”
He offered a “modest critique” of France’s system of “laïcité,” a strict separation of Church and state, saying while generally good, the policy is “exaggerated” in France.
Rather than considering religions as a mere “subculture,” they must be accepted as “fully-fledged cultures in their own right. I fear that this approach, which is understandable as part of the heritage of the Enlightenment, continues to exist.”
“France needs to take a step forward on this issue in order to accept that openness to transcendence is a right for everyone.”
“That’s what fascinates me about France,” he continued. “On one hand, that exaggerated laïcité, the heritage of the French Revolution, and on the other hand, so many great saints.”
Pope Francis also spoke of the importance of ensuring individuals the right to conscientiously object to issues they believe to be against their deeply held beliefs.
In response to how Catholics ought to defend their concerns on issues such as euthanasia or same-sex marriage in a secular government, the Pope said that it’s up to each country’s individual governing body to discuss, argue and explain their positions, because “that is how a society grows.”
However, he emphasized that once a law has been adopted, “the state must also respect (people’s) consciences.”
The right to conscientious objection must be legally recognized as a human right, he said. The same must also go for a government official, “who is a human person. The state must also take criticism into account. That would be a genuine form of laïcité.”
Pope Francis said that Catholic arguments shouldn’t be swept aside with the excuse that they “speak like a priest. No.”
Catholics, he said, “base themselves on the kind of Christian thinking that France has so remarkably developed,” and ought to have a voice.
Published May 16, the Pope’s interview touched on a variety of other issues, such as clericalism, possible reconciliation with the Society of St. Pius X (SSPX), migration and fears surrounding Islam and terrorism.
He said that despite his appeals to welcome incoming migrants, the question as to whether Europe can handle the increasing influx is “a fair and responsible question because one cannot open the gates wide unreasonably.”
In order to properly deal with the problem, one must go to the root causes, he said, noting that migration is mainly caused due to wars in the Middle East and Africa, as well as a lack of development on the African continent.
The worst welcome migrants fleeing these situations can receive is for their host countries “to ‘ghettoize’ them,” he said, stressing the need for proper integration.
He noted how the terrorists who carried out the Brussels attacks were themselves Belgians and the children of migrants, “but they grew up in a ghetto…This illustrates the need for Europe to rediscover its capacity to integrate.”
This need for integration is all the more important today, he said, “since, as a result of a selfish search for well-being, Europe is experiencing the grave problem of a declining birth rate. A demographic emptiness is developing.”
When asked if Europe’s fear of Islam – which in turn has caused hesitancy to accept migrants – is justified, Francis said in his opinion, there is not a fear of Islam in itself so much as a fear of ISIS and “its war of conquest, which is partly drawn from Islam.”
He acknowledged that the idea of conquest “is inherent in the soul of Islam,” but said that Jesus’ commission to his disciples in the Gospel of Matthew to “go out to all nations” could also be interpreted “in terms of the same idea of conquest.”
In the face of Islamic terrorism, “it would therefore be better to question ourselves about the way an overly Western model of democracy has been exported to countries such as Iraq, where a strong government previously existed. Or in Libya, where a tribal structure exists,” he said.
Francis said that ultimately “co-existence between Christians and Muslims is still possible,” and pointed to countries such as Argentina, “where they co-habit on good terms,” Lebanon and a pre-wartime Central Africa as examples.
On the topic of reconciliation with the SSPX, Pope Francis said that Bishop Bernard Fellay, the head of the traditionalist group, is “a man with whom one can dialogue.”
This is not the case with others “who are a little strange, such as Bishop Williamson or others who have been radicalized,” he said, expressing his belief that professed members “are Catholics on the way to full communion.”
A “good dialogue” is currently taking place with the SSPX, he said, explaining that the proposal of a personal prelature would be possible solution for their full reconciliation with the Church, but stressed that before this is done, “it will be necessary to establish a fundamental agreement with them.”
“The Second Vatican Council has its value. We will advance slowly and patiently,” he said.
In terms of a future trip to France, the Pope said he has recently received an invitation from French president François Hollande as well as the local bishop’s conference.
However, he said that he doesn’t know when a visit might take place since 2017 is an election year for France, and “in general, the policy of the Holy See is not to organize such trips during these periods.”
Rome, Italy, May 17, 2016 / 01:39 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- With millions of youth set to arrive in Krakow for World Youth Day in just a few weeks, Cardinal Stanislaw Dziwisz said that “there is no danger” and urged those still on the fence to not miss the opportunity out of fear.“Come to Krakow, we’re waiting for you, don’t be afraid!” the cardinal said in a May 30 message to young people around the world. “I say clearly to the youth: do not be afraid.”Cardinal Dziwisz, who served as St. John Paul II’s personal secretary for 12 years in Krakow as well as throughout the entirety of his 27-year pontificate, is the current Archbishop of Krakow and is heading the majority of preparations for the July 26-31 World Youth Day (WYD) gathering, which his diocese is hosting.He spoke to a delegation of journalists and communications experts gathered in Krakow to help prep for the encounter.The cardinal's plea to the youth of “don&...

Rome, Italy, May 17, 2016 / 01:39 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- With millions of youth set to arrive in Krakow for World Youth Day in just a few weeks, Cardinal Stanislaw Dziwisz said that “there is no danger” and urged those still on the fence to not miss the opportunity out of fear.
“Come to Krakow, we’re waiting for you, don’t be afraid!” the cardinal said in a May 30 message to young people around the world. “I say clearly to the youth: do not be afraid.”
Cardinal Dziwisz, who served as St. John Paul II’s personal secretary for 12 years in Krakow as well as throughout the entirety of his 27-year pontificate, is the current Archbishop of Krakow and is heading the majority of preparations for the July 26-31 World Youth Day (WYD) gathering, which his diocese is hosting.
He spoke to a delegation of journalists and communications experts gathered in Krakow to help prep for the encounter.
The cardinal's plea to the youth of “don't be afraid” is something John Paul II, who instituted WYD, frequently repeated to youth, encouraging them to form a relationship with Jesus Christ and to not allow anything to get in the way.
The WYD event in Krakow, Cardinal Dziwisz said, will be a “celebration of faith, not simply having fun.”
He stressed that the theme “is always Jesus Christ, so you must deepen, pray, be together and rejoice in being Christian together with the Pope. In this sense ministry to youth is vital.”
Preparations on the ground are moving forward quickly, and everyone is awaiting the millions of youth expected to come to Krakow, he said. Groups from 182 countries have already registered for the event, and the number is expected to rise as the date gets closer.
Recent attacks from Islamic extremists in Europe, such as the November 2015 attacks in Paris and the March 22 attack on a Brussels airport and subway, have aroused fears in some that the large crowd garnered by WYD would be placing a big target on the map for another such incident.
However, Cardinal Dziwisz stressed that while “the situation in Europe is delicate,” Poland itself “is calm. There is no danger, (and) the security services are doing everything to ensure that there will not be any problems.”
World Youth Day “will be a fantastic event, we can already feel the atmosphere,” he said. While the youth who come do so to meet both their peers and Pope Francis, in Krakow they will also get to know the great Polish Pope, St. John Paul II, much better.
“They want to come to Krakow to get to know John Paul II better,” he said, adding that the saint’s memory “has remained and the youth want to know it.”
Noting how the theme for this year’s global gathering, “Blessed are the Merciful,” fits seamlessly into Pope Francis’ Jubilee of Mercy, the cardinal expressed his hope that the youth who come “will find a personal and communitarian peace, and will bring this message of peace to the world.”
“Europe and the world need peace, and through these events we can contribute to changing the atmosphere of the world and of our own countries.”
Part of building peace, he said, is being open and choosing not to be fearful in the face of incoming migrants and refugees. He stressed that Poland itself is open to welcoming them, “but with prudence and responsibility.”
Responsibility is needed on the part of those who do the welcoming, “because it’s not enough to open the doors, we must also ensure life, education (and) work.”
“We are open because in history even the Poles were forced to flee,” he said, and noted how many Western countries are “creating walls and barriers” in order keep refugees out. “(But) we in Poland still have not built walls – and we hope we never will.”