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IMAGE: CNS photo/Bob RollerBy Allana HaynesWASHINGTON (CNS) -- People offaith have the responsibility to "advocate for their faith," not onlythrough good works, but on spiritual realms -- one being through prayer, U.S.House Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wisconsin, said May 17.He made the comments at the 12thannual National Catholic Prayer Breakfast, which drew a record high of about1,300 attendees to a downtown Washington hotel.Ryan and Sister Constance Veit,communications director for her religious congregation, the Little Sisters ofthe Poor, were special guests at the breakfast.Keynote speaker Cardinal RobertSarah, prefect of the Vatican Congregation for Divine Worship and Discipline ofthe Sacraments since late 2014, addressed the topic of marriage in the church.He said that it is the responsibility of the church to demonstrate to othershow marriage should look within a Christian community."The family is the naturalpreparation and anticipation for the communion that is possible when we are...

IMAGE: CNS photo/Bob Roller

By Allana Haynes

WASHINGTON (CNS) -- People of faith have the responsibility to "advocate for their faith," not only through good works, but on spiritual realms -- one being through prayer, U.S. House Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wisconsin, said May 17.

He made the comments at the 12th annual National Catholic Prayer Breakfast, which drew a record high of about 1,300 attendees to a downtown Washington hotel.

Ryan and Sister Constance Veit, communications director for her religious congregation, the Little Sisters of the Poor, were special guests at the breakfast.

Keynote speaker Cardinal Robert Sarah, prefect of the Vatican Congregation for Divine Worship and Discipline of the Sacraments since late 2014, addressed the topic of marriage in the church. He said that it is the responsibility of the church to demonstrate to others how marriage should look within a Christian community.

"The family is the natural preparation and anticipation for the communion that is possible when we are united with God," said Cardinal Sarah, who is the former president of the Pontifical Council Cor Unum. "This is why the devil is so intent on destroying the family."

In his address, in addition to highlighting the importance of prayer, Ryan also emphasized the need to advocate for the government to safeguard religious liberty.

"Religious liberty is going to make a comeback," he said. "There is a growing need for faith in this nation."

Ryan, who is Catholic, also emphasized the importance of good works, referencing the ministry of Sister Constance and the Little Sisters of Poor.

In 2015, the religious congregation challenged the Affordable Care Act's mandate that most religious employers cover contraceptives for their employees even if the employer finds such coverage morally unacceptable. The Little Sisters' challenge and a number of other suits filed against the mandate by Catholic and other faith-based entities reached the Supreme Court. On May 16, the high court sent the cases -- known collectively as Zubik v. Burwell -- back down to the lower courts.

At the breakfast, Sister Constance underlined that people of faith should not only take care of the physical needs of those who are hurting, but should care for their spiritual needs and demonstrate to them their value.

"Look upon each person, friend or foe as Christ would," said Sister Constance. "Even our most cunning adversary is a person ultimately longing to love and to be loved."

Father Paul Scalia, a priest of the Diocese of Arlington and son of late Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia, led the recitation of the Divine Mercy chaplet. Bishop Paul S. Loverde of Arlington, Virginia, then gave the invocation and blessing at the start of the breakfast.

Baltimore Archbishop William E. Lori, who is chairman of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops' Ad Hoc Committee for Religious Liberty, gave the final blessing.

Jay Richards, who is executive editor of The Stream, an online news source on science, culture and other issues, and an assistant research professor at the School of Business and Economics at The Catholic University of America, attended the breakfast for a second year to represent the university.

"The National Catholic Prayer Breakfast is a nonpartisan event that focuses on faith as Catholics and doesn't avoid the controversial issues of today," said Richards in a phone interview with Catholic News Service the day before the breakfast.

He said that this year, in many ways, would be different than the previous year he attended.

"The speakers represent not only the controversy in the church, but in the culture at large," said Richards. "The family has never been more under attack than it has been today in the U.S. Cardinal Sarah has been absolutely rock solid on the issue of marriage in the church and Speaker Paul Ryan is a good example of a Catholic in (the) legislature. Both the keynote speaker and the guest speakers are dealing with controversial issues."


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PORTLAND, Maine (AP) -- A police sergeant looking for speeders captured a fireball streaking across the sky on his dashboard camera early Tuesday....

PORTLAND, Maine (AP) -- A police sergeant looking for speeders captured a fireball streaking across the sky on his dashboard camera early Tuesday....

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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) -- 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....

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WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Senate voted decisively on Tuesday in favor of a bipartisan $1.1 billion measure to combat the Zika virus this year and next, cutting back President Barack Obama's request but offering significantly more money to fight Zika than would House GOP conservatives....

WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Senate voted decisively on Tuesday in favor of a bipartisan $1.1 billion measure to combat the Zika virus this year and next, cutting back President Barack Obama's request but offering significantly more money to fight Zika than would House GOP conservatives....

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BEIRUT (AP) -- Russia has built a military encampment inside a zone that holds the UNESCO world heritage site in the ancient Syrian town of Palmyra, where Islamic State militants were driven out recently by pro-government forces....

BEIRUT (AP) -- Russia has built a military encampment inside a zone that holds the UNESCO world heritage site in the ancient Syrian town of Palmyra, where Islamic State militants were driven out recently by pro-government forces....

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FORT MCMURRAY, Alberta (AP) -- Canadian officials said Tuesday they are taking a second look at their plan to allow people to return home to Fort McMurray after a raging wildfire spread north toward oil sands plants....

FORT MCMURRAY, Alberta (AP) -- Canadian officials said Tuesday they are taking a second look at their plan to allow people to return home to Fort McMurray after a raging wildfire spread north toward oil sands plants....

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WASHINGTON (AP) -- Donald Trump is rushing to install operatives in several states that traditionally favor Democrats, pointing to a general election plan consistent with the campaign he has run thus far: Defying conventional wisdom and political trends....

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Donald Trump is rushing to install operatives in several states that traditionally favor Democrats, pointing to a general election plan consistent with the campaign he has run thus far: Defying conventional wisdom and political trends....

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WASHINGTON (AP) -- Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders is condemning "any and all forms of violence" in the aftermath of a chaotic Democratic party gathering in Nevada last weekend but says the party needs to understand that millions of Americans are "outraged at establishment politics and establishment economics."...

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders is condemning "any and all forms of violence" in the aftermath of a chaotic Democratic party gathering in Nevada last weekend but says the party needs to understand that millions of Americans are "outraged at establishment politics and establishment economics."...

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(Vatican Radio) Pope Francis has given an exclusive interview to the French Catholic La Croix newspaper. In the broad-ranging conversation with journalists Guillaume Goubert and Sébastien Maillard for La Croix, Pope Francis discussed matters ranging from healthy secularism and the right way to understand and live according to the Church’s universal missionary mandate, to the idea of Europe in relation to the migration crisis and the possibility of peaceful coexistence among Muslims and Christians. He also addressed the clergy sex abuse crisis, offering considerations about an ongoing investigation – widely covered in France – involving the Archbishop of Lyon, Cardinal Philippe Barbarin, whose handling of the case of one pedophile priest in particular has been subject to scrutiny and criticism. La Croix has now published an English translation of the interview, available here.

(Vatican Radio) Pope Francis has given an exclusive interview to the French Catholic La Croix newspaper. In the broad-ranging conversation with journalists Guillaume Goubert and Sébastien Maillard for La Croix, Pope Francis discussed matters ranging from healthy secularism and the right way to understand and live according to the Church’s universal missionary mandate, to the idea of Europe in relation to the migration crisis and the possibility of peaceful coexistence among Muslims and Christians. 

He also addressed the clergy sex abuse crisis, offering considerations about an ongoing investigation – widely covered in France – involving the Archbishop of Lyon, Cardinal Philippe Barbarin, whose handling of the case of one pedophile priest in particular has been subject to scrutiny and criticism. La Croix has now published an English translation of the interview, available here.

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The Council of Interreligious Dialogue in Pakistan organized a seminar in Lahore on the occasion of the Jubilee Year of Mercy coordinated by Fr. Francis Nadeem OFM Cap, and led by Islamist leader Sufi Pir Shafaat Rasool.The seminar titled “The mercy in Christianity and Islam” held in recent weeks, focused on the common values present in Islam and Christianity.As reported to Fides by the Council, Fr. Qaisar Feroz, among the Christian leaders who intervened, quoted several passages from the Old and New Testaments on mercy, recalling that "God is merciful and wants us to be merciful". While we focus too often on facts that "fuel hatred and differences, there is a dire need to create situations of peace, tolerance, forgiveness and mercy", he said, noting that "the Year of Mercy proclaimed by Pope Francis is of utmost importance for the whole world", and is "an invitation to building a culture of mercy, common value for Islam and Christian...

The Council of Interreligious Dialogue in Pakistan organized a seminar in Lahore on the occasion of the Jubilee Year of Mercy coordinated by Fr. Francis Nadeem OFM Cap, and led by Islamist leader Sufi Pir Shafaat Rasool.

The seminar titled “The mercy in Christianity and Islam” held in recent weeks, focused on the common values present in Islam and Christianity.

As reported to Fides by the Council, Fr. Qaisar Feroz, among the Christian leaders who intervened, quoted several passages from the Old and New Testaments on mercy, recalling that "God is merciful and wants us to be merciful". While we focus too often on facts that "fuel hatred and differences, there is a dire need to create situations of peace, tolerance, forgiveness and mercy", he said, noting that "the Year of Mercy proclaimed by Pope Francis is of utmost importance for the whole world", and is "an invitation to building a culture of mercy, common value for Islam and Christianity".

Pir Shafaat Rasool then described the perspective of Islam on Mercy, referring to several verses of the Koran. "No one has the right to forcibly convert a believer of another religion", he said. "Mercy is the only channel that attracts a human being to embrace a religion", recalling that Islam and Christianity have a common origin. "Mercy is the key factor in both religions and listening to the call of Pope Francis, we must spread mercy in our society", he concluded.

These Muslim speakers expressed great appreciation for the gesture of Pope Francis to celebrate 2016 as "Year of Mercy", hoping that this helps to promote inter-religious harmony and eradicate extremism from the hearts. "We will continue to spread the message of Mercy in Pakistan, hoping that peace will prevail in our society". The participants unanimously passed a resolution that asks religious leaders, politicians, educators and the media, to help promote values such as mercy, forgiveness and tolerance, by appealing to followers of all religions to spread the message of peace and harmony. (Fides)

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