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Catholic News 2

(Vatican Radio) North Korean state television is reporting the test of a rocket engine for boosting its long-range nuclear arsenal.Listen to Alastair Wanklyn's report: Pyongyang has made a string of similar claims recently about its ability to destroy cities in South Korea, Japan and the United States. It has also denounced the latest United Nations sanctions, which are in punishment for a nuclear blast and rocket test earlier this year.Separately this weekend, G-7 foreign ministers are meeting in the Japanese city of Hiroshima for talks on terrorism, maritime security and nuclear non-proliferation. Japan is among nations pushing for nuclear disarmament.U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry will become the most senior American official to visit Hiroshima since its destruction in World War II. Some Japanese hope President Obama will visit one of the two sites where atomic bombs were dropped, when he attends a G-7 summit in Japan next month.Today, the cities of ...

(Vatican Radio) North Korean state television is reporting the test of a rocket engine for boosting its long-range nuclear arsenal.

Listen to Alastair Wanklyn's report:



Pyongyang has made a string of similar claims recently about its ability to destroy cities in South Korea, Japan and the United States. It has also denounced the latest United Nations sanctions, which are in punishment for a nuclear blast and rocket test earlier this year.

Separately this weekend, G-7 foreign ministers are meeting in the Japanese city of Hiroshima for talks on terrorism, maritime security and nuclear non-proliferation. Japan is among nations pushing for nuclear disarmament.

U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry will become the most senior American official to visit Hiroshima since its destruction in World War II. Some Japanese hope President Obama will visit one of the two sites where atomic bombs were dropped, when he attends a G-7 summit in Japan next month.

Today, the cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki have been rebuilt, and public parks stand near where the bombs fell. But across Japan, a sense of injustice remains over the massive destruction of life.

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(Vatican Radio) Preparations have begun in Armenia, Azerbaijan and Georgia to welcome Pope Francis later this year as part of efforts to further improve Catholic-Orthodox relations. Saturday's announced trip comes amid international concern about renewed clashes around the separatist region of Nagorno-Karabakh.Listen to Stefan Bos' report: The Pope's visit to the often volatile Caucasus region comes shortly after Azerbaijan and Armenia blamed each other for massivecease-fire violations in the breakaway enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh.Fighting between forces from both countries killed dozens of people. Officials described the clashes as the worst violence sincea truce was signed in 1994. Azerbaijan and Armenian-backed separatists could be seen fighting fierce battles.They later pledged to allow each side to search safely for the bodies of the many soldiers killed in the clashes.UNILATERAL CEASEFIREEarlier, Azerbaijan's President Ilham Aliyev announced a unilat...

(Vatican Radio) Preparations have begun in Armenia, Azerbaijan and Georgia to welcome Pope Francis later this year as part of efforts to further improve Catholic-Orthodox relations. Saturday's announced trip comes amid international concern about renewed clashes around the separatist region of Nagorno-Karabakh.

Listen to Stefan Bos' report:

The Pope's visit to the often volatile Caucasus region comes shortly after Azerbaijan and Armenia blamed each other for massive
cease-fire violations in the breakaway enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh.

Fighting between forces from both countries killed dozens of people. Officials described the clashes as the worst violence since
a truce was signed in 1994. Azerbaijan and Armenian-backed separatists could be seen fighting fierce battles.

They later pledged to allow each side to search safely for the bodies of the many soldiers killed in the clashes.

UNILATERAL CEASEFIRE

Earlier, Azerbaijan's President Ilham Aliyev announced a unilateral ceasefire with Armenian-backed troops over the breakaway region of Nagorno-Karabakh. "Azerbaijan has violated all the norms of international law. We won't abandon our principal position. But at the same time we are observing the ceasefire," he said in televised remarks. "And after that we will try to solve the conflict peacefully. At the same time we will strengthen our army."  

Nagorno-Karabakh is inside Azerbaijan but is controlled by ethnic Armenians who comprise most of its population.  

The spokesman of the president of the self-declared Nagorno Karabakh republic, David Babayan, has denied wrongdoing,
accusing instead Azerbaijan of escalating tensions. "It was a clear violation of the ceasefire regime, the international law, the international humanitarian law and the Geneva conventions...Because whatever official Baku has done in the zone of the Azerbaijani-Karabakh conflict was a conspicuous manifestation of terrorism and anti-Armenian policy," he said.

PRAYING PEACE

Armenian forces reportedly shot down an Azeri helicopter and worries have been growing that the clashes will spread in the strategic region,
rich with oil and natural gas.

Pope Francis has been praying for peace in the troubled region, a message he was expected to carry with him when visiting Armenia in June. The Pope also labeled the Ottoman-era slaughter of Armenians as genocide and seeks to improve relations with the Orthodox Church. And he reaches out to heavily Islamic Azerbaijan and mainly Orthodox Georgia where people are looking forward to his September 30-October 2 trip. 

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AUGUSTA, Ga. (AP) -- The Latest from the third round of the Masters on Saturday (all times local):...

AUGUSTA, Ga. (AP) -- The Latest from the third round of the Masters on Saturday (all times local):...

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WARSAW, Poland (AP) -- Thousands of Poles rallied Saturday against tightening Poland's anti-abortion law, which is already among Europe's strictest....

WARSAW, Poland (AP) -- Thousands of Poles rallied Saturday against tightening Poland's anti-abortion law, which is already among Europe's strictest....

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KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) -- Afghan President Ashraf Ghani on Saturday committed to pushing reforms after his picks for attorney general and interior minister won long-sought Cabinet confirmation, while U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry pleaded with the government's power-sharing leaders to bury their "factional divisions" for the good of the country....

KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) -- Afghan President Ashraf Ghani on Saturday committed to pushing reforms after his picks for attorney general and interior minister won long-sought Cabinet confirmation, while U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry pleaded with the government's power-sharing leaders to bury their "factional divisions" for the good of the country....

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DUBLIN (AP) -- British Prime Minister David Cameron conceded Saturday that he had bungled his acknowledgement of his investment in an offshore fund, a controversy that drove thousands out onto London's streets to denounce him and the Panama law firm involved....

DUBLIN (AP) -- British Prime Minister David Cameron conceded Saturday that he had bungled his acknowledgement of his investment in an offshore fund, a controversy that drove thousands out onto London's streets to denounce him and the Panama law firm involved....

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COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (AP) -- Looking both East and West for support, Republican presidential candidates angled Saturday to pick up more delegates in Colorado while at the same time bidding for favor a half-continent away in New York's all-important April 19 primary....

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (AP) -- Looking both East and West for support, Republican presidential candidates angled Saturday to pick up more delegates in Colorado while at the same time bidding for favor a half-continent away in New York's all-important April 19 primary....

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BRUSSELS (AP) -- After nearly three weeks of frantic searching, Belgian authorities announced Saturday they had finally identified the elusive "man in the hat" spotted alongside the two suicide bombers who blew themselves up at Brussels Airport: It was Paris attacks suspect Mohamed Abrini....

BRUSSELS (AP) -- After nearly three weeks of frantic searching, Belgian authorities announced Saturday they had finally identified the elusive "man in the hat" spotted alongside the two suicide bombers who blew themselves up at Brussels Airport: It was Paris attacks suspect Mohamed Abrini....

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Vatican City, Apr 9, 2016 / 05:44 am (CNA/EWTN News).- In Saturday's address for the monthly Jubilee of Mercy general audience, Pope Francis said almsgiving is not just about the money; it is about being attentive to the actual needs of the person asking for help.“Almsgiving is a gesture of love which directs us toward those we meet,” the Pope said in his catechesis. “It is a gesture of sincere attention to those who come to us and ask our help.”“We should not identify almsgiving simply with a (hastily given) monetary offering” he said, “without looking at the person, and without stopping to talk, to understand what they really need.”In off-the-cuff remarks, the Pope challenged the faithful as to whether they are able to “stop and look in the face, look in the eyes, of the person who is asking for my help.”The April 9 gathering in St. Peter's Square was the latest in a monthly series of special audiences for the Hol...

Vatican City, Apr 9, 2016 / 05:44 am (CNA/EWTN News).- In Saturday's address for the monthly Jubilee of Mercy general audience, Pope Francis said almsgiving is not just about the money; it is about being attentive to the actual needs of the person asking for help.

“Almsgiving is a gesture of love which directs us toward those we meet,” the Pope said in his catechesis. “It is a gesture of sincere attention to those who come to us and ask our help.”

“We should not identify almsgiving simply with a (hastily given) monetary offering” he said, “without looking at the person, and without stopping to talk, to understand what they really need.”

In off-the-cuff remarks, the Pope challenged the faithful as to whether they are able to “stop and look in the face, look in the eyes, of the person who is asking for my help.”

The April 9 gathering in St. Peter's Square was the latest in a monthly series of special audiences for the Holy Year of Mercy, which are held in addition to the weekly general audiences.

The Jubilee of Mercy is an Extraordinary Holy Year that officially commenced December 8 – the Solemnity of the Immaculate Conception – with the opening of the Holy Door in St. Peter's Basilica. It will close Nov. 20, 2016 with the Solemnity of Christ the King.


Almsgiving “must carry with it all the richness of mercy,” the Pope said in his catechesis, observing that the Italian word for alms – “elemosina” – is derived from the Greek and references “mercy.”

“Just as mercy has a million paths, a million processes, so too almsgiving is expressed in many ways to alleviate the disadvantages of all those in need.”

Francis cited examples from Scripture of the importance of giving alms.

“God demands particular attention (be given) to the poor,” he said: the “destitute, foreigners, orphans, and widows.”

Citing a passage from Deuteronomy on giving alms – “You shall give to him freely, and your heart shall not be grudging” - he explained how giving to those in need requires “an attitude of interior joy.”

Almsgiving should not be seen as a “weight or annoyance from which we free ourselves hastily,” he said.

Speaking off-script, the Pope spoke on the hesitancy to give money to the poor on the argument that they will just use it “to buy wine get drunk.”

“But if he is drunk, it is because he does not have another path!” he said.

“And you, what do you do in hiding, that no one sees? And you judge that poor man who asks for a coin (to buy) a glass of wine?”

Francis turned his catechesis to the Gospel, citing Jesus admonishing us not to give to the poor in order to receive “praise and admiration.”

Speaking once again off-the-cuff, the Pope observed that almsgiving should be a sacrifice. He recalled an anecdote of a woman who taught her three young children to always give alms to those who asked. A poor man once approached the children while they were eating, and begged for food. The mother told the children to give half of their meal to the man.

This is an example of being “involved with the poor,” he said. “I am depriving myself of something of mine to give to you.

“And I say to parents: educate your children so give alms, to be generous with what they have.”

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Washington D.C., Apr 9, 2016 / 06:57 am (CNA/EWTN News).- Reflecting on Pope Francis' apostolic exhortation on love in the family, two professors at the John Paul II Institute have emphasized the close ties between integration and conversion, as well as the importance of the Church's established teaching.Amoris laetitia, released April 8, is the conclusion of a two-year synod process discussing both the beauty and challenges of family life today.“Among the many pastoral challenges facing the family, one issue in particular provoked intense debate and discussion during the 2014 and 2015 synods. Could there be a change in the Church's discipline to allow divorced and civilly remarried Catholics to receive the Eucharist, at least in some cases?” explained Father Antonio López and Dr. Nicholas Healy.Fr. López is dean at the Pontifical John Paul II Institute for Studies on Marriage and Family at The Catholic University of America in Washington, D.C.,...

Washington D.C., Apr 9, 2016 / 06:57 am (CNA/EWTN News).- Reflecting on Pope Francis' apostolic exhortation on love in the family, two professors at the John Paul II Institute have emphasized the close ties between integration and conversion, as well as the importance of the Church's established teaching.

Amoris laetitia, released April 8, is the conclusion of a two-year synod process discussing both the beauty and challenges of family life today.

“Among the many pastoral challenges facing the family, one issue in particular provoked intense debate and discussion during the 2014 and 2015 synods. Could there be a change in the Church's discipline to allow divorced and civilly remarried Catholics to receive the Eucharist, at least in some cases?” explained Father Antonio López and Dr. Nicholas Healy.

Fr. López is dean at the Pontifical John Paul II Institute for Studies on Marriage and Family at The Catholic University of America in Washington, D.C., and Healy is an associate professor of philosophy and culture.

“Following the lead of the synod, Pope Francis chose not to answer this question directly,” they reflected, adding that he encouraged instead a "responsible personal and pastoral discernment," accompanying people in their particular circumstances.

They noted the Pope's belief that "The key to pastoral care ... is the 'logic of integration' and discernment."

“Pope Francis's concern to avoid 'overly rigid classifications' as well as the simple application of [a] 'general norm or rule' to complex personal situations is a helpful reminder that pastors need to be patient and merciful in dealing with the sensitive situations of marriage and family life,” Fr. López and Healy reflected.

They added that “At the same, the question of whether or not someone is married is not a matter of 'rigid classification,' or the unmerciful application of a 'general norm' without regard for particular circumstances. If someone is in fact married, then the path of integration must acknowledge the reality of this marriage as an integral part of the mystery of God's plan for their life.”

“For every Christian, the path of integration is also a path of conversion. Amoris laetitia invites us to reflect on the meaning of 'integration' not in the sociological sense, but as a theological 'incorporation' in the body of Christ, 'who gave himself up for our sake and who continues to dwell in our midst' (59).”

Fr. López said that two of the most beautiful things in Amoris laetitia are "the emphasis on the centrality of Christ, and how the Christian gospel makes married love truer and more human. We need to look more at these two elements. The Pope is aware that the main challenges the Church is facing is that young people no longer see why they should get married, what the nature of Christian marriage is, and what is the social significance of the family."

They also mentioned the Pope's lengthy discussion of “mitigating factors” that might reduce one's culpability for a grave sin.

“Does this imply that on a case by case basis some civilly remarried Catholics may be admitted to the Eucharist? Although there are some expressions in the text that are not entirely clear, the answer seems to be 'no.'”

They explained that the reason that the divorced-and-remarried cannot be admitted to Communion, “which Familiaris Consortio 84 and Sacramentum Caritatis 29 affirm as based on Christ's teaching” is “precisely not” a judgement about the person's culpability: “Instead, it is the objective situation of living more coniugale [in a conjugal way] with a person who is not in fact one's husband or wife.”

"Mitigating factors do not change this objective situation,” they explained. “To change a discipline of the Church rooted in doctrine and affirmed by the constant Magisterium of the Church, an explicit declaration would be necessary. This cannot be found in the apostolic exhortation. Wherever a reader may have doubts as of how to interpret a certain passage, a sound guiding principle of interpretation is to read those passages in light of the clearly affirmed doctrine of the Church. To seek 'doctrinal novelty,' as some claim to have found in the text, where it is not stated, is to do violence to the text."

Healy acknowledged, at the same time, that “there is going to be a debate of interpreting just what this means.”

“One point that would be helpful for Catholic readers is to know that the reason why the Church has this discipline of not allowing civilly remarried Catholics to receive the sacrament is not on the basis of a determination that they're in mortal sin: it's not the subjective culpability, or even their responsibility in the failure of the marriage.”

Healy said that “once you see that, then what are presented in the document as mitigating circumstances … aren't mitigating circumstances that open the path to receiving Communion: they're mitigating circumstances that would allow for a more human and more charitable form of accompaniment and mercy.”

Instead of judging “a person's subjective state, you realize the human complexity of the situation. But that's of a different order than principles that would allow an exception to the prohibition against receiving the sacrament, because the reason for that prohibition is objective: it's the state or condition of life.”

He also reflected on the importance of understanding “where there is a discussion in this exhortation of the need for recognizing that there are [universal, general] norms, but there can be exceptions to the norm, what norms are being talked about here? Are they norms of divine right? Absolute moral norms that regard those acts that are intrinsically evil? Or are they disciplinary norms?”

"We are not dealing with absolute moral norms that refer to intrinsically evil acts and are valid in every situation. The existence of such norms is the main point of the doctrinal encyclical Veritatis splendor. The Pope said that he does not want to make doctrinal changes. We are not dealing with whether, for example, there can be an acceptable exception to adultery, or torture, or acts of pedophilia, which are wrong always, everywhere, and without exception. The Church does not have the authority to change norms of divine right, like the one regarding the admission to Communion of those living in irregular situations."

Fr. López suggested that "the norms referred to in the text are not absolute moral norms or norms that regard the divine right, but are rather disciplinary, such as the admission to certain public offices of people in irregular situations (see no. 299). There is also reference (fn. 336) to the sacramental discipline that regards who is a fitting person to be the godfather or godmother at a baptism."

"It would be be erroneous to reduce the affirmation that 'divorced and civilly remarried couples cannot receive communion' to a disciplinary norm whose application can be suspended if certain circumstances suggest that the norm is not pertinent to a specific couple. In this case, a subjectivistic understanding of conscience will have more weight than what God has revealed about the nature of love and what human experience knows to be the case. One's own conscience will be the ultimate tribunal to discriminate what one can do; but it is a tribunal where God is not allowed to speak, and whatever he says is taken to coerce human freedom. But to expel God from one's conscience is to hand oneself over to the one who is more powerful than oneself, or who speaks with greater clarity. It is to accept slavery in the guise of self-determination."

“To see their impossibility of receiving the Eucharist as a hard way of applying a norm, I think is a confusion of what is going on; they can't receive communion because their state objectively contradicts the nature of the sacraments of marriage and the Eucharist … That's why you can't see this case as a possible exception to a sacramental or moral norm.”

The risk in the discussion of norms, Fr. López said, is that “what people will run away with once the dust settles is … an idea of Christianity that says, 'Alright, so let's try to be good. If we can, great. If not, don't worry, we'll be understanding and merciful'.”

Healy stressed that there is also a danger in "reducing marraige to a mere ideal, which the spouses need to pursue."

“That's not really adequate to the truth of marriage: if you understand it simply as an ideal, that misses what's most fundamental about the sacramental economy … marriage isn't just an ideal, but a sacrament, a vocation that comprehends you, and that makes possible a life together beyond the shortcomings of your will.”

Marriage is “not something that you have put into existence,” Fr. López stated. “It's a gift given by God and accepted in freedom; it is a vocation that one joyfully and courageously receives and embraces for all of life.”

“If you talk about marriage simply as an ideal,” he said, "detached from the concrete lives of the spouses, you moralize marriage. You put marriage in the hands of the spouses' intentions, their good wills, and their capacity to sacrifice. But if this is the case -- is it really the only thing the Church has to say about married love, is this moral effort to pursue a very high ideal? Is the Christian Gospel really necessary to come up with this not particularly deep morality? How can there be joy in marriage if it does not participate in Christ's love for the Church? Why would one endure the sacrifices that married life brings with itself? If marriage is just dependent upon the will, intentions, and feelings of the spouses, is there an adequate reason that can adequately justify why marriage is indissoluble?"

Real pastoral accompaniment, Healy concluded, isn't saying, “we acknowledge the ideal, but we recognize that not everyone lives up to it.”

“Real pastoral accompaniment does not simply propose an ideal: it is grounded in the mystery of God's grace, which is communicated in the sacraments. A sure signpost along the path of accompaniment and integration is the sacramental gift of an indissoluble bond of marriage -- a sign that God has irrevocably shared his own life and love, and that his faithfulness endures.”

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