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Catholic News 2

Richmond, Va., Apr 3, 2016 / 04:26 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- The veto of a religious freedom bill means faith-based groups that support marriage as a union of a man and a woman won’t have needed protections, the state’s Catholic bishops said.“The Virginia Catholic Conference is deeply dismayed by the governor’s action,” the conference said March 30. “This veto risks the destruction of Virginia’s long tradition of upholding the religious freedom of faith communities which dates back to Thomas Jefferson.”The bill would have forbidden the state of Virginia from punishing religious groups that follow their sincerely held beliefs that marriage is between a man and a woman. The bill passed the House of Delegates by a vote of 59-38 and the Senate by 21-19.Virginia’s Catholic conference said the bill would ensure “that clergy and religious organizations are not penalized by the government.” The bill would also protect these indivi...

Richmond, Va., Apr 3, 2016 / 04:26 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- The veto of a religious freedom bill means faith-based groups that support marriage as a union of a man and a woman won’t have needed protections, the state’s Catholic bishops said.

“The Virginia Catholic Conference is deeply dismayed by the governor’s action,” the conference said March 30. “This veto risks the destruction of Virginia’s long tradition of upholding the religious freedom of faith communities which dates back to Thomas Jefferson.”

The bill would have forbidden the state of Virginia from punishing religious groups that follow their sincerely held beliefs that marriage is between a man and a woman. The bill passed the House of Delegates by a vote of 59-38 and the Senate by 21-19.

Virginia’s Catholic conference said the bill would ensure “that clergy and religious organizations are not penalized by the government.” The bill would also protect these individuals and organizations from civil liability.

Gov. Terry McAuliffe, a Democrat, vetoed the bill on live radio Wednesday. He claimed that signing the bill would be “making Virginia unwelcome to same-sex couples, while artificially engendering a sense of fear and persecution among our religious communities.”

He also cited corporation leaders’ opposition to the bill, charging that it was “bad for business.”

“They don't want headaches coming from the state,” he said.

LGBT activist groups also opposed the bill.

The Catholic conference said that the bill does not apply to businesses, but “simply affirms the right of religious organizations to follow their religious beliefs.” The conference charged that Gov. McAuliffe’s veto “marginalizes religious believers who hold to the timeless truth about marriage.”

The legislation would have preserved “fair access to state resources” for clergy and religious organizations, including charities and schools, the conference said.

“Marriage is the first institution, written in natural law and existing before any government or religion, and is between one man and one woman,” the conference added. “Recognizing and honoring this institution is not discrimination, but counting people’s faith against them most certainly is.”

Sen. Charles W. Carrico Sr. (R-Grayson) sponsored the bill. He told the Washington Post he believes there will be lawsuits against churches.

“I think you see a trend around the country right now to promote homosexual beliefs, and I think you see that trend happening on a wide-scale basis,” he said.

The Virginia legislature could override the veto, but that is considered very unlikely, the Associated Press reports.

Other bills to protect religious freedom have drawn significant opposition in recent years. In Georgia on Monday, Republican Gov. Nathan Deal vetoed another proposed religious freedom protection bill.

In some states and the District of Columbia, new laws and funding decisions have shut down Catholic adoption agencies on the grounds they do not place children with same-sex couples. Some Catholic schools have also become the targets of lawsuits from employees fired for violating morals standards on sexual morality.

Wealthy funders like the Ford Foundation, the Arcus Foundation and the Evelyn and Walter Haas Jr. Fund have poured millions of dollars into legal groups, law school projects and activist groups to counter religious freedom protections.


Photo credit: Joseph Sohm via www.shutterstock.com

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HOUSTON (AP) -- Kris Jenkins and Nate Britt, brothers in every way except blood, are giving each other the silent treatment for about 48 hours....

HOUSTON (AP) -- Kris Jenkins and Nate Britt, brothers in every way except blood, are giving each other the silent treatment for about 48 hours....

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CHESTER, Pa. (AP) -- An Amtrak train struck a piece of heavy equipment just south of Philadelphia on Sunday, causing a derailment, killing two Amtrak workers and sending more than 30 passengers to hospitals, authorities said....

CHESTER, Pa. (AP) -- An Amtrak train struck a piece of heavy equipment just south of Philadelphia on Sunday, causing a derailment, killing two Amtrak workers and sending more than 30 passengers to hospitals, authorities said....

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BILLINGS, Mont. (AP) -- Joseph Medicine Crow, an acclaimed Native American historian and last surviving war chief of Montana's Crow Tribe, has died. He was 102....

BILLINGS, Mont. (AP) -- Joseph Medicine Crow, an acclaimed Native American historian and last surviving war chief of Montana's Crow Tribe, has died. He was 102....

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CHICAGO (AP) -- Heart failure patients with clogged arteries have a better chance of surviving 10 years if they get bypass surgery plus medicine rather than just drugs alone, according to an international study....

CHICAGO (AP) -- Heart failure patients with clogged arteries have a better chance of surviving 10 years if they get bypass surgery plus medicine rather than just drugs alone, according to an international study....

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ATHENS, Greece (AP) -- An agreement between the European Union and Turkey to deport migrants currently on Greek islands back to the Turkish mainland is to take effect Monday morning, but the operation is threatened by a shortage of personnel....

ATHENS, Greece (AP) -- An agreement between the European Union and Turkey to deport migrants currently on Greek islands back to the Turkish mainland is to take effect Monday morning, but the operation is threatened by a shortage of personnel....

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BERLIN (AP) -- An international coalition of media outlets on Sunday published what it said was an extensive investigation into the offshore financial dealings of the rich and famous, based on a vast trove of documents provided by an anonymous source....

BERLIN (AP) -- An international coalition of media outlets on Sunday published what it said was an extensive investigation into the offshore financial dealings of the rich and famous, based on a vast trove of documents provided by an anonymous source....

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(Vatican Radio) Pope Francis says a special collection will be taken up in all of Europe's Catholic churches on April 24 to raise funds to help the people of Ukraine, which is facing renewed conflict and political tensions. Despite a peace deal agreed last year in Belarus, the nation continues to be in dire need of aid amid continuing violence and political turmoil.Listen to the report by Stefan Bos: The Pope told tens of thousands of people at the end of a Mass in St. Peter's Square, that the collection was a "gesture of charity that, apart from alleviating material suffering, shows my personal closeness as well as that of the entire Church" to the people of Ukraine.    The Pope's call for compassion comes at a time when the former Soviet republic remains in turmoil. International observers note that violence has intensified recently in eastern Ukraine between government forces and Russian-backed separatists. Officials on both sides say s...

(Vatican Radio) Pope Francis says a special collection will be taken up in all of Europe's Catholic churches on April 24 to raise funds to help the people of Ukraine, which is facing renewed conflict and political tensions. 

Despite a peace deal agreed last year in Belarus, the nation continues to be in dire need of aid amid continuing violence and political turmoil.

Listen to the report by Stefan Bos:

The Pope told tens of thousands of people at the end of a Mass in St. Peter's Square, that the collection was a "gesture of charity that, apart from alleviating material suffering, shows my personal closeness as well as that of the entire Church" to the people of Ukraine.    

The Pope's call for compassion comes at a time when the former Soviet republic remains in turmoil. International observers note that violence has intensified recently in eastern Ukraine between government forces and Russian-backed separatists. 

Officials on both sides say several people have been killed and injured in renewed fighting in recent weeks. Kiev said at least one Ukrainian soldier was killed and eight others injured in the clashes over the weekend.   

It comes as a major setback for negotiators who had hoped that a peace deal agreed last year in Minsk, Belarus, would finally end a conflict that has killed more than 9,000 people. The ongoing clashes have also impacted up to 1.7 million people, including many children, who have fled their homes in Crimea, which was annexed by Russia, and the eastern Donbass region.

POLITICAL UPHEAVAL 

Besides clashes in the east Ukraine also faces a political crisis amid mounting frustration over high-level corruption. 

Attempts to form a new government, which is vital to get billions of dollars in crucial international assistance, collapsed last week. 

Officials initially said Ukraine's three major parliamentary parties had agreed to form a new coalition and nominate parliamentary speaker Volodymyr Hroysman as the new prime minister.

But at the last moment Yulia Tymoshenko, a former prime minister herself, pressed demands such as ending Western-backed reforms, including a tax on pension payments and rolling back energy price hikes, as the price of taking her Fatherland Party into the alliance.

Despite these difficulties, Ukraine's President Petro Poroshenko insists on closer ties with the European Union.  

"DANGEROUS" MOVE

He has expressed concerns about an upcoming non-binding referendum in the Netherlands on whether the country should ratify an association agreement between the EU and Ukraine. "The real purpose for the internal Dutch discussion is about the future of the European Union and internal political clashes," Poroshenko told reporters at the end of a nuclear security summit in Washington.

"I think this is very dangerous for a country of 45 million [people]... to become the victim of this discussion if this referendum would have a negative result, despite of the fact that this is not a binding referendum," he added 

Yet amid uncertainty about their future, many Ukrainians hold on to their Christian faith, encouraged by Pope Francis. 

The vast majority of Christians living in Ukraine are Orthodox but there are about a million Roman Catholics and some four million Eastern Rite Catholics. 

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ATLANTA (AP) -- Much attention is being paid to the U.S. Supreme Court vacancy, but equally partisan battles are being waged for control of state courts around the nation....

ATLANTA (AP) -- Much attention is being paid to the U.S. Supreme Court vacancy, but equally partisan battles are being waged for control of state courts around the nation....

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CHESTER, Pa. (AP) -- An Amtrak train struck a piece of construction equipment just south of Philadelphia on Sunday causing a derailment, killing two Amtrak workers and sending more than 30 passengers to hospitals, authorities said....

CHESTER, Pa. (AP) -- An Amtrak train struck a piece of construction equipment just south of Philadelphia on Sunday causing a derailment, killing two Amtrak workers and sending more than 30 passengers to hospitals, authorities said....

Full Article

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