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Catholic News

Pope Leo XIV speaks at a Wednesday audience with the public on June 11, 2025. / Credit: Daniel Ibanez/CNAVatican City, Jun 11, 2025 / 09:12 am (CNA).Pope Leo XIV has appointed Bishop Joseph Lin Yuntuan as auxiliary bishop of the Archdiocese of Fuzhou in China, the Holy See announced on Wednesday.The Vatican credited the Sino-Vatican deal, signed in September 2019 and renewed for a third time in October 2024, for Lin Yuntuan's June 5 appointment.The Vatican announced "the recognition of the civil effects and the taking of possession of the office of Monsignor Joseph Lin Yuntuan." The announcement said the Holy Father made the appointment "in the framework of the dialogue regarding the application of the provisional agreement between the Holy See and the People's Republic of China."Lin Yuntuan, 73, was ordained a priest for the Fuzhou Archdiocese, located in China's Fujian Province, in 1984 after completing four years of studies in the local seminary. He was clandestinely consecr...

Pope Leo XIV speaks at a Wednesday audience with the public on June 11, 2025. / Credit: Daniel Ibanez/CNA

Vatican City, Jun 11, 2025 / 09:12 am (CNA).

Pope Leo XIV has appointed Bishop Joseph Lin Yuntuan as auxiliary bishop of the Archdiocese of Fuzhou in China, the Holy See announced on Wednesday.

The Vatican credited the Sino-Vatican deal, signed in September 2019 and renewed for a third time in October 2024, for Lin Yuntuan's June 5 appointment.

The Vatican announced "the recognition of the civil effects and the taking of possession of the office of Monsignor Joseph Lin Yuntuan." The announcement said the Holy Father made the appointment "in the framework of the dialogue regarding the application of the provisional agreement between the Holy See and the People's Republic of China."

Lin Yuntuan, 73, was ordained a priest for the Fuzhou Archdiocese, located in China's Fujian Province, in 1984 after completing four years of studies in the local seminary. He was clandestinely consecrated a bishop in 2017. 

From 1984 to 1994 and 1996 to 2002, Lin Yuntuan was appointed parish priest for several parishes spread across the Fuzhou Archdiocese.

Other roles he held include a teaching role at the Fuzhou seminary in 1985, two terms as deputy director of the diocesan economic commission from 1994 to 1996 and 2000 to 2003, and as diocesan administrator from 2003 and 2007.

Prior to his clandestine consecration as bishop in 2017, Lin Yuntuan served as apostolic administrator of Fuzhou from 2013 to 2016.

Archbishop Joseph Cai Bing-rui currently leads the metropolitan Archdiocese of Fuzhou, which was erected in 1946. 

Globally, 84 new bishops have been elected in 2025. To date, Pope Leo XIV has appointed 15 new bishops in Europe, Asia, Africa, South America, and the U.S. 

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Jay Richards, the director of the Heritage Foundation's DeVos Center for Life, Religion, and Family, speaks at a Fidelity Month gathering on June 9, 2025, in the Longworth House Office Building on Capitol Hill. / Credit: Madalaine Elhabbal/CNAWashington D.C., Jun 11, 2025 / 09:54 am (CNA).Members of the grassroots movement promoting the month of June as "Fidelity Month" at a gathering on Capitol Hill on Monday called for a renewal of the "common bonds" that unite Americans.Fidelity Month bills itself as "a positive, grassroots movement to heal division and restore unity in our nation. It celebrates June as a season of recommitment to God, our spouses and families, our communities, and country," according to the Fidelity Month website. Princeton professor Robert George founded the movement in 2023 after reading a Wall Street Journal article citing survey data that showed significant declines in Americans' belief in the importance of religion, family, and patriotism.It was t...

Jay Richards, the director of the Heritage Foundation's DeVos Center for Life, Religion, and Family, speaks at a Fidelity Month gathering on June 9, 2025, in the Longworth House Office Building on Capitol Hill. / Credit: Madalaine Elhabbal/CNA

Washington D.C., Jun 11, 2025 / 09:54 am (CNA).

Members of the grassroots movement promoting the month of June as "Fidelity Month" at a gathering on Capitol Hill on Monday called for a renewal of the "common bonds" that unite Americans.

Fidelity Month bills itself as "a positive, grassroots movement to heal division and restore unity in our nation. It celebrates June as a season of recommitment to God, our spouses and families, our communities, and country," according to the Fidelity Month website

Princeton professor Robert George founded the movement in 2023 after reading a Wall Street Journal article citing survey data that showed significant declines in Americans' belief in the importance of religion, family, and patriotism.

It was these principles, George said at the event in the Longworth House Office Building on June 9, that inspired him to declare "by the power invested in me by absolutely no one" the month of June to be Fidelity Month. 

The "exceptional" thing about America, George observed, is that the source of the country's unity cannot be found in race, ethnicity, or a particular religious tradition. 

Rather, national unity of the United States is found in the "shared commitment to the principles of republican government" and the "shared belief in the importance of fidelity to God, fidelity to spouses and families, fidelity to our country and communities." 

George said the movement has grown from a few thousand initial followers to tens of thousands in 2024. "This year, we're moving into the hundreds of thousands," he said, adding: "I hope we'll be moving into the millions of people recognizing June as Fidelity Month, where we rededicate ourselves and pledge ourselves to these important principles." 

George also discussed the Fidelity Month movement during a June 4 interview on "EWTN Pro-Life Weekly," telling anchor Abigail Galván he hoped it would serve as a rallying point for Americans to reclaim the enduring values that have long been the bedrock of national unity. 

Sources of America's unity and strength

At Monday's event, titled "What Are the Sources of America's Unity and Strength?", George was joined by several conservative leaders including Sen. Josh Hawley, R-Missouri; the Heritage Foundation's Jay Richards; and Kristen Waggoner, CEO of Alliance Defending Freedom (ADF).

Echoing George in her speech, Waggoner reflected that "unlike most countries, [America] was founded on a direct appeal to divine reality."

Waggoner continued: "When the founders declared independence, they didn't appeal to a king or to an army or even to a written constitution. They appealed to heaven, to a God who endows each person with an alienable right, no matter what they believe."

In his remarks, Hawley extolled marriage as "the true test of virtue for men and women" but especially for young men.

Citing President Theodore Roosevelt's four-volume work "The Winning of the West," Hawley noted Roosevelt's view that of all the dangers faced by frontiersmen in the West, "the greatest challenge they faced" was their character and that fidelity to marriage was the ultimate test of manhood and the foundation of civilization.

"Whereas in Roosevelt's day, the challenge of the frontier was the challenge of bringing culture and civilization to a vast wide-open space to what was in many respects a wilderness, our challenge today is to preserve our civilization from becoming a wilderness," Hawley said.

"Today, the wilderness threatens to come to us," he continued. "We see this nowhere more starkly than the breakdown of marriage and the family." 

Hawley called on members of the movement to embrace their responsibility to "craft an economy and a society where marriage is rewarded."

"I think Roosevelt was right all those years ago," he said, concluding: "This must be the great call that we give to our countrymen again, to embrace the call to fidelity, to be faithful to what we believe in, to be faithful to what makes us who we are, to be faithful in our marriage commitments, in our family life, to our country."

In his speech, Richards, director of Heritage's DeVos Center for Life, Religion, and Family, cited the changing tide on the gender ideology debate in the U.S., where half of the states have passed laws protecting children from "gender-affirming care." 

Just three years ago, he pointed out, "it was difficult to get Republican staffers and members in Congress to even talk about this issue." 

Now, he said, "something like 70 or 80% of the American public doesn't believe that we should be conducting experimental medicine on kids who are uncomfortable with their bodies. [And] they don't believe that males should be in female prisons." 

"We now have a moment in which the vast majority of our country is opposed to the idea that separates children's identities from their bodies and is focused like a laser beam on the health of children," he said, concluding: "That's concrete. That's the moment for those of us to continue to commit ourselves to fidelity to God, to country, to marriage, and to family, to make the case for that good again." 

Other speakers included former U.S. Secretary of Housing and Urban Development Ben Carson, Family Research Council President Tony Perkins, and American Enterprise Institute Senior Fellow Ian Rowe.

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null / Credit: Korawat photo shoot/ShutterstockRome, Italy, Jun 11, 2025 / 10:46 am (CNA).The head of a sex abuse survivors' group in Italy expressed his doubts that a recent report on safeguarding efforts published by the Italian bishops' conference presents a complete picture of the scale of the abuse crisis in the local Church.Francesco Zanardi, a survivor and founder of Rete L'Abuso, told CNA that the conference (known by the Italian acronym CEI) has only published "partial reports every year or every two years" since 2020, which makes it hard to make an accurate assessment."It's difficult to make a comparison because we don't know which cases they are talking about or which geographical area in Italy they are talking about when they give these numbers," he said. "It's a bit like if there's a hole in the middle of the road and instead of repairing the hole, you're just there counting how many people fall into that hole, but you don't fix it.""Let's just say this report says...

null / Credit: Korawat photo shoot/Shutterstock

Rome, Italy, Jun 11, 2025 / 10:46 am (CNA).

The head of a sex abuse survivors' group in Italy expressed his doubts that a recent report on safeguarding efforts published by the Italian bishops' conference presents a complete picture of the scale of the abuse crisis in the local Church.

Francesco Zanardi, a survivor and founder of Rete L'Abuso, told CNA that the conference (known by the Italian acronym CEI) has only published "partial reports every year or every two years" since 2020, which makes it hard to make an accurate assessment.

"It's difficult to make a comparison because we don't know which cases they are talking about or which geographical area in Italy they are talking about when they give these numbers," he said. "It's a bit like if there's a hole in the middle of the road and instead of repairing the hole, you're just there counting how many people fall into that hole, but you don't fix it."

"Let's just say this report says nothing," he added.

Titled "Protect, Prevent, Train: Third Survey on the Territorial Network for the Protection of Minors and Vulnerable Adults," the nearly 100-page report, published May 28, highlighted current and developing safeguarding practices within the Italian Church between 2023 and 2024.

Among them is the establishment of listening centers for clerical abuse victims in the country. According to the report, there are currently 103 centers serving 130 Italian dioceses.

In a statement released the same day, Archbishop Giuseppe Baturi of Cagliari, secretary-general of the CEI, said the report was part of a path of transparency meant "to overcome the cultural and operational resistances still present."

"We are called to do our part, with full awareness and responsibility," especially in promoting "institutional hubs at the local level, as well as a deeper cultural awareness, in particular within universities."

While the report noted "significant progress in training and awareness," it noted an increase in abuse cases, the majority of which were committed within a "parish setting." An estimated 115 (64 male and 51 female) past and current victims reported their abuse between 2023 and 2024. Comparatively, in 2022, 54 victims reported abuse, while 89 victims reported being abused in 2020.

The abuses were committed by "67 alleged perpetrators," including "44 clergy members, 15 religious, and eight laypersons," the report stated.

Chiara Griffini, president of the CEI's Office for the Protection of Minors, said the increase in cases was "concerning because, as we have always said, even a single case, for what the Church is and represents, will always be too many."

"There are 69 reported cases, 37 of which are current — which tells us that there is clearly an ongoing phenomenon — and 32 are from the past," she said in an interview with CNA on June 11. "So, looking at these 32 from the past, I think that the prevention work we have put in place is, in some way, sowing some seeds."

Griffini added that making those reported abuses public was a sign that the bishops' conference is aiming for transparency and that "the path we have undertaken is certainly an important one and there is no turning back."

"Child protection must be an integral part of the Church's mission," she said.

However, Zanardi told CNA that although the report states the number of victims who have come forward in the past year, it doesn't state what the Church has done to assist them.

"It says there are 115 victims. Fine. Have you compensated them? Have you given them psychological assistance? Nothing is known about this," he said.

Griffini told CNA that while the task of the listening centers is to collect reported abuses and to inform ecclesiastical authorities about those cases, compensation to victims "concerns a procedural phase and therefore does not fall within the scope" of the centers.

She also noted that the report highlights the various means of support offered to victims and their families by the listening centers, including "psychotherapeutic support, spiritual support, and other forms that have not been detailed but which represent a form of support and closeness that the listening center offers to victims."

Among the other concerns Zanardi expressed were that Cardinal Matteo Zuppi of Milan, president of the CEI, did not keep his word that the reports would examine cases from 2000 onward.

At a 2022 press conference, Zuppi announced the publishing of the annual reports and said it would only analyze cases dating back to 2000 and no further because "judging something from 80 years ago by today's criteria, something that was was judged by other criteria at the time, creates difficulties of evaluation." 

However, the first report released in November 2022 only published information on cases from 2020. 

On its website, Rete L'Abuso compiled its own list of abuse cases in Italy dating back to 2000. Zanardi said that based on the data and files they have collected from victims, "we count 1,035 pedophile priests who have abused 4,267 victims. That is a real figure." 

During the press conference two years ago, Zuppi publicly offered to meet with Zanardi and told him: "If you have a case, tell us." 

The head of Rete L'Abuso told CNA that he met with Zuppi on several occasions and had brought the cases his network had collected.  

"I brought them, but then he never wanted to take them," he said. "Now, they [the Italian bishops' conference] have declared that they will not take data from associations or anyone else but only data that arrives at their help desks."

For this reason, he added, the current report most likely contains incomplete data since not all victims, especially those "who no longer believe in the Church," would report their abuse to a diocesan listening center.

However, Griffini clarified that the annual survey is meant as a "monitoring and accountability tool" for the safeguarding policies adopted by the CEI in 2019.

"Therefore, the surveys start from 2020 precisely because their purpose is to monitor whether the system that was created, both to generate safe ecclesial environments and to intercept alleged abuses, is working," she said.

Griffini also told CNA that a "pilot study" dealing with "verified cases of abuse against minors in the 20-year period between 2001 and 2021" is still in progress and expected to be published "in the first months of 2026."

She added that the study is being compiled by "two third-party and completely independent bodies": the Center for Victimology and Security at the University of Bologna and the Istituto degli Innocenti (Institute of the Innocents) based in Florence.

"Researchers will deliver the data to a commission appointed by the bishops' conference, which will carry out interpretations at the ecclesial level, and the study will be published in its entirety, just as they have reported it," she explained.

Zanardi expressed doubts that the Italian Church could be trusted to monitor itself and said he had filed a request with Italian prosecutors to conduct an independent investigation, like those conducted in Spain and France. However, he noted, it was doubtful such an inquiry would happen because of the relationship between church and state.

"Let's say that Italy is a very distinct country, where in fact they are letting the Church do everything, but the state doesn't interfere," he said. "It doesn't meddle, as they say, like the Mafia."

Griffini argued that the pilot study "is an independent investigation because the two bodies are clearly not of an ecclesial nature; they are academic bodies that have received a mandate, just as other independent commissions had mandates, and they will respond according to scientific criteria."

Once completed, she said, the 2026 study will develop further research "that can truly shed more light on this phenomenon to help us, in the present day, to make non-repetition possible and, at the same time, find what may be the best practices for justice and reparation."

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A group of pilgrims in St. Peter's Square. / Credit: EWTN NewsVatican City, Jun 11, 2025 / 11:32 am (CNA)."Rome '25-the Way of St. James '27-Jerusalem '33" is the name of an initiative led by young people who, through pilgrimages, evangelization, and healing, aim to "restore the soul of Europe."The initiative encourages young Christians from across the continent to open up a pathway to faith and hope for a new European generation in preparation for the Jubilee of Redemption, which will be celebrated in 2033."It's not just about making the pilgrimage but about rediscovering God and our Christian identity, walking the pilgrim paths of Europe with a new, courageous, and joyful perspective," the young people stated in a press release issued by the Spanish Bishops' Conference, one of the promoters of the initiative.Young Christians in Europe 'raising their voices'In this way, young Christians in Europe "are raising their voices" to tell the world that another Europe is possible and ...

A group of pilgrims in St. Peter's Square. / Credit: EWTN News

Vatican City, Jun 11, 2025 / 11:32 am (CNA).

"Rome '25-the Way of St. James '27-Jerusalem '33" is the name of an initiative led by young people who, through pilgrimages, evangelization, and healing, aim to "restore the soul of Europe."

The initiative encourages young Christians from across the continent to open up a pathway to faith and hope for a new European generation in preparation for the Jubilee of Redemption, which will be celebrated in 2033.

"It's not just about making the pilgrimage but about rediscovering God and our Christian identity, walking the pilgrim paths of Europe with a new, courageous, and joyful perspective," the young people stated in a press release issued by the Spanish Bishops' Conference, one of the promoters of the initiative.

Young Christians in Europe 'raising their voices'

In this way, young Christians in Europe "are raising their voices" to tell the world that another Europe is possible and to reconnect it "with the beauty, truth, and love of Christ," especially in a time of distractions, uprootedness, and "hidden wounds."

Fernando Moscardó, a 22-year-old medical student, has been the architect of this "revolution of the youthful spirit" on the old continent. Speaking with ACI Prensa, CNA's Spanish-language news partner, he explained that the idea arose from seeing the pessimistic figures of an increasingly secularized Europe.

"Recent surveys tell us that more than 70% of young Europeans declare themselves nonreligious, an unprecedented figure. Furthermore, young people feel lonelier than ever, and we see that 42% of Europeans say they feel their lives lack meaning," he noted.

"Fer," as his friends know him, was clear that the answer to healing these wounds must be a spiritual one. He also pointed out that Bishop Mikel Garciandía, head of the Spanish bishops' conference's committee on pilgrimages and also in charge of the project, refers to this "lack of meaning" as "a spiritual orphanhood."

Manifesto of the young Christians of Europe

They consequently decided to embark on this journey of renewal in preparation for the Jubilee of Redemption in 2033, the 2,000th anniversary of Christ's redemption.

"We couldn't wait until 2033 to get started, so we outlined a project consisting of three stages: The first is in Rome, with this year's Jubilee of Hope, with which we kick off the event." It will then take place in Santiago de Compostela (the Way of St. James pilgrimage route) in 2027 and, finally, in Jerusalem in 2033.

During this month of June, local pilgrimages are taking place throughout Europe, culminating on Aug. 1 with the proclamation of a manifesto of the Young Christians of Europe in St. Mary's Basilica in Trastevere, Rome.

"On that day, together we will tell the world what we believe, what we dream, and what we are ready to live out. Every step we take is for those who no longer believe they have hope. This revolution of the spirit aims to make the invisible visible and give a voice to those who unknowingly seek God," he said.

So that this declaration, drawn up on the basis of pilgrimages, truly serves as the voice of a generation, it will be published digitally during the month of July so that young people around the world can read and sign it.

"We want this to be the most widely supported youth declaration in the history of Europe, and only then will the words we speak on Aug. 1 have the weight of a multitude that believes, dreams, and journeys together."

Furthermore, the project is also organized around a large network of Christian pilgrimage routes, including the historic Michaelmas Axis, which links shrines of St. Michael the Archangel from Ireland to Jerusalem.

This "spiritual sword" symbolizes a Europe that is once again turning heavenward. Monasteries, cathedrals, and parishes will become points of light, welcoming those who go through life in search of meaning.

Three pillars of the project

Moscardó also explained that the initiative is based on three pillars: pilgrimage, healing, and evangelization. "These are the three pillars we are taking as turning points to bring about change in this lost Europe," he emphasized.

The young man reiterated that this is "a project of young people and for young people" and said that it has had "a very beautiful start," with work teams throughout Europe supported by the bishops' conferences.

"We thought that people today were going on pilgrimage for tourism, for social interaction, and we were forgetting that the most important thing when going on pilgrimage is to be aware that we do not walk alone, that we walk with Christ, and that we can pave the way for that personal relationship with him," he explained.

He also noted that more than 600 people participated in the first pilgrimage, which was to Mont Saint-Michel in France. "We're having a very beautiful and quite large response."

On June 11, the project's promoters are scheduled to be received by Pope Leo XIV at the Vatican. He also explained that they are already working on a website to provide all the necessary information about the activities as well as on their social media channels, which will be called J2R2033 (Journey to Redemption 2033).

This story was first published by ACI Prensa, CNA's Spanish-language news partner. It has been translated and adapted by CNA.

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Pope Leo XIV address papal representatives on June 10, 2025, at the Vatican. / Credit: Vatican MediaVatican City, Jun 10, 2025 / 14:11 pm (CNA).Pope Leo XIV received papal representatives at the Vatican on Tuesday, reminding them that the Church "will always defend the sacrosanct right to believe in God" and that this life "is not at the mercy of the powers of this world."In the June 10 speech delivered in the Clementine Hall of the Vatican Apostolic Palace, he thanked the papal nuncios and international organizations around the world for their work.The pontiff noted that "there is no country in the world" with a diplomatic corps as universal and united as that of the Holy See: "We are united in Christ and we are united in the Church.""I say this thinking certainly of the dedication and organization, but, even more so, of the motivations that guide you, the pastoral style that should characterize you, the spirit of faith that inspires us," he added.He particularly thanked them ...

Pope Leo XIV address papal representatives on June 10, 2025, at the Vatican. / Credit: Vatican Media

Vatican City, Jun 10, 2025 / 14:11 pm (CNA).

Pope Leo XIV received papal representatives at the Vatican on Tuesday, reminding them that the Church "will always defend the sacrosanct right to believe in God" and that this life "is not at the mercy of the powers of this world."

In the June 10 speech delivered in the Clementine Hall of the Vatican Apostolic Palace, he thanked the papal nuncios and international organizations around the world for their work.

The pontiff noted that "there is no country in the world" with a diplomatic corps as universal and united as that of the Holy See: "We are united in Christ and we are united in the Church."

"I say this thinking certainly of the dedication and organization, but, even more so, of the motivations that guide you, the pastoral style that should characterize you, the spirit of faith that inspires us," he added.

He particularly thanked them for being able to rely on the documentation, reflections, and summaries prepared by the diplomats when faced with a situation that concerns the Church in a particular country. "This is for me a cause for great appreciation and gratitude," he reiterated.

'Always be the eyes of Peter!'

Pope Leo XIV then shared with those present the account from the Acts of the Apostles (3:1-10) of the healing of the paralytic, a scene that, in his opinion, "describes the ministry of Peter well."

For the pontiff, the man who begs for alms at the Beautiful Gate of the Temple represents "the image of a humanity that has lost hope and is resigned."

"Even today, the Church often encounters men and women who no longer have any joy, whom society has sidelined, or whom life has in a certain sense forced into begging for their existence," he lamented.

After looking into his eyes, the pope recounted, Peter said to the paralytic: "I have neither silver nor gold, but what I do have I give you in the name of Jesus Christ the Nazorean, [rise and] walk."

After quoting this passage, Pope Leo noted that "to look into one's eyes means to build a relationship. The ministry of Peter is to create relationships, bridges: and a representative of the pope, first and foremost, serves this invitation to look into the eyes."

"Always be the eyes of Peter! Be men capable of building relationships where it is hardest to do," the pope exhorted them, asking them to do so with humility and realism.

The Holy Father also placed his trust in the diplomatic corps of the Holy See so that "everyone may know that the Church is always ready for everything out of love, that she is always on the side of the last, the poor, and that she will always defend the sacrosanct right to believe in God, to believe that this life is not at the mercy of the powers of this world but rather is traversed by a mysterious meaning."

He also encouraged them to "always have a blessing gaze, because the ministry of Peter is to bless, that is, always to know how to see the good, even that which is hidden."

"Feel that you are missionaries, sent by the pope to be tools of communion, unity, serving the dignity of the human person, promoting sincere and constructive relations everywhere with the authorities with whom you are required to cooperate," he urged.

In conclusion, he reiterated that their work "always be enlightened by the sound decision for holiness."

After the speech, the papal representatives received a ring bearing the inscription "sub umbra Petri" ("under the shadow of Peter," cf. Acts 5:15) from the pope as a sign of communion.

This story was first published by ACI Prensa, CNA's Spanish-language news partner. It has been translated and adapted by CNA.

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Cardinal Fridolin Ambongo, the archbishop of Kinshasa in the Democratic Republic of Congo, asked President Donald Trump for aid to Africa an op-ed published in the Wall Street Journal on Sunday, June 8, 2025. / Credit: François-Régis Salefran CC BY-SA 4.0 DEEDWashington, D.C. Newsroom, Jun 10, 2025 / 15:19 pm (CNA).Cardinal Fridolin Ambongo asked U.S. President Donald Trump this weekend to reinstate foreign aid to Africa. "Targeted humanitarian aid for Africa is urgently needed, morally good, and of great strategic value to the U.S," Ambongo, the archbishop of Kinshasa in the Democratic Republic of Congo, wrote in an op-ed published in the Wall Street Journal on Sunday afternoon. "??President Trump has made clear that he will put the needs of his country and its citizens first before attending to the needs of the world. No leader of a nation as great as the U.S. could do otherwise," the cardinal stated. "It would be a mistake, however, for Mr. Trump to forget about A...

Cardinal Fridolin Ambongo, the archbishop of Kinshasa in the Democratic Republic of Congo, asked President Donald Trump for aid to Africa an op-ed published in the Wall Street Journal on Sunday, June 8, 2025. / Credit: François-Régis Salefran CC BY-SA 4.0 DEED

Washington, D.C. Newsroom, Jun 10, 2025 / 15:19 pm (CNA).

Cardinal Fridolin Ambongo asked U.S. President Donald Trump this weekend to reinstate foreign aid to Africa. 

"Targeted humanitarian aid for Africa is urgently needed, morally good, and of great strategic value to the U.S," Ambongo, the archbishop of Kinshasa in the Democratic Republic of Congo, wrote in an op-ed published in the Wall Street Journal on Sunday afternoon. 

"??President Trump has made clear that he will put the needs of his country and its citizens first before attending to the needs of the world. No leader of a nation as great as the U.S. could do otherwise," the cardinal stated. "It would be a mistake, however, for Mr. Trump to forget about Africa."

Ambongo highlighted Africa's rich natural resources and "bright entrepreneurial and eager young people" as important assets to the U.S., emphasizing the utility of a relationship between Africa and the United States. 

American generosity toward Africa through USAID has "transformed millions of lives for the better" in the region, Ambongo said, pointing out that American aid has helped enhance African society and avert further political and economic crises threatening the continent's development. In the process, he noted, American economic influence in the region has been strengthened.

With the freezing of critical aid to African countries, the cardinal described Africa as "a magnet for conflicts and fights over the natural resources so important to modern technology." 

He also noted pervasive famine and poverty plaguing many parts of the region. 

While Ambongo acknowledged the need for the U.S. to be concerned about the use of its limited resources, he noted that international adversaries will replace the U.S. if it completely withdraws all aid to Africa.

"International politics won't tolerate a vacuum," he predicted. "Should the U.S. abandon Africa, its place will be taken by its adversaries: China, Russia, Iran, North Korea."

The cardinal stressed that "it isn't too late to turn the tide" and reach a mutually beneficial solution that does not exploit U.S. resources for ideological causes that run counter to African values by providing aid that supports abortion services and contraception in the region. 

"It's unhelpful to tie aid to ideology — to abortion or 'population control' — that defies the values of many African cultures," he said. "I believe that respect for African culture can coexist with humanitarian aid. Cultural colonization needn't be the price exacted for a moral, strategic, and humanitarian partnership." 

Ambongo's remarks on the politicization of humanitarian aid come after the U.S. State Department announced its plans to destroy a reserve of artificial contraceptives that was previously set aside for distribution in developing countries through foreign aid programs. 

Pleading on behalf of bishops, priests, and laypeople in Africa, Ambongo urged Trump and his administration "to reconsider aid to his friends in Africa, who have been and will continue to be important partners of the U.S." 

"We are eager to work closely with Washington to ensure that all such aid is used well, free of the fraud and mismanagement that has occurred in the past," he concluded. "There is too much at stake — for Africans, for Americans, and for the world."

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null / Credit: Tati9/ShutterstockCNA Staff, Jun 10, 2025 / 15:51 pm (CNA).A U.S.-based biotech company has announced the launch of Nucleus Embryo, a company that screens human embryos for desired genetic profiles, a practice the Catholic Church teaches violates human dignity and contributes to a eugenic mentality. People undergoing in vitro fertilization (IVF) will be able to screen up to 20 embryos for over 900 conditions and traits, including health risks, intelligence, and physical characteristics like height and eye color, in order to "optimize" their embryos, according to Kian Sadeghi, founder of Nucleus Genomics, parent company of Nucleus Embryo."I see a world where sequencing, analyzing, and editing DNA merge seamlessly to create a truly preventative health care system," the 25-year-old Sadeghi said on the company's website, adding: "Every parent wants to give their children more than they had. For the first time in human history, Nucleus adds a new tool to that com...

null / Credit: Tati9/Shutterstock

CNA Staff, Jun 10, 2025 / 15:51 pm (CNA).

A U.S.-based biotech company has announced the launch of Nucleus Embryo, a company that screens human embryos for desired genetic profiles, a practice the Catholic Church teaches violates human dignity and contributes to a eugenic mentality. 

People undergoing in vitro fertilization (IVF) will be able to screen up to 20 embryos for over 900 conditions and traits, including health risks, intelligence, and physical characteristics like height and eye color, in order to "optimize" their embryos, according to Kian Sadeghi, founder of Nucleus Genomics, parent company of Nucleus Embryo.

"I see a world where sequencing, analyzing, and editing DNA merge seamlessly to create a truly preventative health care system," the 25-year-old Sadeghi said on the company's website, adding: "Every parent wants to give their children more than they had. For the first time in human history, Nucleus adds a new tool to that commitment."

Embryos that meet parental desires will be eligible for implanting, and undesirable ones will be discarded.

While the Catholic Church teaches that IVF is morally illicit because it completely separates procreation from the marital act and violates the dignity of the child, the Church also condemns preimplantation diagnosis as "shameful and utterly reprehensible," an "expression of a eugenic mentality" that leads to the destruction of innocent human life.

Published by the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith, the 2008 document Dignitatis Personae affirms that the human embryo cannot be treated as "mere laboratory material" because this violates its dignity, which "belongs equally to every single human being, irrespective of his parents' desires, his social condition, educational formation, or level of physical development."

The document explicitly condemns preimplantation diagnosis and resulting genetic enhancements because they can result in the killing of human embryos "affected by various types of anomalies," and they "presume to measure the value of a human life only within the parameters of 'normality' and physical well-being, thus opening the way to legitimizing infanticide and euthanasia."

Such procedures could also marginalize individuals, widen societal divides, and "harm peaceful coexistence among individuals," the dicastery stated.  

The document questioned who would establish which gene edits were worthwhile and which were not, and what limits, if any, should be placed on genetic enhancements "since it would be materially impossible to fulfill the wishes of every single person."

In the end, the common good will be harmed by "favoring the will of some over the freedom of others."

National Catholic Bioethics Center senior ethicist Father Tad Pacholczyk told CNA that "couples will now be tempted to impose quality control and eugenics onto their vulnerable and voiceless children."

Nucleus Embryo's website emphasizes genetic manipulation of embryos before implantation and states: "The best time to prevent disease is pre-pregnancy. Knowing what you could pass on to your kids lets you plan with clarity and avoid future surprises."

National Catholic Bioethics Center senior ethicist Father Tad Pacholczyk. Credit: "The World Over with Raymond Arroyo/Screenshot
National Catholic Bioethics Center senior ethicist Father Tad Pacholczyk. Credit: "The World Over with Raymond Arroyo/Screenshot

This is a "'command and control' mentality over procreation," Pacholczyk said, which allows people to treat their "own offspring like raw material … It's tragic when our children become a mere abstraction, pawns to be played in the end game of seeking what we want."

"Society's demand for physical perfection places untold pressure on couples today to 'conform to the norm' by aborting or otherwise eliminating any less-than-perfect children," he continued.

"Human embryos, among the most vulnerable of God's creatures, have been entrusted to us to be received unconditionally and lovingly by all parents, without demanding that they run any gauntlet of prenatal screening. Every child, exactly as he or she arrives into our families, is precious, good, and beautiful."

Pacholczyk said not every use of prenatal diagnostic information is morally unacceptable, however. 

Diagnostic information that "assists in the treatment of an in-utero patient represents a morally praiseworthy use of this powerful technology."

For example, a life-threatening disease known as Krabbe's leukodystrophy can be treated through a bone marrow transplant immediately following a child's birth. If the disease is diagnosed prenatally, the parents can look for matching bone marrow before the child is born. Certain other diseases, such as spina bifida, can also be surgically treated prenatally.

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Harvard University professor of mathematics and biology Martin Nowak speaks at the annual conference of the Society of Catholic Scientists on June 8, 2025, in Washington, D.C. / Credit: Tessa Gervasini/CNAWashington D.C., Jun 10, 2025 / 08:50 am (CNA).Harvard professor of mathematics and biology Martin Nowak focused on math as a path to God during a presentation at the 2025 annual conference of the Society of Catholic Scientists in Washington, D.C.During a June 8 lecture titled "Does Mathematics Lead Us to God?" Nowak said that among other things, math can be viewed as "an argument for the existence of God."Harvard professor Martin Nowak's discussion of mathematics was a hot topic at the Society of Catholic Scientists conference on June 8, 2025, especially given recent attention to Pope Leo XIV having earned a degree in mathematics at Villanova University. Credit: Tessa Gervasini/CNAReferencing St. Augustine, Nowak said math is like "an intelligible object." "We judge mathemati...

Harvard University professor of mathematics and biology Martin Nowak speaks at the annual conference of the Society of Catholic Scientists on June 8, 2025, in Washington, D.C. / Credit: Tessa Gervasini/CNA

Washington D.C., Jun 10, 2025 / 08:50 am (CNA).

Harvard professor of mathematics and biology Martin Nowak focused on math as a path to God during a presentation at the 2025 annual conference of the Society of Catholic Scientists in Washington, D.C.

During a June 8 lecture titled "Does Mathematics Lead Us to God?" Nowak said that among other things, math can be viewed as "an argument for the existence of God."

Harvard professor Martin Nowak's discussion of mathematics was a hot topic at the Society of Catholic Scientists conference on June 8, 2025, especially given recent attention to Pope Leo XIV having earned a degree in mathematics at Villanova University. Credit: Tessa Gervasini/CNA
Harvard professor Martin Nowak's discussion of mathematics was a hot topic at the Society of Catholic Scientists conference on June 8, 2025, especially given recent attention to Pope Leo XIV having earned a degree in mathematics at Villanova University. Credit: Tessa Gervasini/CNA

Referencing St. Augustine, Nowak said math is like "an intelligible object."

"We judge mathematics in truth by a criterion that is within us. That is, of course, the doctrine of divine illumination. So Augustine says, 'This is possible because God is the teacher of the soul.'"

"Mathematics is not in meta," Nowak said. He explained that math is "timeless" and "atemporal."

"If you accept this … you have made a step toward God." Because "you are no longer a materialist, you are no longer a naturalist in the sense you're no longer an atheist." 

Math provides meaning and understanding, according to Nowak. "We walk through life and the world as meaning," he said. "You need intelligent objects, you need mathematics."

"It is mathematics that gives meaning … We experience mathematics as we experience love. Mathematics tells us who we are, who the other is. Mathematics tells us what stuff we are made of. Mathematics enables us to see God."

Nowak's discussion of math was a hot topic at the conference, especially given recent attention to Pope Leo XIV having earned a degree in mathematics from Villanova University.

"Mathematics is beautiful," Nowak noted. "If you ask mathematicians what's the most beautiful thing they have seen in their lives, it's some mathematical equation."

"Why is mathematics beautiful?" Nowak asked. He explained it's beautiful because "God is beautiful."

"Mathematics is the set of all correct statements," he continued. "Mathematics is about truth with a capital T."

"We will never be done with mathematics … because it takes forever to get to know an infinite being, God."

"I think mathematics helps us to remember that we are eternal objects, that we are not only in time and in space," Nowak said. 

Since God transcends everything, Nowak added, God "cannot be captured or described by mathematics." Math, he said, has more to do with the "thoughts of God."

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United States Conference of Catholic Bishops headquarters in Washington, D.C. / Credit: Farragutful, CC BY-SA 3.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0>, via Wikimedia CommonsWashington, D.C. Newsroom, Jun 10, 2025 / 09:20 am (CNA).Since last year, there has been a 32% decline in U.S. child abuse allegations against Catholic clergy, according to the 2024 annual report of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops' (USCCB) Secretariat of Child and Youth Protection.  Overall, "902 allegations were reported by 855 victims-survivors of child sexual abuse by clergy," the report said, compared with 1,308 allegations by 1,254 survivors last year. Covering July 1, 2023, to June 30, 2024, the annual report is based on a survey of 195 U.S. Catholic dioceses and eparchies, drawn from data collected by the Center for Applied Research in the Apostolate at Georgetown University as well as an audit by StoneBridge Business Partners. The annual reporting stems f...

United States Conference of Catholic Bishops headquarters in Washington, D.C. / Credit: Farragutful, CC BY-SA 3.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0>, via Wikimedia Commons

Washington, D.C. Newsroom, Jun 10, 2025 / 09:20 am (CNA).

Since last year, there has been a 32% decline in U.S. child abuse allegations against Catholic clergy, according to the 2024 annual report of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops' (USCCB) Secretariat of Child and Youth Protection.  

Overall, "902 allegations were reported by 855 victims-survivors of child sexual abuse by clergy," the report said, compared with 1,308 allegations by 1,254 survivors last year. 

Covering July 1, 2023, to June 30, 2024, the annual report is based on a survey of 195 U.S. Catholic dioceses and eparchies, drawn from data collected by the Center for Applied Research in the Apostolate at Georgetown University as well as an audit by StoneBridge Business Partners. 

The annual reporting stems from the U.S. bishops' 2002 creation of the Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People, which established a framework and protocols related to allegations of sexual abuse of minors by Catholic clergy.

A total of 717 clerics were accused within the most recent audit period, with the majority of those accused (54%) being already deceased.

StoneBridge also pointed out several cases of noncompliance by jurisdictions and entities that are in violation of the articles established in the 2018 revision of the youth protection charter.

The Diocese of Our Lady of Deliverance Syriac Catholic Church in the USA, for example, was noncompliant due to the absence of a safe environment training program and for not completing background checks on volunteers.

The Diocese of Altoona-Johnstown, Pennsylvania, meanwhile, was cited by not having a functional review board during the audit period.

"Measuring charter compliance allows each diocese/eparchy to assess strengths and weaknesses and identify programmatic areas requiring improvement, which are critical in our mission of protecting our children," the report said.

The report restated the Catholic Church's commitment "to work to ensure the safety of children and vulnerable adults by performing background checks on clergy, employees, and volunteers, and providing training on how to identify and report abuse signs."

"For the U.S. Church and as articulated in the Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People, this commitment translates into a zero-tolerance policy toward abuse," the USCCB report reads.

Abuse allegations have shown a steady decline since 2020, averaging a 30% decrease annually, according to data accumulated over the past five years.

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Grandly co-founder and director Pili Abouchaar (right) discusses the apostolate's work with grandparents on "EWTN Pro-Life Weekly" on June 4, 2025. / Credit: "EWTN Pro-Life Weekly"/ScreenshotWashington, D.C. Newsroom, Jun 10, 2025 / 06:00 am (CNA)."What if the most important thing that God wants you to do is still in front of you, and that is passing on the faith to your grandchildren?" That's the proposition Pili Abouchaar focuses on as co-founder and director of Grandly, an apostolate dedicated to helping grandparents do just that.In an interview on "EWTN Pro-Life Weekly," Abouchaar acknowledged that grandparents often feel helpless and hopeless in regard to this mission, but Grandly can make a difference in their approach and outlook. "The main thing that we try to tackle in our mission in Grandly is to try to give grandparents hope to help them bridge that generational gap between how they were raised and how youth culture is moving right now."The apostolate, which cel...

Grandly co-founder and director Pili Abouchaar (right) discusses the apostolate's work with grandparents on "EWTN Pro-Life Weekly" on June 4, 2025. / Credit: "EWTN Pro-Life Weekly"/Screenshot

Washington, D.C. Newsroom, Jun 10, 2025 / 06:00 am (CNA).

"What if the most important thing that God wants you to do is still in front of you, and that is passing on the faith to your grandchildren?" That's the proposition Pili Abouchaar focuses on as co-founder and director of Grandly, an apostolate dedicated to helping grandparents do just that.

In an interview on "EWTN Pro-Life Weekly," Abouchaar acknowledged that grandparents often feel helpless and hopeless in regard to this mission, but Grandly can make a difference in their approach and outlook. 

"The main thing that we try to tackle in our mission in Grandly is to try to give grandparents hope to help them bridge that generational gap between how they were raised and how youth culture is moving right now."

The apostolate, which celebrates its 10th anniversary next year, is especially relevant now, within the context of the jubilee year and the upcoming July 27 World Day for Grandparents and the Elderly, with this year's theme being "Blessed Are Those Who Have Not Lost Hope." 

Abouchaar said among Grandly's offerings is "a seminar called the 'Do It Grandly' seminar, which grandparents can take by themselves. They can find the seminar on our website. We are also helping parishes across the United States and in other countries to host seminars for their grandparents locally."

"Do It Grandly," a five-session online seminar, helps grandparents embrace their unique role in fostering the faith of their grandchildren. The sessions include topics on a bold vision, renewing hope, grandparenting and youth work, the strategic grandparent, and faith to move grandchildren.

The series' free, opening 30-minute session, titled "A Bold Vision," covers how youth see our culture and how God is in their lives, and offers interviews and discussions with grandparents. Grandly also features on its website a variety of helpful testimonies, stories, and discussion groups.

So far, Abouchaar said Grandly has reached some 20,000 grandparents and, through them, approximately 100,000 grandchildren.  

The full segment about Grandly on "EWTN Pro-Life Weekly" can be viewed below.

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