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Vatican City, Jul 18, 2017 / 10:02 am (CNA/EWTN News).- A commission of Catholic and Orthodox leaders tasked with examining the wartime record of Bl. Aloysius Stepinac concluded their final session last week, agreeing to disagree about the Croatian cardinal’s cause for canonization.The Secretariat of the Holy See prepared a joint statement, adopted by both sides, at the conclusion of the commission’s sixth and final round of meetings at the Vatican July 12-13.The document states that the opinions of either side remain unchanged, but also acknowledges that ultimately the competency for approval of the cardinal’s cause falls under Pope Francis.“It has come to the conclusion that various events, speeches, writings, silences, and views are still subject to different interpretations. In the case of Cardinal Stepinac, the interpretations that were predominantly given by Catholic Croats and Orthodox Serbs remain divergent,” it states.It included their thanks t...
IMAGE: CNS photo/L'Osservatore Romano via ReutersBy Carol GlatzVATICAN CITY (CNS) -- Two former top Vatican hospital officialsappeared before a Vatican court for a pretrial hearing on allegations of embezzlement.Giuseppe Profiti, who was president of Bambino Gesuhospital from 2008 to 2015, and Massimo Spina, the former treasurer, appeared withtheir lawyers before Vatican magistrates July 18 in a nearly two-hourpreliminary hearing, led by the presiding Vatican judge, PaoloPapanti-Pelletier.A court clerk read the charges, which the Vatican had madepublic July 13: Profiti, 55, and Spina, 57, were accused of an illicit appropriationand use of funds belonging to the Bambino Gesu Foundation to pay GianantonioBandera, an Italian contractor, to refurbish an apartment belonging to VaticanCity State. The apartment was used as the residence of Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone, formerVatican secretary of state.The indictment said Profiti and Spina extracted more than420,000 euros for "completely non-...
By Rhina GuidosWASHINGTON (CNS) -- Denouncingthe "demonization of migrants," hateful rhetoric, the militarization of the border and a system that dividesfamilies, Bishop Mark J. Seitz of El Paso, Texas, called on Catholicsto heed the church's teachings to welcome the migrant. In a July 18 pastoral letter "Sorrowand Mourning Flee Away," on migration and addressed to the "People of God in the Diocese of El Paso,"Bishop Seitz, who serves a border community near Mexico, said the country'ssecurity cannot be used as a "pretext to build walls and shut the door tomigrants and refugees.""God did not create aworld lacking room for all at the banquet of life," he wrote. He said that whilesome might question his reflections, "I am not substituting politics for theteaching of the church," but as a pastor, his "duty is to the Gospel of JesusChrist," he wrote. And the Gospel in the Old Testament is clear, he said: "Youshall treat the alien who resides with you no differently than the natives born...
LOS ANGELES (AP) -- Michael Vick has some advice for Colin Kaepernick if he wants another shot in the NFL: Get a haircut....
PORT JEFFERSON, N.Y. (AP) -- A dog that saw a baby deer in danger of drowning in New York jumped in and dragged it to shore....
WASHINGTON (AP) -- Cake and conversation, it seems, can go only so far to mend longstanding economic rifts between the United States and China....
DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) -- Police in Saudi Arabia have arrested a young woman who wore a miniskirt in public and who had posted the video online, sparking an outcry from people who say she flagrantly violated the kingdom's conservative Islamic dress code....
CHICAGO (AP) -- Former U.S. House Speaker Dennis Hastert was released from prison in Minnesota and transferred to a Chicago re-entry facility, according to the Federal Bureau of Prisons....
WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Russian lawyer who met with Donald Trump Jr. last year had drawn attention from U.S. government officials even before that now-famous encounter for her work fighting U.S. sanctions that had angered the Kremlin....
WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Trump administration slapped 18 Iranian individuals and groups with sanctions Tuesday for aiding the country's non-nuclear weapons programs, in a bid to show that President Donald Trump is staying tough on Iran despite his moves to let the nuclear deal stay in place for now....

