Article Archive
Please click below to view any of the articles in our archive.
“Be inspired by confidence and hope despite the problems, risks and difficulties that you face,” This was the message of the Bishop of Garissa, Joseph Alessandro, who is also Chair of the Kenya Conference of Catholic Bishops’ (KCCB) – Commission for Refugees, Seafarers and Migrants. The Bishop was speaking when he addressed refugees at Divine Word Parish in Kayole, Nairobi. This was on the occasion to mark this year’s World Refugee Day.The Bishop’s consoling message came to the refugees amidst plans regarding the Kenyan government’s intention to close Garissa’s Dadaab refugee camp due to security concerns. Dadaab camp is home mostly to refugees of Somali origin. Bishop Alessandro assured the refugees that the Church stands with them under all circumstances. “You have a special place in the heart of the Church, and you help the Church to enlarge her heart, to manifest her motherhood towards the entire human family&rdq...
Vatican City, Jul 1, 2016 / 07:06 am (CNA/EWTN News).- Though he has rarely spoken since resigning from the papacy, Benedict XVI granted several lengthy interviews to German journalist Peter Seewald shortly after stepping down - conversations that touched on themes such as the reform of the Curia, his resignation and his thoughts on Pope Francis.The interviews, conducted a few months after Benedict’s Feb. 28, 2013, resignation, are set to be released in one book simultaneously worldwide Sept. 9, according to Italian daily “Corriere della Sera.”About 240 pages in length, the book in German is titled "Letzte Gespräche," or, "Final Conversations," and “touches upon all the most important stages of life of Joseph Ratzinger.”These stages include Benedict’s childhood under the Nazi regime, the discovery of his vocation to the priesthood, the hardships of the war and his time in the Vatican until his election to the pap...
IMAGE: CNS photo/Jim Bovin, Catholic SpiritBy Maria WieringST. PAUL, Minn. (CNS) --Hundreds of Catholics crowded into the Cathedral of St. Paul to venerate therelics of two English saints who are known as icons of religious libertybecause of the circumstances of their martyrdom.Relics of St. Thomas More andSt. John Fisher, whose lives spanned the 15th and 16th centuries, were viewedat the cathedral June 26 as part of a national tour coinciding with theFortnight for Freedom.A prayer service was part of theevent and included eucharistic adoration, a Gospel reading and presentations onthe martyrs from John Boyle, professor of theology and Catholic studies at theUniversity of St. Thomas in St. Paul, and Jan Graffius, curator at StonyhurstCollege in England, which holds the relics.The faithful waited up to anhour to process up the cathedral's center aisle to the Communion rail, wherethe relics were displayed in two simple glass boxes. People briefly kneeled andprayed before the relics; m...
By Cindy WoodenVATICAN CITY (CNS) -- Retired Pope Benedict XVI has givenanother interview to the journalist and author Peter Seewald, and a Germanpublisher announced it would be released worldwide Sept. 9.Titled "Letzte Gesprache," (which translates as "lastconversations"), the book includes an in-depth conversation with theretired pope about the background of his resignation in 2013, said the Germanpublisher, Droemer Knaur.Information about an English translation and publisher was not immediatelyavailable.The Italian newspaper Corriere della Sera, which has therights to an Italian newsstand edition of the book, reported July 1 that PopeBenedict admits to Seewald that he knew of "the presence of a 'gay lobby'in the Vatican composed of four or five people and he says he was able toremove their power."Pope Benedict also says he kept a diary during hispontificate, but he plans to destroy it, even though he knows that historianscould find it valuable, Corriere reported.On its website, ...
NEW YORK (AP) -- Nathan's Famous may be in the hot dog business, but for decades they've been peddling a whopper....
WASHINGTON (AP) -- Traffic deaths surged last year as drivers racked up more miles behind the wheel than ever before, a result of an improved economy and lower gas prices, according to preliminary government data released Friday....
RAMALLAH, West Bank (AP) -- A Palestinian gunman opened fire at a family traveling in a car in the West Bank on Friday, killing an Israeli man and wounding his wife and two teenage children....
LONDON (AP) -- Justice Secretary Michael Gove argued Friday that he should be Britain's next leader because he is passionately committed to leaving the European Union - but said he would not trigger EU exit talks this year if he becomes prime minister....
WASHINGTON (AP) -- Attorney General Loretta Lynch says she won't overrule the findings of an FBI-led investigation into Hillary Clinton's private email server....
WASHINGTON (AP) -- Financial inequality became even wider in the United States last year, with average income for the top 1 percent of households surging 7.7 percent to $1.36 million....

