• Home
  • About Us
  • Support
  • Concerts & Events
  • Music & Media
  • Faith
  • Listen Live
  • Give Now

Catholic News

Spanish Augustinian Bishop Luis Marín de San Martín and Cardinal Robert Prevost, now Pope Leo XIV. / Credit: Courtesy of Bishop Luis MarínVatican City, May 22, 2025 / 07:00 am (CNA).The undersecretary of the general secretariat of the Synod of Bishops, the Spanish Augustinian Bishop Luis Marín de San Martín, is among those who have collaborated most closely with Pope Leo XIV.In 2008, Marín moved to Rome because the then-prior general of the Augustinians asked him to take charge of the order's archives. The past 17 years of association allow him to make a clear prognosis of what Pope Leo's pontificate will be like."He's not a person who governs from his office; he goes out to meet people," the bishop told ACI Prensa, CNA's Spanish-language news partner. He also noted that Pope Leo XIV is a son of the Second Vatican Council: "He embraces its theological development, above all, the ecclesiology of the constitution Lumen Gentium, which is a point of reference for synodality, althou...

Spanish Augustinian Bishop Luis Marín de San Martín and Cardinal Robert Prevost, now Pope Leo XIV. / Credit: Courtesy of Bishop Luis Marín

Vatican City, May 22, 2025 / 07:00 am (CNA).

The undersecretary of the general secretariat of the Synod of Bishops, the Spanish Augustinian Bishop Luis Marín de San Martín, is among those who have collaborated most closely with Pope Leo XIV.

In 2008, Marín moved to Rome because the then-prior general of the Augustinians asked him to take charge of the order's archives. The past 17 years of association allow him to make a clear prognosis of what Pope Leo's pontificate will be like.

"He's not a person who governs from his office; he goes out to meet people," the bishop told ACI Prensa, CNA's Spanish-language news partner. He also noted that Pope Leo XIV is a son of the Second Vatican Council: "He embraces its theological development, above all, the ecclesiology of the constitution Lumen Gentium, which is a point of reference for synodality, although the term does not appear in it."

The then-Cardinal Robert Prevost — now Pope Leo XIV — actively participated in all phases of the Synod on Synodality, a signature project of Pope Francis launched three years ago that aimed to make the Church more coherent and participatory, and less clerical. This is an approach that the pope "holds very dear," since "Augustinian spirituality is very synodal," as are "our style and structures," Marín emphasized.

"The Augustinian charism very much fosters communion, fraternal life. It's our most distinctive feature. We Augustinians are also a mendicant order that doesn't have a pyramidal structure like the monastic structures do, but rather a much more horizontal one. We are governed by the prior, a 'primus inter pares' [first among equals]. And our chapter is very participatory: Decisions are made among all the friars," he explained.

Bishop Luis Marín de San Martín, undersecretary of the Synod of Bishops. Credit: Victoria Cardiel/EWTN News
Bishop Luis Marín de San Martín, undersecretary of the Synod of Bishops. Credit: Victoria Cardiel/EWTN News

The key to synodality, Marín emphasized, is not ideological or political but theological and ecclesial: "Pope Leo XIV is synodal because the Church is synodal. To realize this, it's enough to know sacred Scripture, patristics, Church history, canon law … It's the life of the Church, which becomes experience and witness."

In 1985, Prevost, then a priest, was sent to Peru to work in the Chulucanas mission. After a brief return to Chicago in 1987, he returned to Peru in 1988, specifically to Trujillo, where he served as a teacher and formator. While there, he was elected prior provincial of the Augustinian Province of Chicago in 1998 and, in 2001, prior general of the Augustinian order, a position he held until 2013.

"The Church has required him to make big changes in his life, but he has always trusted in what God asked of him at each moment, with total availability to the Lord and great love for the Church," Marín commented.

In October 2013, Prevost returned to Chicago to serve again as master of the professed and vicar provincial, a role he held until Nov. 3, 2014, when Pope Francis appointed him apostolic administrator of the Peruvian Diocese of Chiclayo, making him a bishop and assigning him the titular diocese of Sufar, until he was appointed bishop of Chiclayo the following year.

Pope Leo XIV loves to drive

Marín visited him in Chiclayo, and together they toured the coastal city by car: "Prevost loves to drive, and I was able to see the affection the people had for Padre Roberto, my bishop, as they called him."

The prelate described him above all as "a simple, genuine, authentic person, somewhat reserved, but one who greatly values ??fraternity" and highlighted his great "sensitivity to social justice, to the poorest, the most needy, and the oppressed."

"He has great inner balance. He is a profound, serene, precise, thoughtful, and prayerful man. He's not given to improvisation," the undersecretary summarized, also highlighting his ability to work as part of a team.

"He will exercise global leadership, and his voice will be greatly taken into account," he added. 

The 12 years he served as prior general of the Augustinians, from 2001 to 2013 — the order is present in 47 countries — gave him a vision of the universal Church that also demonstrated his abilities.

"During those years, he visited all the communities in the order, some several times, and embraced cultural diversity. He has a panoramic view of the universal Church; he knows it well," the prelate explained.

Continuity with Francis

In January 2023, Pope Francis appointed him to head the Dicastery for Bishops, one of the most important departments of the Roman Curia, from which the future leadership of the Church is drawn.

"He had his full confidence. They had known each other since Prevost was prior general and [then-Jorge] Bergoglio was archbishop of Buenos Aires," he recounted, recalling a pivotal episode in their relationship.

"Pope Francis had just been elected, and Prevost, who was ending his term as prior general, asked him, without much hope, to preside over the opening Mass of the general chapter of the Augustinians in St. Augustine Basilica in Rome. And he accepted. It was historic. Never before had a pope presided over the opening Eucharist of the general chapter of the Order of St. Augustine," he noted.

In any case, Marín made it clear that Pope Leo XIV will not be a "Francis clone," although "there will be continuity in many aspects." 

The new pope is, above all, a man of profound interior life. He possesses a solid spirituality, forged through prayer, which is also reflected in his apostolate and his understanding of ecclesial leadership.

"Communion with Christ," the prelate said, "leads us not only as priests but also all Christians to feel responsible for the Church. Each with a different vocation, but all co-responsible and interconnected to proclaim the risen Christ and bear witness to him in today's world."

For Marín, the election of this Augustinian as the successor of Peter has immense value: "It's a blessing from God. An extraordinary gift not only for the order but for the universal Church. As you get to know Pope Leo XIV, you will see what a gift the Lord has given us, you will get to know his qualities. He is the right person for the right time."

According to the undersecretary, the spirituality of the order to which the man who now sits on the chair of Peter belongs is based on four pillars: community life, interior life, integration into the world, and availability to the needs of the Church.

"The Church is like a family, the family of God, which, in love, integrates unity and diversity. I believe it is crucial to strengthen communion," he emphasized after warning against empty activism.

"Furthermore, if we don't cultivate the interior life, we're not offering anything. We have to bear witness to Christ, to communicate him to the world. And we can only bear witness to Christ if we know him from experience. Because the risen Christ is a living person." 

Marín concluded by recalling that Pope Leo XIV's first words in his greeting to the people of God were those of the risen Christ: "Peace be with you all."

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

Full Article

Police patrol in Mexico City. / Credit: David Ramos/ACI PrensaPuebla, Mexico, May 21, 2025 / 19:22 pm (CNA).The Mexican Bishops' Conference expressed its "profound consternation" following the assassination of two senior officials of the Mexico City government, which occurred Tuesday in the Mexican capital.The victims of the shooting are Ximena Guzmán, private secretary to Clara Brugada, Mexico City's mayor, and José Muñoz, adviser to the city government. "We join in the grief of their families, friends, and colleagues. To them, we express our closeness, prayers, and solidarity, asking God to grant them comfort, hope, and strength in the face of this painful loss," the Mexican bishops expressed in a message following the assassinations.The Mexico City government reported in a statement that the "direct attack" occurred in the Moderna neighborhood of the Benito Juárez borough, approximately four miles south of Mexico City's historic Zócalo (main square)."Personnel from the ...

Police patrol in Mexico City. / Credit: David Ramos/ACI Prensa

Puebla, Mexico, May 21, 2025 / 19:22 pm (CNA).

The Mexican Bishops' Conference expressed its "profound consternation" following the assassination of two senior officials of the Mexico City government, which occurred Tuesday in the Mexican capital.

The victims of the shooting are Ximena Guzmán, private secretary to Clara Brugada, Mexico City's mayor, and José Muñoz, adviser to the city government. 

"We join in the grief of their families, friends, and colleagues. To them, we express our closeness, prayers, and solidarity, asking God to grant them comfort, hope, and strength in the face of this painful loss," the Mexican bishops expressed in a message following the assassinations.

The Mexico City government reported in a statement that the "direct attack" occurred in the Moderna neighborhood of the Benito Juárez borough, approximately four miles south of Mexico City's historic Zócalo (main square).

"Personnel from the Mexico City Secretariat of Citizen Security and the attorney general's office, both with support from the Mexican [federal] government, are already conducting the corresponding investigations to determine the motive for the attack. Additionally, video surveillance cameras in the area are being analyzed to identify the probable perpetrators, who are known to have been traveling on a motorcycle," the Mexico City government stated. 

"There will be no impunity; those responsible will be arrested and must face justice," the statement assured.

The Mexico City attorney general's office stated that "according to initial reports, the incident occurred while the victims were in the course of their daily routines, when the vehicle they were traveling in was intercepted by individuals who reportedly opened fire from a motorcycle."

"Departmental, forensic, and investigative police personnel are carrying out the corresponding investigations to determine the facts of the case," he said, indicating that they are analyzing recordings "from video surveillance cameras in the area" and gathering information from witnesses "that will allow us to identify and locate the probable perpetrators."

May Christ 'sustain us in this dark moment'

In their statement, the Mexican bishops lamented that this recent crime "joins a painful chain of violent events that, as we noted in our statement of May 19, following the massacre of seven young people in Guanajuato, 'is an alarming sign of the weakening of the social fabric, impunity, and the absence of peace in vast regions of our nation.'"

"As shepherds of the people of God, we do not resign ourselves to living with fear nor with violent death. We trust that, with the power of the Gospel and the collaboration of all, it is still possible to build a Mexico where life, justice, and peace flourish," the bishops said.

"May Christ, our peace, sustain us in this dark moment. May Our Lady of Guadalupe, queen of peace, intercede for our nation," they concluded.

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

Full Article

Pope Leo XIV shakes hands with U.S. President JD Vance in the papal library. The two had a private encounter before they were joined by U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio on May 19, 2025. / Credit: Vatican MediaWashington, D.C. Newsroom, May 21, 2025 / 17:02 pm (CNA).In a sit-down interview with the New York Times' Ross Douthat, Vice President JD Vance opened up about how his Catholic faith informs his political views and how he squares his religious beliefs with his hard-line views on immigration enforcement.Vance, an outspoken convert to the faith, appeared on Douthat's "Interesting Times" podcast while the two were in Rome for Pope Leo XIV's inaugural Mass this past weekend. Douthat, who is also a convert to Catholicism, is a conservative columnist at the Times.During the interview, Vance discussed how his faith and Catholic social teaching contribute to his views on governance. Yet, he also explained why he believes an American vice president cannot simply "do everything t...

Pope Leo XIV shakes hands with U.S. President JD Vance in the papal library. The two had a private encounter before they were joined by U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio on May 19, 2025. / Credit: Vatican Media

Washington, D.C. Newsroom, May 21, 2025 / 17:02 pm (CNA).

In a sit-down interview with the New York Times' Ross Douthat, Vice President JD Vance opened up about how his Catholic faith informs his political views and how he squares his religious beliefs with his hard-line views on immigration enforcement.

Vance, an outspoken convert to the faith, appeared on Douthat's "Interesting Times" podcast while the two were in Rome for Pope Leo XIV's inaugural Mass this past weekend. Douthat, who is also a convert to Catholicism, is a conservative columnist at the Times.

During the interview, Vance discussed how his faith and Catholic social teaching contribute to his views on governance. Yet, he also explained why he believes an American vice president cannot simply "do everything the Holy Father tells me to do" because of his obligations to serve the interests of the American people.

A Catholic American approach to governing

"When you really believe something, it ought to influence how you think about the way that you do your job, the way that you spend time with your wife and your children," Vance said. "It just kind of necessarily informs how I live my life."

Regarding governing, this philosophy means he thinks "the purpose of American politics" is "to encourage our citizens to live a good life."

Vance said his faith informs his care for "the rights of the unborn" along with his belief in "dignified work," where a person has "a high enough wage that [he or she] can support a family."

On family policy, Vance said he fears that American and other Western societies have "become way too hostile to family formation," contending that they "have been quite bad at supporting families over the last generation, and I think you see that in the fact that fewer people are choosing to start families."

Vance added that he has faced criticism from the political right for being "insufficiently committed to the capital-M market." Although he said "I am a capitalist," he said he is not in principal against all interventions in the marketplace and cited the administration's tariff policies as an example.

"I think one of the things that I take from my Christian principles and Catholic social teachings — specifically whether you agree with the specific policies of our administration — is the market is a tool, but it is not the purpose of American politics," the vice president said.

Vance also discussed the potential benefits and drawbacks of developments in artificial intelligence (AI) and said he looks forward to Pope Leo providing moral guidance on these questions.

"The American government is not equipped to provide moral leadership, at least full-scale moral leadership, in the wake of all the changes that are going to come along with AI," he said. "I think the Church is. This is the sort of thing the Church is very good at."

Vance said he disagrees with the view that policy and religion are "two totally separate matters … because it understates the way in which all of us are informed by our moral and religious values." Yet, he also said that taking direct orders from the Vatican on policy matters "would be a violation of the U.S. Constitution."

"My obligation more broadly as a vice president [is] to serve the American people," Vance said.

During his time in Rome, he said, "I'm not there as JD Vance, a Catholic parishioner" but rather "I'm there as the vice president of the United States and the leader of the president's delegation to the pope's inaugural Mass."

"So some of the protocols about how I respond to the Holy Father were much different than how I might respond to the Holy Father, or how you might respond to the Holy Father purely in your capacity as a citizen," Vance told Douthat.

For example, the vice president said he did not bow down to kiss Leo's ring. Although that is a common act of respect for the pontiff, he noted that kissing the ring of a foreign leader would be against the protocol for an American vice president.

"So, no sign of disrespect, but it's important to observe the protocols of the country that I love and that I'm representing and that I serve as vice president of, the United States," he added.

When explaining this balance, Vance said he does not "just disregard" positions of Church hierarchy but that "you make a prudential judgment informed very much by the Church's teachings as reflected by these leaders."

The dignity of migrants and immigration enforcement

One of the primary issues on which President Donald Trump's administration has sparred with the Vatican and the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) is the enforcement of American immigration laws.

During the first four months of Trump's presidency, he has clamped down on illegal border crossings, halted the entry of most refugees, stripped federal funding from nongovernmental organizations (including Catholic ones) that resettle migrants, and vowed mass deportations of those who are in the country illegally.

These policies have been criticized by Catholic charitable organizations, the USCCB, Pope Francis, and then-Cardinal Robert Prevost, who is now Pope Leo XIV.

On U.S. immigration policy, Vance noted that the Catechism of the Catholic Church and Catholic leaders acknowledge "the right of a country to enforce its borders" but also emphasize the need to respect "the dignity of migrants." He said: "You have to be able to hold two ideas in your head at the same time."

"There are obligations that we have to people who in some ways are fleeing violence, or at least fleeing poverty," the vice president said. "I also have a very sacred obligation, I think, to enforce the laws and to promote the common good of my own country, defined as the people with the legal right to be here."

Vance said he spoke with "a lot of cardinals this weekend" about immigration policy and "had a lot of good, respectful conversations, including with cardinals who very strongly disagree with my views on migration."

"The point that I've tried to make is I think a lot about this question of social cohesion in the United States," he said. "I think about how we form the kind of society again where people can raise families, where people join institutions together."

The vice president argued that proponents of mass migration do not recognize "how destructive immigration at the levels and at the pace that we've seen over the last few years is to the common good" and that "I really do think that social solidarity is destroyed when you have too much migration too quickly."

"That's not because I hate the migrants or I'm motivated by grievance," he said. "That's because I'm trying to preserve something in my own country where we are a unified nation. And I don't think that can happen if you have too much immigration too quickly."

Vance became Catholic in August 2019, when he was 35 years old, and is the second Catholic vice president of the United States. Former president Joe Biden was the first when he served under former president Barack Obama from 2008–2016.

Full Article

Gold dome of the Georgia Capitol in Atlanta. / Credit: Rob Hainer/ShutterstockCNA Staff, May 21, 2025 / 17:33 pm (CNA).In response to national outcry over the case of Adriana Smith, a brain-dead pregnant woman on life support, the Georgia attorney general's office released a statement clarifying that the state's heartbeat law, which prohibits abortions after detection of a fetal heartbeat, does not require Smith be kept alive."There is nothing in the LIFE act that requires medical professionals to keep a woman on life support after brain death," said the statement, issued by Attorney General Chris Carr's office last week.  Quoting the law itself, the statement continued: "Removing life support is not an action 'with the purpose to terminate a pregnancy.'"Doctors at Emory University Hospital declared Smith, who was nine weeks pregnant at the time, brain dead in February after she was diagnosed with multiple blood clots in her brain. According to Smith's mother, Ap...

Gold dome of the Georgia Capitol in Atlanta. / Credit: Rob Hainer/Shutterstock

CNA Staff, May 21, 2025 / 17:33 pm (CNA).

In response to national outcry over the case of Adriana Smith, a brain-dead pregnant woman on life support, the Georgia attorney general's office released a statement clarifying that the state's heartbeat law, which prohibits abortions after detection of a fetal heartbeat, does not require Smith be kept alive.

"There is nothing in the LIFE act that requires medical professionals to keep a woman on life support after brain death," said the statement, issued by Attorney General Chris Carr's office last week.  

Quoting the law itself, the statement continued: "Removing life support is not an action 'with the purpose to terminate a pregnancy.'"

Doctors at Emory University Hospital declared Smith, who was nine weeks pregnant at the time, brain dead in February after she was diagnosed with multiple blood clots in her brain. 

According to Smith's mother, April Newkirk, doctors told her that Georgia's law protecting unborn children with a heartbeat required that they keep Smith on life support until her child could be safely delivered.

Echoing the attorney general's statement, a spokesperson for the Georgia state House told the Washington Post this week that the LIFE Act is "completely irrelevant" regarding Smith's situation, saying "any implication otherwise is just another gross mischaracterization of the intent of this legislation by liberal media outlets and left-wing activists."

Although he supports the hospital's decision to keep the unborn child alive until viability, state Sen. Ed Stetzer, the original sponsor of the LIFE Act, told CNA last week that "the removal of the life support of the mother is a separate act" from an abortion.

David Gibbs III, a lawyer at the National Center for Life and Liberty who was a lead attorney in the Terri Schiavo case, said he thinks there may be a misunderstanding about which law the hospital is invoking in Smith's case. Georgia's Advance Directive for Health Care Act may be the law at play here, Gibbs told CNA.

Section 31-32-9 of that law states that if a woman is pregnant and "in a terminal condition or state of permanent unconsciousness" and the unborn child is viable, certain life-sustaining procedures may not be withdrawn.

"The majority of states have advance directive laws with a pregnancy exclusion," Gibbs explained. 

"When in doubt, the law should err on the side of life," he said.

A pregnancy exclusion means that if a patient is pregnant, the law prioritizes the survival of her unborn child over her stated wishes in an advance directive if there is a conflict between her wishes and the child's well-being.

Several Democratic Georgia legislators have continued to demand the attorney general provide clarification of the heartbeat law, and some are calling for its repeal.

In a letter sent to the attorney general's office last Friday, state Sen. Nabilah Islam Parkes characterized the hospital's decision to keep Smith on life support to sustain the life of her unborn child as "inhumane" and called it "a grotesque distortion of medical ethics and human decency." She asked the attorney general to "speak clearly and candidly" about the applicability of the law. 

In a statement released Monday, state Reps. Kim Schofield, Viola Davis, and Sandra Scott called Smith's case "barbaric" and cited the "emotional torture" her family is enduring. They are calling for the repeal of Georgia's heartbeat law, even though Carr made it clear on Friday that the LIFE Act does not require Smith be kept alive.

Joe Zalot, an ethicist and director of education at the National Catholic Bioethics Center, told CNA Wednesday: "I don't know what's barbaric or inhumane about seeking to sustain the life of the unborn child, who is a fellow human being."

For its part, Emory Healthcare released a statement saying that while it cannot comment on particular patients, it "uses consensus from clinical experts, medical literature, and legal guidance to support our providers as they make individualized treatment recommendations in compliance with Georgia's abortion laws and all other applicable laws."

"Our top priorities continue to be the safety and well-being of the patients we serve," the statement continued.

Newkirk told 11Alive last week that Smith was transferred to Emory Midtown recently because she was told that the hospital is better at providing obstetric care.

On a GoFundMe page Newkirk has set up since the story broke last week, she said she was saddened to have "no say so regarding [Smith's] lifeless body and unborn child," who, she claimed, "will suffer disease which will lead to major disabilities." 

Newkirk could not be reached for comment by time of publication.

Full Article

Catholic Health building in Buffalo, New York. / Credit: Andre Carrotflower, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia CommonsCNA Staff, May 21, 2025 / 14:01 pm (CNA).A Catholic health care system in New York state has agreed to pay a multimillion-dollar settlement over allegations that it violated federal Medicare reporting laws. The U.S. attorney's office for the western district of New York said in a press release that Catholic Health Systems agreed to pay nearly $3.3 million in order to resolve allegations that the network "knowingly submitted or caused to be submitted false claims to the Medicare program" in violation of federal law. The government had alleged that the Catholic hospital system violated the Stark Law, a federal rule that prohibits health care entities from receiving Medicare payments for services referred by a physician with "a financial relationship to the health care entity."The prosecutor's office claimed that the Catholic health provider "had financial rela...

Catholic Health building in Buffalo, New York. / Credit: Andre Carrotflower, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons

CNA Staff, May 21, 2025 / 14:01 pm (CNA).

A Catholic health care system in New York state has agreed to pay a multimillion-dollar settlement over allegations that it violated federal Medicare reporting laws. 

The U.S. attorney's office for the western district of New York said in a press release that Catholic Health Systems agreed to pay nearly $3.3 million in order to resolve allegations that the network "knowingly submitted or caused to be submitted false claims to the Medicare program" in violation of federal law. 

The government had alleged that the Catholic hospital system violated the Stark Law, a federal rule that prohibits health care entities from receiving Medicare payments for services referred by a physician with "a financial relationship to the health care entity."

The prosecutor's office claimed that the Catholic health provider "had financial relationships with nonemployee physicians" who "referred health services, such as laboratory testing, hospital services, or medical supplies, to CHS and its affiliated hospitals."

"The Stark Law is designed to protect Medicare by ensuring that physician referrals are not influenced by financial interest," U.S. Attorney Michael DiGiacomo said in the press release, stating that his office "is committed to holding health care providers accountable who engage in such conduct."

Though the Catholic medical system will pay more than $3 million over the claims, the payout does not establish the guilt of the hospital, the government said. 

"The claims resolved by the settlement are allegations only and there has been no determination of liability," the press release stated. 

Federal authorities were originally tipped off to the alleged violations by Gary Tucker, a former executive in the Catholic Health Systems network. Under whistleblower provisions, Tucker "will receive a share of the settlement," the government said. 

In a statement provided to CNA, Leonardo Sette-Camara, the general counsel of the hospital system, said: "Defending these types of subjective allegations requires an unsustainable and unacceptable allocation of Catholic Health resources."

"This investigation was never about the quality of care provided to our patients. By resolving the case now, we can move forward and remain fully focused on delivering the highest standard of care," he said.

This report was updated on Wednesday, May 21, 2025 at 3:00 p.m. with a statement from the hospital.

Full Article

Pope Leo XIV at the Basilica of St. Paul Outside the Walls on May 20, 2025. / Credit: Daniel Ibáñez/EWTN NewsVatican City, May 21, 2025 / 14:32 pm (CNA).Pope Leo XIV on May 20 visited St. Paul Outside the Walls Basilica, one of the papal basilicas located outside Rome, to pray at the tomb of the "apostle to the Gentiles."Upon his arrival, the Holy Father was welcomed by basilca abbot Father Donato Ogliari, OSB, and the archpriest of the basilica, Cardinal James Michael Harvey.Accompanied by Benedictine monks, custodians of the church built over the tomb of St. Paul the Apostle, Pope Leo XIV entered the basilica through the Holy Door amid the chants of the Sistine Chapel choir and the Benedictine community.He then descended to the altar of confession to venerate the tomb of St. Paul, kneeling in silence. After returning to the apse of the church, a passage from St. Paul the Apostle's Letter to the Romans was read.In his homily, delivered in Italian, the Holy Father emphasized th...

Pope Leo XIV at the Basilica of St. Paul Outside the Walls on May 20, 2025. / Credit: Daniel Ibáñez/EWTN News

Vatican City, May 21, 2025 / 14:32 pm (CNA).

Pope Leo XIV on May 20 visited St. Paul Outside the Walls Basilica, one of the papal basilicas located outside Rome, to pray at the tomb of the "apostle to the Gentiles."

Upon his arrival, the Holy Father was welcomed by basilca abbot Father Donato Ogliari, OSB, and the archpriest of the basilica, Cardinal James Michael Harvey.

Accompanied by Benedictine monks, custodians of the church built over the tomb of St. Paul the Apostle, Pope Leo XIV entered the basilica through the Holy Door amid the chants of the Sistine Chapel choir and the Benedictine community.

He then descended to the altar of confession to venerate the tomb of St. Paul, kneeling in silence. After returning to the apse of the church, a passage from St. Paul the Apostle's Letter to the Romans was read.

In his homily, delivered in Italian, the Holy Father emphasized that the reading revolves around three themes — "grace, faith, and justification" — and entrusted the beginning of his pontificate to the intercession of the apostle to the Gentiles.

Leo XIV reminded the nearly 2,000 faithful gathered in the basilica that St. Paul claimed to have received "from God the grace of his vocation."

An interior view of St. Paul Outside the Walls Basilica on May 20, 2025. Credit: Daniel Ibáñez/EWTN News
An interior view of St. Paul Outside the Walls Basilica on May 20, 2025. Credit: Daniel Ibáñez/EWTN News

"He acknowledges, in other words, that his encounter with Christ and his own ministry were the fruit of God's prior love, which called him to a new life while he was still far from the Gospel and persecuting the Church," he explained.

He also quoted the convert St. Augustine, the pope's spiritual father, "who spoke of the same experience."

In this context, he emphasized that "at the root of every vocation, God is present, in his mercy and his goodness, as generous as that of a mother who nourishes her child with her own body for as long as the child is unable to feed itself."

Recalling how St. Paul spoke of the "obedience of faith," he pointed out, however, that on the road to Damascus, the Lord "did not take away his freedom but gave him the opportunity to make a decision, to choose an obedience that would prove costly and entail interior and exterior struggles, which Paul proved willing to face."

The pontiff thus pointed out that "salvation does not come about by magic but by a mysterious interplay of grace and faith, of God's prevenient love and of our trusting and free acceptance."

In this regard, he invited the faithful to "ask him to enable us to respond in the same way to his grace and to become, ourselves, witnesses of the love 'poured into our hearts through the Holy Spirit who has been given to us.'"

"Let us ask the Lord for the grace to cultivate and spread his charity," he continued, "and to become true neighbors to one another. Let us compete in showing the love that, following his encounter with Christ, drove the former persecutor to become 'all things to all people' even to the point of martyrdom."

He further emphasized that "the weakness of the flesh will show the power of faith in God that brings justification."

From this basilica, entrusted to the care of the Benedictine community, Pope Leo XIV also recalled St. Benedict, who proposed "love as the source and driving force of the preaching of the Gospel," noting his insistent exhortations "to fraternal charity."

The pontiff did not want to end his homily without recalling Pope Benedict XVI and his words at World Youth Day in Madrid in 2011: "'Dear friends,'" he said, "'God loves us. This is the great truth of our life; it is what makes everything else meaningful." Indeed, "our life originates as part of a loving plan of God," and faith leads us to "open our hearts to this mystery of love and to live as men and women conscious of being loved by God.'"

"Here we see, in all its simplicity and uniqueness, the basis of every mission, including my own mission as the successor of Peter and the heir to Paul's apostolic zeal. May the Lord grant me the grace to respond faithfully to his call," Leo XIV concluded.

At the end of his homily, the Holy Father knelt again before the altar, located above the apostle's tomb. Later, the Lord's Prayer and the Regina Caeli were sung in Latin. 

Pope Leo XIV left the basilica again in procession, preceded by Benedictine monks, to the applause of the faithful.

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

Full Article

Archbishop Vincenzo Paglia speaks at a press conference for a Vatican summit on longevity on March 24, 2025, at the Vatican. / Credit: Daniel Ibañez/CNAWashington, D.C. Newsroom, May 21, 2025 / 15:22 pm (CNA).The Pontifical Academy for Life, the elderly advocacy group AARP, and the Muslim Council of Elders this month signed a declaration promising to support elderly populations and promote research on brain health. The organizations launched the initiative in order to help safeguard the elderly from discrimination and abuse and to protect their human dignity, right to independence, and engagement in society. The leaders met at a two-day global symposium held at the Vatican titled "The Memory: Addressing the Opportunities and Challenges of an Aging Global Population."Representatives from the Vatican and AARP talked with doctors, scientists, academics, nongovernmental organizations, and nonprofits from more than 20 countries about the future of the elderly population an...

Archbishop Vincenzo Paglia speaks at a press conference for a Vatican summit on longevity on March 24, 2025, at the Vatican. / Credit: Daniel Ibañez/CNA

Washington, D.C. Newsroom, May 21, 2025 / 15:22 pm (CNA).

The Pontifical Academy for Life, the elderly advocacy group AARP, and the Muslim Council of Elders this month signed a declaration promising to support elderly populations and promote research on brain health. 

The organizations launched the initiative in order to help safeguard the elderly from discrimination and abuse and to protect their human dignity, right to independence, and engagement in society. 

The leaders met at a two-day global symposium held at the Vatican titled "The Memory: Addressing the Opportunities and Challenges of an Aging Global Population."

Representatives from the Vatican and AARP talked with doctors, scientists, academics, nongovernmental organizations, and nonprofits from more than 20 countries about the future of the elderly population and how organizations can advocate for older generations.

?"We promote this symposium in partnership with AARP to reflect with scientific and academic institutions on how to promote a model of longevity that does not limit itself to extending the years of life but to enriching them," Archbishop Vincenzo Paglia, president of the Pontifical Academy for Life, said at the summit.

The event concluded with Paglia, AARP CEO Myechia Minter-Jordan, and Muslim Council of Elders Secretary-General Mohamed Abdelsalam signing the official declaration pledging their commitment to the mission.

The "landmark initiative marks the first official activity of the Vatican under Pope Leo XIV,"  Abdelsalam wrote in a post to X.

"Caring for the elderly is a religious and moral responsibility, as they are the memory keepers of human societies," he wrote. "They serve as a living record for transmitting wisdom and knowledge across generations."

The event and declaration were spearheaded by the leaders to help plan for future demographic shifts. 

"By 2050, 1 in 5 people worldwide will be over the age of 60," AARP reported. "Globally, systems and supports are not in place to handle the unique needs of a rapidly aging population."

"Aging is not a problem to solve," Minter-Jordan said at the event. "It is an opportunity to rethink how we support our communities."

Full Article

Pope Leo XIV smiles during his first general audience in St. Peter's Square on May 21, 2025. / Credit: Daniel Ibanez/CNAVatican City, May 21, 2025 / 10:46 am (CNA).Pope Leo XIV will hold a meeting of cardinals on June 13 to give the final approval to the canonizations of several beatified men and women.The ordinary public consistory, as it is called, will be the first of Leo's pontificate. Pope Francis had called for the consistory in late February, when he was in the hospital, but the date was never set.At the consistory, cardinals will vote to approve the canonizations of five beatified men and women whose causes were advanced earlier this year by Pope Francis. The vote of the cardinals marks the final step in the canonization process and allows a date for the Mass of canonization to be set.Among the almost-canonized saints expected to be discussed on June 13 is Blessed Bartolo Longo (also known as Bartholomew Longo).Longo, an Italian layman and lawyer, was a former Sata...

Pope Leo XIV smiles during his first general audience in St. Peter's Square on May 21, 2025. / Credit: Daniel Ibanez/CNA

Vatican City, May 21, 2025 / 10:46 am (CNA).

Pope Leo XIV will hold a meeting of cardinals on June 13 to give the final approval to the canonizations of several beatified men and women.

The ordinary public consistory, as it is called, will be the first of Leo's pontificate. Pope Francis had called for the consistory in late February, when he was in the hospital, but the date was never set.

At the consistory, cardinals will vote to approve the canonizations of five beatified men and women whose causes were advanced earlier this year by Pope Francis. The vote of the cardinals marks the final step in the canonization process and allows a date for the Mass of canonization to be set.

Among the almost-canonized saints expected to be discussed on June 13 is Blessed Bartolo Longo (also known as Bartholomew Longo).

Longo, an Italian layman and lawyer, was a former Satanist "priest" who returned to the practice of the Catholic faith through the influence of Mary and the rosary.

The canonization of the Venezuelan "doctor of the poor," José Gregorio Hernández, is also expected be voted on at the June 13 consistory, along with Pietro To Rot, the first blessed from Papua New Guinea; Vincenza Maria Poloni, the founder of the Sisters of Mercy of Verona; and Ignazio Maloyan, a bishop martyred in the Armenian genocide in 1915. 

The consistory will take place in the consistory hall in the Vatican's Apostolic Palace with all of the cardinals resident or otherwise present in Rome. It usually begins with a short time of prayer.

The Vatican also announced Wednesday a slew of liturgies to be celebrated by Pope Leo XIV in June, including a Mass at the Archbasilica of St. John Lateran followed by a Eucharistic procession through Rome to the Basilica of St. Mary Major for the solemnity of Corpus Christi on June 22.

Here is the full list of public Masses Pope Leo will celebrate during the month of June:

  • June 1: Mass in St. Peter's Square for the Jubilee of Families, Children, Grandparents, and the Elderly

  • June 8: Mass in St. Peter's Square for the solemnity of Pentecost and the Jubilee of Movements, Associations, and New Communities 

  • June 9: Mass in St. Peter's Basilica for the memorial of the Blessed Virgin Mary, Mother of the Church, and the Jubilee of the Holy See

  • June 15: Mass in St. Peter's Square for the solemnity of the Holy Trinity and the Jubilee of Sports

  • June 22: Mass in the Archbasilica of St. John Lateran and procession to the Basilica of St. Mary Major with Eucharistic benediction for the solemnity of the Most Holy Body and Blood of Christ

  • June 27: Mass in St. Peter's Square for the solemnity of the Most Sacred Heart of Jesus and the Jubilee of Priests

  • June 29: Mass in St. Peter's Basilica for the solemnity of Sts. Peter and Paul, with the blessing of the palliums for the new metropolitan archbishops

Full Article

Credit: Gregory Dean/ShutterstockDenver, Colo., May 20, 2025 / 17:28 pm (CNA).The Archdiocese of Denver launched a vocations campaign this weekend to connect young men who may be interested in pursuing the priesthood with the archdiocese.The "Called By Name" campaign invites parishioners across the archdiocese to nominate young men ages 15 to 35 who they think may have the qualities to become a priest.The archdiocese is one of nine dioceses currently collaborating with Vianney Vocations, an organization founded in 2009 that helps support vocations efforts in Catholic dioceses around the U.S.Men who are nominated by their fellow parishioners will receive a letter from the archbishop congratulating them for being recognized.The letter encourages them to be open to God's call in their lives and invites them to connect with Father Jason Wallace, the archdiocesan director of vocations, who will send a weekly message about discernment to nominees. Nominees are also invited to attend ...

Credit: Gregory Dean/Shutterstock

Denver, Colo., May 20, 2025 / 17:28 pm (CNA).

The Archdiocese of Denver launched a vocations campaign this weekend to connect young men who may be interested in pursuing the priesthood with the archdiocese.

The "Called By Name" campaign invites parishioners across the archdiocese to nominate young men ages 15 to 35 who they think may have the qualities to become a priest.

The archdiocese is one of nine dioceses currently collaborating with Vianney Vocations, an organization founded in 2009 that helps support vocations efforts in Catholic dioceses around the U.S.

Men who are nominated by their fellow parishioners will receive a letter from the archbishop congratulating them for being recognized.

The letter encourages them to be open to God's call in their lives and invites them to connect with Father Jason Wallace, the archdiocesan director of vocations, who will send a weekly message about discernment to nominees. Nominees are also invited to attend the small discernment groups led by priests or deacons trained by Vianney Vocations.

While Denver is one of the leading dioceses in the U.S. for vocations by size, according to a 2025 report, Denver Archbishop Samuel Aquila has in recent years expressed his hope to see more seminarians in the growing archdiocese. 

"Denver is good soil, so we're really hopeful that there'll be a lot of fruit from this," Chris Kreslins, senior client manager for Vianney Vocations, told CNA. 

Rather than recruiting abroad, many bishops are moving toward encouraging "homegrown guys" to discern and apply for seminary, Kreslins noted.

"The hope and the goal is that there will be more men applying for seminary," Kreslins said. 

With more priests, "parishes will have the priests they need to minister to the people of God" and priests will not be "so thinly stretched," he noted. 

These vocation campaigns across the country come amid a decadeslong decline in men pursuing the priesthood. Globally, the number of priests has been decreasing in recent years, except in Africa and Asia, where vocations to the priesthood are on the rise.  

To kick off the campaign in Denver on Sunday, priests across the archdiocese shared their vocation stories in their homilies and invited parishioners to nominate young men to consider discerning. 

"Some men may need to hear from others that their faith is recognized and that they possess the qualities of a good priest," Kreslins explained. "Sometimes, we need another person to lead us to Jesus." 

Father Brian Larkin, pastor of Our Lady of Lourdes Parish in Englewood, Colorado, shared his own experience discerning the priesthood in a homily on Sunday.

"When I was wrestling with if God was calling me, my first question wasn't necessarily the office of priesthood," Larkin said. "My question was, 'God, are you calling me to give you everything?'"

"I felt this pull on my heart that God was calling me to give up my hopes and my dreams," Larkin said. "What I saw at first was just a price tag."  

"Maybe some of you are called to the priesthood. Maybe some of you are called to a consecrated life. I don't know," Larkin said to an array of parishioners. "You are called to a radical love, and I do know that. Every single one of us [is]."

"We've seen tremendous growth in the faith and the number of Catholics. But then we also have a need when we see that growth, to serve all those people," Wallace told the Denver Catholic. "The Archdiocese of Denver is in need of many more vocations."

In his homily, Larkin prayed for more priests who are "on fire" for God.  

"Jesus, we pray for more priests — not just any priests," Larkin said. "Only priests [who] will be on fire with the love of God. Not men who are perfect, not men who have no mistakes, not men who know everything, but men whose hearts have been transformed." 

Full Article

"Leo XIV: Portrait of the First American Pope," written by Matthew Bunson, vice president and editorial director at EWTN News, is the first authoritative biographical portrait of Cardinal Robert Prevost, who was elected the new Holy Father on May 8, 2025. / Credit: EWTN PublishingCNA Staff, May 20, 2025 / 17:58 pm (CNA).A new biography of Pope Leo XIV, the first pope from the United States, will be available May 21 from EWTN and is now available for preorder. "Leo XIV: Portrait of the First American Pope," written by Matthew Bunson, vice president and editorial director at EWTN News, is the first authoritative biographical portrait of Cardinal Robert Prevost, 69, who was elected the new Holy Father on May 8. The book will be officially launched at a May 22 event set to be held at the Vatican's Campo Santo Teutonico in the Aula Benedict XVI at 5:30 p.m. local time.The biography provides an "assessment of his three fundamental roles as a successor to the apostles: his s...

"Leo XIV: Portrait of the First American Pope," written by Matthew Bunson, vice president and editorial director at EWTN News, is the first authoritative biographical portrait of Cardinal Robert Prevost, who was elected the new Holy Father on May 8, 2025. / Credit: EWTN Publishing

CNA Staff, May 20, 2025 / 17:58 pm (CNA).

A new biography of Pope Leo XIV, the first pope from the United States, will be available May 21 from EWTN and is now available for preorder. 

"Leo XIV: Portrait of the First American Pope," written by Matthew Bunson, vice president and editorial director at EWTN News, is the first authoritative biographical portrait of Cardinal Robert Prevost, 69, who was elected the new Holy Father on May 8. 

The book will be officially launched at a May 22 event set to be held at the Vatican's Campo Santo Teutonico in the Aula Benedict XVI at 5:30 p.m. local time.

The biography provides an "assessment of his three fundamental roles as a successor to the apostles: his sanctifying role as a priest, his governing role as a bishop, and his prophetic role as a teacher and missionary," EWTN said. 

Michael Warsaw, EWTN's CEO and chairman of the board, told CNA that he is "excited that EWTN Publishing is releasing this biography of Pope Leo XIV so soon after his election."

"As the leading Catholic media platform, our aim is to share the Holy Father's story with the world, starting with his early life, to help people connect with the man now serving as the vicar of Christ," Warsaw said.

"EWTN is uniquely positioned to publish this biography of the first pope born in the United States and the second pope from the Americas. Like Pope Leo, the EWTN family is global, but our roots are American."

Bunson, a longtime Vatican journalist and Church expert who has written over 50 books, said he hopes to help to inform readers about the importance of Pope Leo's membership in the venerable Order of St. Augustine and the fact that he is both a mathematician and canon lawyer, and how those credentials will help him address the Vatican's financial woes

Bunson will also discuss the significance of the choice of the name "Leo" and what that says about the pope's vision for his pontificate. 

"He has also taken the name Leo XIV in honor of Leo XIII, the great pope from 1878 to 1903, who is like Pope Leo XIV taken up profoundly with the concerns of the encounter between the Church and modernity," Bunson said May 15, speaking to "EWTN News Nightly." 

"We had the great industrial revolution at the end of the 19th century; [Leo XIV] is very concerned about the technological and digital revolutions that are taking place right now in the 21st century. So he's a man very much of his times but somebody who understands the importance of the perennial aspects of Church teaching, to apply them to all the modern situations that we can find ourselves in."

Additionally, Bunson's book touches on some of the moral and theological issues currently being debated in the Church and public arena, offering the "informed, balanced, accurate picture of our new Holy Father that the world has been waiting for."

"We saw that with Pope Benedict XVI [elected] in 2005 and Pope Francis in 2013, many of the things that you read or watch in secular media either weren't accurate or were sort of a deliberate misrepresentation," Bunson said.

"So what we want to do with this book is to offer a first portrait of the life, formation, and journey of Robert Francis Prevost from Chicago all the way to Rome, and now, of course, as Pope Leo XIV."

The future Pope Leo XIV was born on Sept. 14, 1955, in Chicago. He studied at an Augustinian minor seminary in Michigan and later earned a bachelor of science degree in mathematics from Villanova University in Pennsylvania. He joined the Order of St. Augustine, taking solemn vows in 1981, and was ordained to the priesthood in June 1982 after studying theology at the Catholic Theological Union of Chicago.

After being ordained, Leo earned a doctorate in canon law from Rome's Pontifical University of St. Thomas Aquinas (also known as the Angelicum) in 1987. He spent over a decade ministering in South America before being called back to the U.S. to head the Midwest Augustinians and was later elected prior general of the Augustinian order, serving in that role for a dozen years. 

He returned to South America after Pope Francis in 2014 appointed him bishop in Chiclayo, Peru. Francis later called him to Rome in 2023 to head the highly influential Dicastery for Bishops.

The book about Leo's life is available for preorder on EWTN Religious Catalogue.

Full Article

Facebook Twitter Instagram YouTube Soundcloud

Public Inspection File | EEO

© 2015 - 2021 Spirit FM 90.5 - All Rights Reserved.