Bishop Abdallah Elias Zaidan of the Eparchy of Our Lady of Lebanon of Los Angeles serves as chairman of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops' Committee on International Justice and Peace. / Credit: Joe Bukuras/CNAWashington, D.C. Newsroom, Aug 1, 2025 / 14:15 pm (CNA).Bishop Abdallah Elias Zaidan, chairman of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops' Committee on International Justice and Peace, expressed approval of U.S. President Donald Trump's recent comments recognizing starvation in Gaza. "I commend President Trump for acknowledging that starvation is happening in Gaza, especially affecting children," Zaidan wrote in a July 31 statement, adding: "And I urge him to demand the immediate expansion of humanitarian assistance through all channels in Gaza." Zaidan, who leads the Maronite Eparchy of Our Lady of Lebanon, has remained outspoken in his calls for "lasting peace" in the Holy Land.The Lebanese bishop's comments come after Trump told reporters during a meeti...
Bishop Abdallah Elias Zaidan of the Eparchy of Our Lady of Lebanon of Los Angeles serves as chairman of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops' Committee on International Justice and Peace. / Credit: Joe Bukuras/CNA
Washington, D.C. Newsroom, Aug 1, 2025 / 14:15 pm (CNA).
Bishop Abdallah Elias Zaidan, chairman of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops' Committee on International Justice and Peace, expressed approval of U.S. President Donald Trump's recent comments recognizing starvation in Gaza.
"I commend President Trump for acknowledging that starvation is happening in Gaza, especially affecting children," Zaidan wrote in a July 31 statement, adding: "And I urge him to demand the immediate expansion of humanitarian assistance through all channels in Gaza."
Zaidan, who leads the Maronite Eparchy of Our Lady of Lebanon, has remained outspoken in his calls for "lasting peace" in the Holy Land.
The Lebanese bishop's comments come after Trump told reporters during a meeting with U.K. Prime Minister Keir Starmer in Scotland: "We'll be helping with the food ... We're also going to make sure that they don't have barriers stopping people ... We can save a lot of people. That's real starvation. I see it, and you can't fake that."
.@POTUS on Gaza: "We'll be helping with the food ... We're also going to make sure that they don't have barriers stopping people ... We can save a lot of people. That's real starvation. I see it, and you can't fake that." pic.twitter.com/zcFiVYCxrE
— Rapid Response 47 (@RapidResponse47) July 28, 2025
Zaidan further cited remarks by the Holy Father during the Angelus last Sunday: "Reflecting Christ's mandate in the Gospel to love one another, Pope Leo XIV's challenge to us is clear: 'We cannot pray to God as "Father" and then be harsh and insensitive towards others. Instead, it is important to let ourselves be transformed by his goodness, his patience, his mercy, so that his face may be reflected in ours as in a mirror.'"
Leo's appeal came after an Israeli strike on Gaza's only Catholic parish left three dead and 15 wounded, including the parish's pastor, Father Gabriel Romanelli. Israel Defense Forces (IDF) have said the strike was incidental, with Israeli Foreign Ministry spokesperson Oren Marmorstein expressing the country's "deep regret over the damage to the Holy Family Church in Gaza City and over any civilian casualties."
Zaidan expressed solidarity on behalf of the bishops' conference with Cardinal Pierbattista Pizzaballa, the Latin patriarch of Jerusalem; Gazan Christians; "and all men and women of goodwill in the Holy Land, especially those suffering from unprovoked violence."
"Let us pray that the Holy Spirit, creator and vivifier, may infuse fraternal love into the hearts and minds of peoples of all faiths living in the lands of Our Lord's life, death, and glorious resurrection," Zaidan concluded.
Thousands fill St. Peter's Square for the Jubilee of Youth welcome Mass on July 29, 2025, at the Vatican. / Credit: Vatican MediaWashington, D.C. Newsroom, Aug 1, 2025 / 11:00 am (CNA).Here is a roundup of Catholic world news from the past week that you might have missed.2 Syrian girls share 'moving testimony' at Jubilee of Youth eventDuring a vocation-themed evening in Rome, two young Syrian women, Olga Al-Maati and Christine Saad, moved hearts with their testimony about living faith amid war, CNA's Arabic-language news partner, ACI MENA, reported on Thursday. Representing the Marian youth of Damascus, they told fellow attendees that their presence wasn't about recounting suffering but spreading hope. They spoke of growing up amid bombs and despair yet clinging to Christ and discovering deep meaning in faith. Their testimony, rooted in the Vincentian spirit of charity and perseverance, received a heartfelt response. "Love is stronger than death," Saad declared, highl...
Thousands fill St. Peter's Square for the Jubilee of Youth welcome Mass on July 29, 2025, at the Vatican. / Credit: Vatican Media
Washington, D.C. Newsroom, Aug 1, 2025 / 11:00 am (CNA).
Here is a roundup of Catholic world news from the past week that you might have missed.
2 Syrian girls share 'moving testimony' at Jubilee of Youth event
During a vocation-themed evening in Rome, two young Syrian women, Olga Al-Maati and Christine Saad, moved hearts with their testimony about living faith amid war, CNA's Arabic-language news partner, ACI MENA, reported on Thursday.
Representing the Marian youth of Damascus, they told fellow attendees that their presence wasn't about recounting suffering but spreading hope. They spoke of growing up amid bombs and despair yet clinging to Christ and discovering deep meaning in faith.
Their testimony, rooted in the Vincentian spirit of charity and perseverance, received a heartfelt response. "Love is stronger than death," Saad declared, highlighting the role of Syrian youth in helping others find light in darkness through acts of service.
Thai diocese provides shelter to those displaced by border clashes with Cambodia
The Diocese of Ubon Ratchathani in northeast Thailand activated its emergency shelters on Tuesday for those fleeing ongoing border clashes between Thailand and Cambodia, according to a report from Fides.
Despite a Trump administration-brokered ceasefire agreement on Monday, tensions between the two countries remain high, the report said, prompting the diocese to open its shelters, which took in roughly 200,000 displaced people. Bishop Stephen Boonlert Phromsena has opened donation sites across the diocese, while Caritas and other local Catholic agencies are providing food, water, clothing, and other basic necessities to refugees of the conflict.
South Sudan bishop calls for end to protracted violence
In a moving letter to the South Sudan government shared this week with ACI Africa, CNA's news partner in Africa, Bishop Eduardo Hiiboro Kussala of the Tombura-Yambio Diocese pleaded for bold action to end the protracted violence occurring within his episcopal see.
"Our people live under plastic sheeting, drink unsafe water, walk in fear, and bury their loved ones in silence," he wrote, adding: "This is not a political inconvenience, this is a humanitarian tragedy and a moral failure."
Ethnically-driven violence between the Azande and Balanda communities has plagued Tombura as conflicts over political representation, traditional authority roles, and land access continue to escalate.
In Rome, Lebanese youth kneel for peace in their homeland
Hundreds of Lebanese youth gathered at the Basilica of the Twelve Holy Apostles in Rome during the Jubilee of Youth to pray for peace in Lebanon, lifting their country in prayer, asking for strength, reconciliation, and a renewed spirit of responsibility among their fellow citizens.
According to ACI MENA, Bishop Jules Boutros, who heads the Syriac Catholic youth committee, urged participants to model their hearts after Christ's and be beacons of unity and love. Also present, Armenian Catholic priest Father Bedros Haddad invoked prayers for Lebanon's recovery from its many crises, remembering the victims of the Aug. 4, 2020, Beirut port explosion and the country's ongoing political and economic turmoil.
Kenyan bishop says government plan to end free education funding will cause crisis
Bishop Joseph Obanyi Sagwe of the Kakamega Diocese called out the Kenyan government's reported plans to scrap free education in the country, warning that the move would trigger a crisis in the education sector by shifting the financial burden to already struggling parents.
Speaking to journalists on July 28, Obanyi said that should government capitation in schools in Kenya be removed, most learning institutions in the East African nation will not be able to operate, ACI Africa reported on Wednesday. "If capitation is removed from schools, there's going to be a crisis. I'm aware that many of the institutions, even when they were not getting this capitation on time, some of them were taking overdrafts, awaiting the capitation," he said.
Munich and Freising bishop encourages citizens to run in local elections in Bavaria
Cardinal Reinhard Marx, the archbishop of Munich and Freising in Germany, has encouraged the people of Bavaria to vote in the next local election in the free state on March 8, 2026, and to run in the elections.
Marx published the appeal together with the state bishop of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Bavaria, Christian Kopp, on Friday, according to CNA Deutsch, CNA's German-language news partner.
"The two Christian churches in Bavaria encourage all people to run for a local political mandate with a democratic party or association," the appeal said. Even if federal and state politics often play a more prominent role in the media, Marx and Kopp emphasized the importance of local politics.
"It takes care of services of general interest, [including] water, energy, garbage disposal, or fire protection," they continued. "It decides on the weighting of the areas of economic development, construction, social affairs, and education, sport, health, and care."
Catholic health giant pledges $500M to build hospital in the Philippines
Bon Secours Mercy Health, a U.S-based Catholic health care provider, has announced plans to invest up to $500 million to build a major hospital in the Philippines.
"If realized, it would mark one of the largest private-sector health care investments by a U.S.-based system in the Philippines," the Philippine government task force that oversees foreign investments said in a statement, according to an Inquirer.net report.
According to its website, Bon Secours Mercy Health's mission "is to extend the compassionate ministry of Jesus by improving the health and well-being of our communities." Commitment to "uphold the sacredness of life," integrity, compassion, stewardship, and service are also listed as its core values.
Father Cosimo Schena is a priest at St. Francis Parish in the Diocese of Brindisi in southern Italy. / Credit: Victoria Cardiel/EWTN NewsVatican City, Aug 1, 2025 / 07:00 am (CNA).With more than a million followers across Instagram, TikTok, Facebook, and other platforms, Father Cosimo Schena has become one of the most recognizable faces of the so-called "digital missionary" phenomenon in Italy."The illness of this century is loneliness, and we listen to each other very little. I try to convey a simple message, because the Lord is simple," Schena explained.It was four years ago that the priest, philosopher, psychologist, and psychotherapy specialist decided to create a social media profile to proclaim the Gospel in a friendly, positive, and accessible way."I earned a doctorate in philosophy, then studied psychology and specialized in psychotherapy. And that's precisely where the need to convey a beautiful message, a positive message, on social media arose. Because when I go onli...
Father Cosimo Schena is a priest at St. Francis Parish in the Diocese of Brindisi in southern Italy. / Credit: Victoria Cardiel/EWTN News
Vatican City, Aug 1, 2025 / 07:00 am (CNA).
With more than a million followers across Instagram, TikTok, Facebook, and other platforms, Father Cosimo Schena has become one of the most recognizable faces of the so-called "digital missionary" phenomenon in Italy.
"The illness of this century is loneliness, and we listen to each other very little. I try to convey a simple message, because the Lord is simple," Schena explained.
It was four years ago that the priest, philosopher, psychologist, and psychotherapy specialist decided to create a social media profile to proclaim the Gospel in a friendly, positive, and accessible way.
"I earned a doctorate in philosophy, then studied psychology and specialized in psychotherapy. And that's precisely where the need to convey a beautiful message, a positive message, on social media arose. Because when I go online, when I turn on the television, everything is negative, everything is bad… The bad news is news, and the good news is relegated. So I said to myself, 'Why not give it a try?'", he explained in conversation with ACI Prensa, CNA's Spanish-language news partner, just before participating in an event this week with other Catholic influencers at the Via della Conciliazione auditorium, a few steps from the Vatican.
Little by little, he began posting inspirational quotes and then motivational and spiritual videos. The response he found online was surprising: "I've gained more than a million followers across different platforms, and the ages vary, from the youngest to the oldest."
Not everyone who follows him is Catholic. "There are many people who don't believe in God and follow me, and they say, 'Look, even though I don't believe, I like you as a priest because of what you say.' What makes me smile in a positive way is that, after all, Jesus is for everyone," he explained.
He felt the call to the priesthood in the parish, inspired by the credible witness of his pastor, "which made me wonder if I too could make that decision," Schena related.
After years of discernment, he left his studies in computer engineering to enter the seminary. He was ordained a priest at 30, and at 40, he discovered that there is a mission to fulfill not only in the sacristy but also in the digital world.
The key, he insisted, is to not complicate the message: "I truly hope that this — experiencing the digital world — will be cleaner, more beautiful, conveying a simple message, without complicating it, because the Lord is simple."
The face of a new pastoral ministry
He is now a priest at St. Francis Parish in the Diocese of Brindisi in southern Italy and has noticed that his online work has had a direct impact: "The number of people coming to my church has doubled. Not only thanks to the local faithful, but above all because of those who come specifically from other cities in Italy to hear the homily or confess."
This phenomenon of digital missionaries has gained such strength that the Vatican celebrated July 28–29 the Jubilee of Digital Missionaries and Catholic Influencers, an official recognition — the first — of this new form of evangelization. "Until a few years ago, the higher-ups looked at us with suspicion," Schena acknowledged.
'Loneliness is the great disease of this century'
Beyond likes and algorithms, Schena perceives a profound need in those who follow him: "Now I receive, some days, even a thousand messages a day, between private messages and emails. Many people write me super-long emails, and at the end they say: 'You don't need to reply. The important thing is that someone has listened to me.' That makes me feel good, because the illness of this century is truly loneliness. And we listen to each other very little."
For Schena, behind all this lies a spiritual emptiness: "Unfortunately, this society has imposed individualism on us, and we have welcomed it with open arms. In this sense, the message of Jesus, of Christ, reaches these people and makes them feel better, even if they are not believers."
This story was first published by ACI Prensa, CNA's Spanish-language news partner. It has been translated and adapted by CNA.
Fifty-four Missionaries of Charity are in Rome this week for the Catholic Church's Jubilee of Young People, where they are approaching young people one by one to invite them to spend time with Christ in all-day Eucharistic Adoration and to learn about the mission and message of their founder, St. Teresa of Calcutta. / Credit: Courtney MaresRome, Italy, Aug 1, 2025 / 07:30 am (CNA).Just steps away from the exuberant crowds of Gen Z pilgrims chanting and taking selfies in St. Peter's Square, religious sisters in white saris with blue stripes kneel barefoot in silent adoration before the Blessed Sacrament. More than 50 sisters of Mother Teresa's Missionaries of Charity are in Rome this week for the Catholic Church's Jubilee of Youth offering a striking contrast to the vibrant festival atmosphere filling the Vatican's streets. Their mission: "To give them Jesus," said one 25-year-old sister from Spain, who declined to be quoted by name in accordance with the congregation's rul...
Fifty-four Missionaries of Charity are in Rome this week for the Catholic Church's Jubilee of Young People, where they are approaching young people one by one to invite them to spend time with Christ in all-day Eucharistic Adoration and to learn about the mission and message of their founder, St. Teresa of Calcutta. / Credit: Courtney Mares
Rome, Italy, Aug 1, 2025 / 07:30 am (CNA).
Just steps away from the exuberant crowds of Gen Z pilgrims chanting and taking selfies in St. Peter's Square, religious sisters in white saris with blue stripes kneel barefoot in silent adoration before the Blessed Sacrament.
More than 50 sisters of Mother Teresa's Missionaries of Charity are in Rome this week for the Catholic Church's Jubilee of Youth offering a striking contrast to the vibrant festival atmosphere filling the Vatican's streets. Their mission: "To give them Jesus," said one 25-year-old sister from Spain, who declined to be quoted by name in accordance with the congregation's rules.
The sisters, known for their vow of extreme poverty and life of service to "the poorest of the poor," are praying for the souls and intentions of the thousands of young people gathered in the Eternal City. But they're not stopping there.
A Missionary of Charity speaks to young pilgrims on the Via della Conciliazione near Vatican City. Courtney Mares
In their no-frills style, the sisters are also taking to the streets, approaching young people one by one along the Via della Conciliazione — the broad avenue leading to St. Peter's Basilica — inviting them to spend time with Christ in all-day Eucharistic adoration and to learn about the mission and message of their founder, St. Teresa of Calcutta.
They press Miraculous Medals into open palms and quietly teach short prayers beloved by Mother Teresa, including: "Mary, Mother of Jesus, please be a mother to me now."
Missionaries of Charity kneel in prayer before the Blessed Sacrament in the chapel where they are inviting young people to come and prayer at the Jubilee of Youth. Courtney Mares
Jubilee pilgrims in Rome can visit the sisters near the Vatican at the Pius IX Pontifical School at Via dei Cavalieri del Santo Sepolcro, 1, where the Missionaries of Charity have set up a welcome center with a small exhibit featuring Mother Teresa's sari, sandals, and other personal belongings.
Mother Teresa's blood, preserved on a piece of cotton, is exposed for veneration as a first-class relic, and visitors are encouraged to leave handwritten prayer intentions in a shoebox. The sisters gather these daily and place them near the altar during Mass.
Missionaries of Charity speak with young pilgrims at the Jubilee of Youth in Rome. Courtney Mares
The exhibit also includes a video presentation of Mother Teresa's life, with images and excerpts from her speeches, playing in an adjacent room. For some young visitors, this is their first encounter with the saint. One sister recalled a moment when a young pilgrim asked her: "Mother Teresa? Who is that?" — a question that underscored the importance of their presence at the youth jubilee.
The sisters — who usually avoid being photographed or quoted — have made an exception for this special outreach to young people. Still, the young Spanish sister, born after Mother Teresa's death, said she prays that any photo taken of her would lead people not to her but to Christ.
She pointed to a favorite line from a prayer based on the words of St. John Henry Newman — whom Pope Leo XIV will soon declare a doctor of the Church — that the Missionaries of Charity recite daily after Communion: "Let them look up and see no longer me, but only Jesus!"
A Missionary of Charity passes out holy cards of St. Teresa of Calcutta at the Jubilee of Youth in Rome. Courtney Mares
Together with the sisters at the jubilee is Father Sebastian Vazhakala, the co-foundeder of the contemplative branch of the order with Mother Teresa, who gave talks for some of the young pilgrims.
Vazhakala told CNA that he thinks that the encounters taking place between the sisters and the young pilgrims could help more young people to discover their vocations, not only with the Missionaries of Charity, but also with other congregations.
"Definitely God is the one that does the calling," he said. "But we have to create an atmosphere for it … inspiring and instilling in the hearts of people the desire for God and the desire for commitment."
"Not everybody can have the same vocation, but at least they can come to know God better, come to love God better, and so come to know the meaning of their life."
Living memories of Mother Teresa
Vazhakala also shared some of his favorite memories from working alongside Mother Teresa for more than 30 years.
Father Sebastian Vazhakala, the co-foundeder of the contemplative branch of the order with Mother Teresa, shared some of his favorite memories from working alongside Mother Teresa for more than 30 years. Courtney Mares
He recalled one instance during their work together on the streets of Calcutta in the 1960s when a man, sick and homeless, was brought in for help — not for the first time.
Vazhakala, then a young priest, told Mother Teresa: "There is no sense of taking this man. … This man has been here at least 10 times. Now when he gets well, he will go out to the street, and then they will bring him back again."
He remembers that Mother Teresa replied: "Are you living tomorrow and yesterday? Because it doesn't matter whether he came yesterday or will come back tomorrow. But this man is in need of your help now. If he needs your help now, don't ask questions. Do it."
Vazhakala said Mother Teresa taught him to live in the present moment, which she saw as a gift from God. He remembered a time when after receiving the Nobel Prize she was asked by a journalist what she considered to be the most significant day of her life.
"Today," was Mother Teresa's reply.
"'I can do something today. I can love people. I can help others. I can pray.'"
At this year's Jubilee of Youth, the Missionaries of Charity quietly echo that message — in their prayers, their presence, and their patient invitation to pause and encounter the living Christ today.
Credit: J.J. Gouin/ShutterstockCNA Staff, Jul 31, 2025 / 16:35 pm (CNA).The U.S. Federal Trade Commission is investigating potential "unfair or deceptive trade practices" regarding transgender surgeries and drugs.The launch of the federal inquiry is designed to "gauge the harms consumers may be experiencing" from "false or unsupported claims" about transgender treatment, according to a press release. The inquiry focuses on affected minors but is also open to adults who have been affected.The agency's investigation comes after President Donald Trump pledged to end federal support for transition drugs and surgeries in an executive order he issued at the outset of his administration this year.The Federal Trade Commission, a federal agency that promotes marketplace competition and consumer education, will investigate whether practitioners have violated a long-standing law against deception in the marketplace.The investigation falls under the purview of the agency as the primary enf...
Credit: J.J. Gouin/Shutterstock
CNA Staff, Jul 31, 2025 / 16:35 pm (CNA).
The U.S. Federal Trade Commission is investigating potential "unfair or deceptive trade practices" regarding transgender surgeries and drugs.
The launch of the federal inquiry is designed to "gauge the harms consumers may be experiencing" from "false or unsupported claims" about transgender treatment, according to a press release. The inquiry focuses on affected minors but is also open to adults who have been affected.
The agency's investigation comes after President Donald Trump pledged to end federal support for transition drugs and surgeries in an executive order he issued at the outset of his administration this year.
The Federal Trade Commission, a federal agency that promotes marketplace competition and consumer education, will investigate whether practitioners have violated a long-standing law against deception in the marketplace.
The investigation falls under the purview of the agency as the primary enforcer of the Federal Trade Commission Act of 1914, a federal law that, among other things, prohibits deception and false advertising in the marketplace. The agency will investigate if practitioners have gone against Sections 5 and 12 of the act, which ban "unfair or deceptive acts" and false advertising, respectively.
The commission "is uniquely positioned to investigate this potentially unlawful activity," the agency stated, noting that the organization "has a long history of bringing enforcement actions" in health care.
The agency "encourages members of the public to comment on any issues or concerns that are relevant to the FTC's consideration of this topic, including by submitting any written data, advertisements, social media posts, disclosures, or empirical research," the press release read.
U.S. Sen. Tom Cotton, R-Arkansas, commended the agency "for investigating the horrific scheme to target minors with barbaric gender procedures."
"Everyone involved — including the 'doctors' — should face massive liability for the damage they did to vulnerable children," Cotton said in a post on X.
This is not the commission's first look at the transgender issue. Earlier this month, the agency hosted a workshop in Washington, D.C., to investigate "unfair or deceptive trade practices" within transgender treatment.
The workshop brought in doctors, medical ethicists, detransitioners and their parents, and whistleblowers to share their testimonies.
Andrew Ferguson, a Catholic Virginian who chairs the commission, told detransitioners and survivors that the agency "hears you, we hear all of you, and we want to understand how the law is being broken," according to a report by Daily Wire.
At the workshop, the U.S. Justice Department's Chief of Staff Chad Mizelle announced that the department had issued more than 20 subpoenas against medical clinics as part of an investigation for fraud and false statements, National Review reported.
The deadline for the public to submit comments is Sept. 26. Comments will be posted to Regulations.gov, while another forum is available for confidential comments.
Bishop James Conley of Lincoln, Nebraska, in St. Peter's Square, a day before the canonization Mass of St. John Henry Newman, Oct. 12, 2019. / Credit: Daniel Ibanez/CNAWashington, D.C. Newsroom, Jul 31, 2025 / 17:18 pm (CNA).Catholic bishops across the nation are reacting to the "joyful" news that Pope Leo XIV has approved St. John Henry Newman to be declared the 38th doctor of the universal Church.The July 31 decision to give the title to the 19th-century Catholic convert and English saint was confirmed during Leo's morning meeting with Cardinal Marcello Semeraro, prefect of the Dicastery for the Causes of Saints."Six years ago, Pope Francis canonized English cardinal John Henry Newman," the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops noted in a post on X. "Now, he will join the other 37 men and women who have received the title of doctor of the Church."A doctor of the Church is someone who has significantly "advanced the knowledge of God through their writing on theology, s...
Bishop James Conley of Lincoln, Nebraska, in St. Peter's Square, a day before the canonization Mass of St. John Henry Newman, Oct. 12, 2019. / Credit: Daniel Ibanez/CNA
Catholic bishops across the nation are reacting to the "joyful" news that Pope Leo XIV has approved St. John Henry Newman to be declared the 38th doctor of the universal Church.
The July 31 decision to give the title to the 19th-century Catholic convert and English saint was confirmed during Leo's morning meeting with Cardinal Marcello Semeraro, prefect of the Dicastery for the Causes of Saints.
"Six years ago, Pope Francis canonized English cardinal John Henry Newman," the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops noted in a post on X. "Now, he will join the other 37 men and women who have received the title of doctor of the Church."
A doctor of the Church is someone who has significantly "advanced the knowledge of God through their writing on theology, spirituality, mysticism, or through their defense of the faith in the face of heresy and schism," the USCCB explained.
In recent years, the country's bishops have shown strong support for extending this recognition to Newman. In 2023, America's bishops voted overwhelmingly to endorse a petition brought by the Bishops' Conference of England and Wales asking the Vatican to name Newman a doctor of the Church.
Now, with the news that Newman's elevation to doctor of the Church has officially been approved, bishops across the nation are sharing their enthusiasm for the designation.
Bishop James Conley of Lincoln, Nebraska, called Newman his "favorite saint," saying that "I even chose his motto as my own. 'Heart speaks to heart.'"
St. John Henry Newman is expected to be named a Doctor of the Church—joining saints like Augustine, Catherine, and Thérèse.
Newman has been my friend since before I became Catholic. He's my favorite saint, and I even chose his motto as my own. "Heart speaks to heart."@USCCBpic.twitter.com/VUZHHguB1g
"Terrific news out of the Vatican this morning!" Bishop Robert Barron of Winona-Rochester, Minnesota, wrote immediately following the announcement, subsequently adding: "St. John Henry Newman was many things — apologist, theologian, educator, poet — but through it all, he was a lover of the truth." Barron invited the faithful to learn about the saint's "extraordinary life and witness."
"The announcement that Pope Leo XIV will declare St. John Henry Newman a doctor of the Church is truly joyful news," Bishop Michael Burbidge of Arlington, Virginia, also wrote in a post to social media.
St. John Henry Newman's "courageous pursuit of truth led him to enter the Catholic Church and helped deepen the Church's understanding of how doctrine develops while remaining faithful to the Gospel handed on by the apostles and their successors, the bishops," Burbidge said. "His witness of pastoral service and charity now serves as a beacon for all those seeking Christ and his peace in their hearts and lives."
"In his Apologia Pro Vita Sua, he writes: 'I am not ashamed to be a seeker after truth and to have changed my mind when I found that I was in error.'"
Burbidge added: "May we all follow his example of humility in pursuit of the God who wishes only our eternal happiness."
Cardinal Vincent Nichols of Westminster speaks with a police officer outside Westminster Cathedral in London, Nov. 9, 2021. / Credit: Mazur/cbcew.org.ukWashington, D.C. Newsroom, Jul 31, 2025 / 11:41 am (CNA).Cardinal Vincent Nichols, president of the Catholic Bishops' Conference of England and Wales, (CBCEW) said he is "delighted and thrilled" that Pope Leo XIV has announced that he will declare St. John Henry Newman to be a doctor of the Church.Joining Nichols in a statement from the conference following Thursday's announcement by the Holy See Press Office, Archbishop Bernard Longley of Birmingham said of Newman that "it is remarkable that his writings, first as an Anglican and then as a Roman Catholic, but considered as one entire corpus of written work, have led to him being declared a doctor of the Church." "This recognition that the writings of St. John Henry Newman are a true expression of the faith of the Church is of huge encouragement to all who appreciate not on...
Cardinal Vincent Nichols of Westminster speaks with a police officer outside Westminster Cathedral in London, Nov. 9, 2021. / Credit: Mazur/cbcew.org.uk
Washington, D.C. Newsroom, Jul 31, 2025 / 11:41 am (CNA).
Cardinal Vincent Nichols, president of the Catholic Bishops' Conference of England and Wales, (CBCEW) said he is "delighted and thrilled" that Pope Leo XIV has announced that he will declare St. John Henry Newman to be a doctor of the Church.
Joining Nichols in a statement from the conference following Thursday's announcement by the Holy See Press Office, Archbishop Bernard Longley of Birmingham said of Newman that "it is remarkable that his writings, first as an Anglican and then as a Roman Catholic, but considered as one entire corpus of written work, have led to him being declared a doctor of the Church."
"This recognition that the writings of St. John Henry Newman are a true expression of the faith of the Church is of huge encouragement to all who appreciate not only his great learning but also his heroic sanctity in following the call of God in his journey of faith," Nichols added.
Longley, who also serves as vice president of the CBCEW, said he is "immensely grateful to Pope Leo for declaring St. John Henry Newman as a doctor of the Church" and pointed out that Newman is "the third Englishman to be afforded this title," after St. Bede the Venerable and St. Anselm of Canterbury.
Nichols noted that the request to recognize Newman as a doctor of the Church had been before the Holy See "for some time" and has been widely supported across the globe, especially by the bishops of the Church in England.
"This moment brings back vivid memories of thepapal visit in 2010 of Pope Benedict XVI to these countries when he declared the beatification of John Henry Newman," Nichols continued. "That moment now reaches its fulfillment and gives great joy to all who strive to follow Christ today."
The announcement by the Holy See Press Office stated that the decision was made during a July 31 meeting between Pope Leo and the Vatican's prefect of the Dicastery for the Causes of Saints, Cardinal Marcello Sameraro.
Oratorian Father Ignatius Harrison, co-actor of the Newman cause, joined in the celebration of the announcement, declaring: "The fathers and brothers of the Birmingham Oratory give praise and thanks to God that the Holy Father Pope Leo has today confirmed that the title 'doctor of the Church' will soon be bestowed on St. John Henry."
Harrison emphasized that "Newman's wisdom and spiritual vision will now be of even greater relevance to the universal Church and indeed to all people of goodwill who seek God's truth."
Gavin Ashenden, a former Anglican bishop who was received into the Catholic Church in 2019, reacted with similar ebullience to the announcement, writing in a post on X: "This is the most wonderful news."
Pope Leo XIV visits the historic telescopes located at the Vatican Observatory in Castel Gandolfo, 15 miles southeast of Rome, on July 20, 2025. / Credit: Vatican MediaVatican City, Jul 31, 2025 / 12:11 pm (CNA).Pope Leo XIV on Thursday appointed astronomer Father Richard Anthony D'Souza, SJ, as the new director of the Vatican Observatory.D'Souza, who has worked at the Vatican's astronomical research and educational institution since 2016, will start his new position on Sept. 19, according to the Holy See Press Office statement.The Indian priest succeeds Brother Guy J. Consolmagno, SJ, whose 10-year mandate ends next month, as head of the observatory. Consolmagno will remain at the scientific institution as a staff astronomer.Born in Goa in 1978, D'Souza joined the Society of Jesus in 1996 and was ordained a priest in 2011 after completing studies at the Jnana Deepa Institute of Philosophy and Theology in India.He obtained a bachelor's degree in physics from St. Xavier's Colleg...
Pope Leo XIV visits the historic telescopes located at the Vatican Observatory in Castel Gandolfo, 15 miles southeast of Rome, on July 20, 2025. / Credit: Vatican Media
Vatican City, Jul 31, 2025 / 12:11 pm (CNA).
Pope Leo XIV on Thursday appointed astronomer Father Richard Anthony D'Souza, SJ, as the new director of the Vatican Observatory.
D'Souza, who has worked at the Vatican's astronomical research and educational institution since 2016, will start his new position on Sept. 19, according to the Holy See Press Office statement.
The Indian priest succeeds Brother Guy J. Consolmagno, SJ, whose 10-year mandate ends next month, as head of the observatory. Consolmagno will remain at the scientific institution as a staff astronomer.
Born in Goa in 1978, D'Souza joined the Society of Jesus in 1996 and was ordained a priest in 2011 after completing studies at the Jnana Deepa Institute of Philosophy and Theology in India.
He obtained a bachelor's degree in physics from St. Xavier's College, University of Mumbai, India, in 2002 and was awarded a master's degree in physics by the University of Heidelberg, Germany, in 2005.
In 2016, he completed his doctorate in astronomy at Ludwig Maximilian University in Munich, Germany, before moving to Italy to work with the Vatican Observatory in the same year.
According to the Vatican Observatory website, D'Souza, whose area of specialized research is the formation and evolution of galaxies, is also the superior of the Jesuit community attached to the observatory in Castel Gandolfo, Italy.
In 1891, Leo XIII issued the motu proprio Ut Mysticam ("As Mystical") authorizing the construction of a new modernized observatory in Castel Gandolfo, approximately 15 miles southeast of Rome.
The Church's first observatory was founded in 1579 by Pope Gregory XIII, who entrusted the institution to the Society of Jesus.
null / Credit: Ulf Wittrock/ShutterstockCNA Staff, Jul 31, 2025 / 15:05 pm (CNA).A lawsuit filed in Massachusetts alleges that a Catholic student in a medical education program was dismissed from the school after she objected to having been forced to witness an abortion as part of her clinical studies.The lawsuit, filed earlier this month in state court, alleges that Alina Thopurathu was taking part in Springfield College's physician assistant program when, during clinical rotations, she was scheduled to see a dilation and evacuation, or D&E, a procedure commonly used for later-term abortions.Thopurathu, identified in the filing as a practicing Catholic, wrote in evaluations that she had assumed the procedure was intended for a miscarriage and that she was "overwhelmed" at witnessing an actual abortion."In the future, I believe students should be asked if they are comfortable with seeing a D&E rather than being assigned the procedure without patient information," she wr...
null / Credit: Ulf Wittrock/Shutterstock
CNA Staff, Jul 31, 2025 / 15:05 pm (CNA).
A lawsuit filed in Massachusetts alleges that a Catholic student in a medical education program was dismissed from the school after she objected to having been forced to witness an abortion as part of her clinical studies.
The lawsuit, filed earlier this month in state court, alleges that Alina Thopurathu was taking part in Springfield College's physician assistant program when, during clinical rotations, she was scheduled to see a dilation and evacuation, or D&E, a procedure commonly used for later-term abortions.
Thopurathu, identified in the filing as a practicing Catholic, wrote in evaluations that she had assumed the procedure was intended for a miscarriage and that she was "overwhelmed" at witnessing an actual abortion.
"In the future, I believe students should be asked if they are comfortable with seeing a D&E rather than being assigned the procedure without patient information," she wrote in the evaluation.
The lawsuit says that after this write-up, faculty evaluations of Thopurathu "changed tone," with advisers accusing her of negative performance in the program, though she had received praise beforehand.
Eventually her academic advisers presented her with a "remediation contract" placing her under academic probation, according to the suit; the school also designated her work in the OB-GYN rotation as "incomplete."
Thopurathu said she was "coerced" to sign the contract, the terms of which allegedly went beyond what was required in the student handbook. The school eventually dismissed her from the program, citing her alleged negative performance.
The suit claims that following her negative response to being forced to witness an abortion, the college "sought to dismiss [Thopurathu] for having personal values incompatible with those of the [school]."
The lawsuit seeks monetary damages from the school, including $500,000 for "mental anguish, emotional distress," and other injuries.
Springfield College did not immediately return a request for comment on the suit on Thursday.
The suit has drawn national support from pro-life advocates. Students for Life of America spokesman Michael Allers told the College Fix this week that the group "stands with all Catholics in the academic space that are discriminated against by the secular elite."
Several of the participants at the 2025 EWTN Summer Academy in Rome, an intensive program in religious journalism and digital storytelling, come from places where Catholics live their faith amid severe adversity. / Credit: Lemmy Ogbonnaya Ijioma/EWTN Summer AcademyVatican City, Jul 31, 2025 / 07:00 am (CNA).Mikhail Ajjan fled war-torn Syria and the terrors of ISIS with his family when he was 10. Now a university student in Sweden, the 21-year-old Catholic faces a vastly different challenge of living his faith in a secular environment and is honing his media skills to help spread the Gospel.Ajjan is one of more than 40 young Catholics from 23 countries who have come together to train in the 2025 EWTN Summer Academy in Rome, an intensive program in religious journalism and digital storytelling, which coincides this year with the Catholic Church's Jubilee of Youth.Mikhail Ajjan, 21, is originally from Aleppo, Syria, but now lives in Sweden. Credit: Lemmy Ogbonnaya Ijioma/EWTN Summ...
Several of the participants at the 2025 EWTN Summer Academy in Rome, an intensive program in religious journalism and digital storytelling, come from places where Catholics live their faith amid severe adversity. / Credit: Lemmy Ogbonnaya Ijioma/EWTN Summer Academy
Vatican City, Jul 31, 2025 / 07:00 am (CNA).
Mikhail Ajjan fled war-torn Syria and the terrors of ISIS with his family when he was 10. Now a university student in Sweden, the 21-year-old Catholic faces a vastly different challenge of living his faith in a secular environment and is honing his media skills to help spread the Gospel.
Ajjan is one of more than 40 young Catholics from 23 countries who have come together to train in the 2025 EWTN Summer Academy in Rome, an intensive program in religious journalism and digital storytelling, which coincides this year with the Catholic Church's Jubilee of Youth.
Mikhail Ajjan, 21, is originally from Aleppo, Syria, but now lives in Sweden. Credit: Lemmy Ogbonnaya Ijioma/EWTN Summer Academy
Several of the academy participants come from places where Catholics live their faith amid severe adversity — from war zones to countries where cartel violence or religious persecution threaten Christian communities.
Among them is Nicolawos Hazboun, a multimedia officer from Bethlehem who works closely with Cardinal Pierbattista Pizzaballa documenting life in the Holy Land for the Latin Catholic Patriarchate of Jerusalem.
Nicolawos Hazboun is from Bethlehem, Palestine. He works for the Latin Patriarchate of Jerusalem as a multimedia officer. Credit: Lemmy Ogbonnaya Ijioma/EWTN Summer Academy
On a recent afternoon, Hazboun, 26, paused to reflect on the current situation facing Palestinian Catholics in Bethlehem.
"It's a blessing for us to be in the same place where Jesus was born," he said. "My family is one of the biggest Christian families in Bethlehem. … We are in Bethlehem for more than 500 years … And we want to stay."
But staying isn't easy. "Nowadays we have a bad situation because of the war," Hazboun said. "We don't have any pilgrimage … groups from outside. The people of Bethlehem … depend on the tourists. We don't have any income."
Many Christian families in Bethlehem, he added, are leaving for Europe or North America. "We want the Christians of Bethlehem to grow and to increase in numbers, but unfortunately, the numbers of Christians in Bethlehem are getting low because of the situation."
Hazboun hopes to bring the skills he learns at the EWTN Summer Academy back to Bethlehem and Jerusalem to help him better communicate the experience of Christians in the Holy Land.
"People are always surprised that there are … Palestinian Christians," Hazboun said. "I want them to know that we are a strong community."
"There are still Christians in Bethlehem. … Not all Palestinians are Muslim."
The EWTN Summer Academy, organized by the global Catholic media network EWTN, CNA's parent company, is now in its fourth year of training aspiring communicators in skills ranging from video editing to narrative reporting. The academy is held at the Pontifical Urban University's CIAM center with a panoramic view of Rome and the dome of St. Peter's Basilica and is offered at no cost to participants.
"I feel close to heaven," said Sister Mary Iyadunni Adeniyi, 27, a Nigerian member of the Congregation of Sisters of St. Michael the Archangel making her first pilgrimage to Rome to take part in the academy.
Sister Mary Iyadunni Adeniyi is a Nigerian religious sister with the Congregation of Sisters of St. Michael the Archangel. Credit: Lemmy Ogbonnaya Ijioma/EWTN Summer Academy
She recalls vividly the 2022 Pentecost massacre at St. Francis Catholic Church in Owo, Nigeria, where dozens of Catholics were killed.
"It feels bad that you just go out and you could get killed," she said. "We pray that God will help our faith and God could restore peace in our country."
Even so, Sister Mary remains committed to building a hopeful future. "The charism of my congregation is evangelization through inculturation," she explained.
"Now, it's a digital world … so we also have to use that for evangelization." She edits videos, designs graphics, and believes strongly in the potential of online platforms to reach young hearts.
"Where can you find the young people in the 21st century? In the media," the sister said.
In Vietnam, Tâm Nguyên Bùi, 31, works with the Vietnamese bishops' conference and also volunteers for the local archdiocese in Saigon.
Tâm Nguyên Bùi, 31, works with the Vietnamese bishops' conference and also volunteers for the local archdiocese in Saigon. Credit: Lemmy Ogbonnaya Ijioma/EWTN Summer Academy
"Even though we are a minority in the population — about 7% of 100 million people in the country — we have profound experiences in family life… and devotion in the churches," Nguyên said.
"In the EWTN Summer Academy 2025, we are alongside 43 communicators from 23 countries. We come from different backgrounds, different experiences of faith also. I really learn when I speak with others about how they live their faith in their country. For some, it is freely and it's very enjoyable, but sometimes with difficulties," he said.
Nguyên has translated some of the writings of St. John Paul II into Vietnamese and is a veteran of Catholic youth gatherings across Asia. He said that Catholics in Vietnam are hoping that Pope Leo XIV will visit Vietnam soon. "We try to pray that the relationship between Vietnam and the Holy See is better and gets better."
For Ajjan, the Jubilee of Youth will be a continuation of the rewarding experience that he had at the last World Youth Day.
"I've been to the World Youth Days in Portugal and I got hooked. So I was like, 'I'm going to the jubilee. I'm going to South Korea," he said referring to the 2027 World Youth Day in Seoul.
Ajjan has also found a way to serve his local Catholic community. With EWTN Sweden, he helps a young priest to produce a weekly homily video series.
"In our city, we have a very good youth pastor," he explained. "And we started to film a Sunday homily series with him. So each Wednesday we filmed the series, edited it, and then put it out on Sunday morning.?… It was really, really fun."
From Lebanon, Marguerita Kallassyis a trilingual journalist for ACI MENA, CNA's Arabic-language news partner, also owned by EWTN. She has covered everything from street protests to massive religious processions. But her heart lies in telling Catholic stories.
Marguerita Kallassy is a trilingual journalist from Lebanon for ACI MENA, CNA's Arabic-language news partner, also owned by EWTN. Credit: Lemmy Ogbonnaya Ijioma/EWTN Summer Academy
"It was so magical to bring that part of the East that still believes … that still has a place for Jesus in their lives," she said.
She wants to correct the common misperception that Christianity is all but vanished from the Middle East.
"People never realize the scale [of Christianity] in the East. … They thought we have only Muslim community in Lebanon so I really need to tell people that this is the birthplace of Jesus. I mean — Jesus is not from New Jersey, you know?" she joked.
"My work with the EWTN inspired me so that I applied to the Sorbonne?… in media studies," she said. Kallassy will start her graduate studies in Paris in the fall.
Daniela Sánchez y Sánchez, 21, grew up in Puebla, Mexico, and is now studying journalism in Spain.
Daniela Sánchez y Sánchez grew up in Puebla, Mexico, and is now studying journalism in Spain. Credit: Lemmy Ogbonnaya Ijioma/EWTN Summer Academy
"Since I was a little kid, I always wanted to know … everything about everything," she said. She began working with Radio María and the Archdiocese of Puebla to report the news of the local Church and bring a message of faith to a country torn by drug violence.
The Church's response, she said, has always been prayer — even for those committing violence. "[We] pray for all the victims, for all the priests who have been affected by this, and pray for those people … who are bad and want to do bad to our community," she said. "We all need to have mercy and pray for them."
Seated in view of St. Peter's, Santos marveled at the experience. "If you're into spreading God's message throughout the world and journalism, this is the best opportunity God has given us."