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Catholic News

Bernardo García is executive director of the Casablanca Declaration. / Credit: "EWTN Noticias"/ScreenshotLima Newsroom, Jun 17, 2025 / 09:42 am (CNA).Bernardo García, executive director of the Casablanca Declaration, a coalition that calls for the universal abolition of surrogacy, said that in reality the practice amounts to "the exploitation of poor women and the sale of children." The Casablanca Declaration takes its name from a conference on the subject held in Casablanca, Morocco, in 2023.García spoke to "EWTN Noticias," the Spanish-language broadcast edition of EWTN News, during the coalition's third summit, held last week in Lima, Peru, with specialists in bioethics, law, and communications participating.García emphasized that the Casablanca Declaration "is an NGO [nongovernmental organization] that informs about the risks and dangers of surrogacy worldwide and actively promotes an international treaty at the United Nations level to abolish this practice.""We believe that...

Bernardo García is executive director of the Casablanca Declaration. / Credit: "EWTN Noticias"/Screenshot

Lima Newsroom, Jun 17, 2025 / 09:42 am (CNA).

Bernardo García, executive director of the Casablanca Declaration, a coalition that calls for the universal abolition of surrogacy, said that in reality the practice amounts to "the exploitation of poor women and the sale of children." The Casablanca Declaration takes its name from a conference on the subject held in Casablanca, Morocco, in 2023.

García spoke to "EWTN Noticias," the Spanish-language broadcast edition of EWTN News, during the coalition's third summit, held last week in Lima, Peru, with specialists in bioethics, law, and communications participating.

García emphasized that the Casablanca Declaration "is an NGO [nongovernmental organization] that informs about the risks and dangers of surrogacy worldwide and actively promotes an international treaty at the United Nations level to abolish this practice."

"We believe that the authorities, as well as the public, need to be aware of the reality of this market, because it is often presented as an alternative fertility technique, as an alternative adoption technique, but this is really the exploitation of poor women and the sale of children," he emphasized.

García pointed out the importance of banning surrogacy, a practice in which several Latin American countries have become the center of operations in recent years.

According to García, the Casablanca Declaration brings together specialists from more than 80 countries and was launched in response to the global growth of surrogacy, an industry valued at $22.4 billion in 2024, according to Global Market Insights.

A practice that violates the rights of women and babies

Lorena Bolson, dean of the Institute of Family Sciences at Austral University in Argentina, explained that surrogacy "involves a violation of all kinds of rights, both for the woman who carries the child and, above all, for the child, who ends up being the most forgotten one."

Commissioning parents are the ones who contract for the baby. María Carrillo, a professor at Pan American University in Mexico, noted: "There are homosexual couples who resort to this practice because they naturally cannot have children. There are also heterosexual couples with infertility problems, and even single people... As long as they can afford it, they can access it."

In Mexico, the states of Tabasco and Sinaloa allow surrogacy. Carrillo noted that it also is done in other states, although illegally. The majority of those seeking Mexican women for this purpose are primarily from the United States, Spain, and Asia.

Mexico "is a country with very high poverty rates, and there are women who are truly in desperate, vulnerable situations who seek this practice as a means to support their families," Carrillo indicated.

Argentina and Uruguay

Women who agree to become surrogates often sign contracts imposed by intermediary companies. Verónica Toller, national director of the Fight Against Human Trafficking and Exploitation in Argentina, follows these contracts closely.

"We are talking about human trafficking with contracts that [make the surrogate] absolutely subservient," Toller said. "The Argentine justice system considers women bound by these contracts to have been reduced to servitude where there was economic violence, health-related violence, where the woman is abandoned if she loses the baby, for example, by not being responsible for her subsequent medical care."

Verónica Toller is national director of the Fight Against Human Trafficking and Exploitation in Argentina. Credit: "EWTN Noticias"/Screenshot
Verónica Toller is national director of the Fight Against Human Trafficking and Exploitation in Argentina. Credit: "EWTN Noticias"/Screenshot

Sometimes, she continued, "by order of the commissioning parents, babies are selectively discarded and aborted."

In Uruguay, surrogacy is legal under certain conditions. As Sofía Maruri, a lawyer and human rights consultant, explained: "It is permitted for women who demonstrate that they cannot become pregnant due to fertility issues and can ask a relative, such as their mother or sister, to bear a child in their place, as long as the condition is that no money is involved."

This case is known as "altruistic" surrogacy, in which the commissioning parents must cover the surrogate's medical and food expenses.

Tragedy of surrogacy in Ukraine

One of the countries where surrogacy is legal is Ukraine. According to data from Casablanca, the cost of surrogacy in Ukraine ranges between $60,000 and $80,000, while in the United States it can reach $150,000. Therefore, many commissioning parents seek Ukrainian women, even in the midst of the conflict there.

In poor countries, surrogate mothers typically receive between $10,000 and $20,000. They must be between 25 and 35 years old and have had at least one child previously.

Faced with the pain of couples who want to have children but cannot, specialists at the Casablanca Declaration encourage them to opt for adoption.

In 2024, during the Second Casablanca Conference in Rome, the organizers met with Pope Francis, who encouraged them to continue defending human rights.

In the United States, surrogacy is governed by laws that vary from state to state. 

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

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The New Jersey State House. / Credit: Felix Lipov/ShutterstockCNA Staff, Jun 17, 2025 / 10:37 am (CNA).The New Jersey government will be allowed to assemble a grand jury to investigate allegations of clergy sexual abuse there, the state Supreme Court said Monday.In a unanimous ruling, the New Jersey Supreme Court said a lower court had erred when it held the state could not empanel the jury, with the high court stating that the government "has the right to proceed with its investigation and present evidence before a special grand jury."The lower court had said in part that any findings from the grand jury could be "fundamentally unfair" because any priests accused in it would lack the ability to adequately challenge the allegations.But the Supreme Court said it was up to judges to decide if any report complied with prevailing legal standards. Courts "cannot and [do] not decide the ultimate question in advance," the ruling said.The court's decision comes just over a month after ...

The New Jersey State House. / Credit: Felix Lipov/Shutterstock

CNA Staff, Jun 17, 2025 / 10:37 am (CNA).

The New Jersey government will be allowed to assemble a grand jury to investigate allegations of clergy sexual abuse there, the state Supreme Court said Monday.

In a unanimous ruling, the New Jersey Supreme Court said a lower court had erred when it held the state could not empanel the jury, with the high court stating that the government "has the right to proceed with its investigation and present evidence before a special grand jury."

The lower court had said in part that any findings from the grand jury could be "fundamentally unfair" because any priests accused in it would lack the ability to adequately challenge the allegations.

But the Supreme Court said it was up to judges to decide if any report complied with prevailing legal standards. Courts "cannot and [do] not decide the ultimate question in advance," the ruling said.

The court's decision comes just over a month after the Diocese of Camden, New Jersey, said it would drop its fight against the state's efforts to empanel the grand jury.

Camden Bishop Joseph Williams last month said he intended to "do the right thing" for abuse victims. The Camden Diocese had been embroiled in a yearslong fight with the state over the potential grand jury empanelment.

Williams' abandonment of the fight came just several weeks after he assumed the bishopric there on March 17.

The diocese had previously argued in part that New Jersey "cannot convene a grand jury to return a presentment unless it addresses public affairs or conditions, censures public officials, or calls attention to imminent conditions." Years-old clergy abuse allegations did not meet these standards, the diocese had said.

In a letter in the Catholic Star Herald last month, Williams said he was "new to being a diocesan bishop and new to the complex legal arguments and proceedings involved" in the ongoing case. Prior to his March 17 appointment, he served as coadjutor bishop of the Camden Diocese.

A grand jury was famously empaneled in Pennsylvania from 2016 to 2018 to investigate abuse allegations in multiple dioceses of that state.

That report, released in August 2018, revealed allegations of abuse against more than 300 priests involving more than 1,000 children in the state.

Remarking on that data, the jurists said in their report: "We believe that the real number — of children whose records were lost, or who were afraid ever to come forward — is in the thousands."

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The Vatican Gardens at Castel Gandolfo is located on the wooded slopes of the Alban Hills, overlooking the blue waters of a small volcanic crater lake. / Credit: Courtney Mares/CNARome Newsroom, Jun 17, 2025 / 06:47 am (CNA).The town of Castel Gandolfo has said Pope Leo XIV will again partake in the centuries-long tradition of spending a summer vacation at the lakeside papal residence in the Alban Hills south of Rome.The Vatican has not responded to a request for confirmation, but a spokeswoman for the small town, Giulia Agostinelli, told CNA Leo will arrive sometime during the first week of July.Pope Francis in 2013 broke with the papal practice of escaping the Roman heat in Castel Gandolfo, with its extensive gardens, preferring to remain at his Vatican residence, Santa Marta, even during the summer.Francis opted to turn the papal summer residence into a museum. It opened to the public in 2016.The gardens of the papal residence, called the Barberini Gardens, were opened...

The Vatican Gardens at Castel Gandolfo is located on the wooded slopes of the Alban Hills, overlooking the blue waters of a small volcanic crater lake. / Credit: Courtney Mares/CNA

Rome Newsroom, Jun 17, 2025 / 06:47 am (CNA).

The town of Castel Gandolfo has said Pope Leo XIV will again partake in the centuries-long tradition of spending a summer vacation at the lakeside papal residence in the Alban Hills south of Rome.

The Vatican has not responded to a request for confirmation, but a spokeswoman for the small town, Giulia Agostinelli, told CNA Leo will arrive sometime during the first week of July.

Pope Francis in 2013 broke with the papal practice of escaping the Roman heat in Castel Gandolfo, with its extensive gardens, preferring to remain at his Vatican residence, Santa Marta, even during the summer.

Francis opted to turn the papal summer residence into a museum. It opened to the public in 2016.

The gardens of the papal residence, called the Barberini Gardens, were opened to the public in 2014 as a way to increase revenue for the town, which thrived on tourism brought by visitors who came to see the pope during his stay.

For Benedict XVI, the villa was a favorite summer getaway during his pontificate. It was conceded to the Holy See as one of their extraterritorial possessions under the Lateran Pact of 1929.

The villa served as the papal summer residence since the pontificate of Urban VIII during the 17th century. It has a small farm created by Pope Pius XI, which produces eggs, milk, oil, vegetables and honey either for local employees, or for sale in the Vatican supermarket.

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null / Credit: angellodeco/ShutterstockWashington, D.C. Newsroom, Jun 16, 2025 / 13:49 pm (CNA).Children's Hospital Los Angeles will close its Center for Transyouth Health and Development and its transgender surgical program in July, citing federal and state-level funding pressures.The hospital told families in an email that there was "no viable alternative" to closing the clinic, one of the nation's largest, citing "the increasingly severe impacts of federal administrative actions and proposed policies," including an executive order issued by President Donald Trump earlier in the year.The center's last day of operation will be July 22, according to the email, which was signed by clinic leaders including Paul Viviano and Kelly Johnson.Earlier this year several hospitals in the United States suspended their child transgender programs after Trump's order "Protecting Children from Chemical and Surgical Mutilation," which moved to halt the "maiming and sterilizing [of] a growing nu...

null / Credit: angellodeco/Shutterstock

Washington, D.C. Newsroom, Jun 16, 2025 / 13:49 pm (CNA).

Children's Hospital Los Angeles will close its Center for Transyouth Health and Development and its transgender surgical program in July, citing federal and state-level funding pressures.

The hospital told families in an email that there was "no viable alternative" to closing the clinic, one of the nation's largest, citing "the increasingly severe impacts of federal administrative actions and proposed policies," including an executive order issued by President Donald Trump earlier in the year.

The center's last day of operation will be July 22, according to the email, which was signed by clinic leaders including Paul Viviano and Kelly Johnson.

Earlier this year several hospitals in the United States suspended their child transgender programs after Trump's order "Protecting Children from Chemical and Surgical Mutilation," which moved to halt the "maiming and sterilizing [of] a growing number of impressionable children" due to transgender ideology.

The executive order directed that medical institutions that receive federal research or education grants must not participate in the "chemical and surgical mutilation of children."

The clinic leaders in their letter this week further cited directives from U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi and inquiries from federal authorities regarding quality standards at the children's hospital as well as a May review on medical protocols from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

Those factors, along with the FBI's solicitation of tips to report hospitals performing transgender procedures on children, "strongly signal this administration's intent to take swift and decisive action, both criminal and civil, against any entity it views as being in violation of the executive order," the letter states.

The leaders said they would be hosting meetings in the coming days to discuss the looming closure.

According to a CDC study published last year, 3.3% of all U.S. high schoolers "identify as transgender," with a further 2.2% of high schoolers "questioning" their "gender identity."

Numerous U.S. states have moved lately to limit transgender procedures for minors, including surgical procedures and chemical prescriptions such as puberty blockers.

Last December the United Kingdom similarly made permanent its ban on children receiving puberty-blocking drugs meant to facilitate "gender transition."

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null / Credit: Wolfgang Schaller|ShutterstockCNA Staff, Jun 16, 2025 / 14:19 pm (CNA).The U.S. Supreme Court has ordered the New York Court of Appeals to revisit Diocese of Albany v. Harris, a case challenging a 2017 New York state mandate requiring employers to cover abortions in health insurance plans.The order follows the court's unanimous ruling on June 5 in Catholic Charities Bureau v. Wisconsin Labor and Industry Review Commission, which upheld First Amendment protections for religious organizations.A coalition of religious groups, including the Dioceses of Albany and Ogdensburg, the Sisterhood of St. Mary (Anglican/Episcopal nuns), First Bible Baptist Church, and Catholic Charities, sued New York state in 2017, arguing the mandate forces them to violate their belief in the sanctity of life by forcing them to fund abortions.In 2017, the New York State Department of Financial Services mandated that employer health plans cover "medically necessary" abortions. Initially, the...

null / Credit: Wolfgang Schaller|Shutterstock

CNA Staff, Jun 16, 2025 / 14:19 pm (CNA).

The U.S. Supreme Court has ordered the New York Court of Appeals to revisit Diocese of Albany v. Harris, a case challenging a 2017 New York state mandate requiring employers to cover abortions in health insurance plans.

The order follows the court's unanimous ruling on June 5 in Catholic Charities Bureau v. Wisconsin Labor and Industry Review Commission, which upheld First Amendment protections for religious organizations.

A coalition of religious groups, including the Dioceses of Albany and Ogdensburg, the Sisterhood of St. Mary (Anglican/Episcopal nuns), First Bible Baptist Church, and Catholic Charities, sued New York state in 2017, arguing the mandate forces them to violate their belief in the sanctity of life by forcing them to fund abortions.

In 2017, the New York State Department of Financial Services mandated that employer health plans cover "medically necessary" abortions. Initially, the state proposed exempting employers with religious objections, but abortion activists pressured the state for a narrower exemption that would apply only to religious groups that primarily teach religion and serve or employ only those of their own faith. 

This excluded many faith-based ministries that serve all people regardless of religious affiliation like the Carmelite Sisters for the Aged and Infirm who run Teresian Nursing Home for all elderly and dying, and Catholic Charities, which offers adoption and maternity services.

Without relief, the groups face millions in fines or will have to eliminate employee health plans. 

In 2017, represented by religious liberty law group Becket and law firm Jones Day, the coalition challenged New York's mandate. After state courts upheld it, the Supreme Court in 2021 reversed those rulings, citing Fulton v. City of Philadelphia, a Becket victory protecting Catholic foster care agencies.

However, New York's Court of Appeals reaffirmed the mandate in May 2024, claiming Fulton was inapplicable and ignoring the Supreme Court's ruling. At the time, Dennis Poust of the New York State Catholic Conference called the mandate "unconstitutional and unjust." Becket and Jones Day appealed again on Sept. 17, 2024.

In the Catholic Charities ruling in early June, the Supreme Court rejected Wisconsin's denial of a tax exemption to Catholic Charities for serving all without proselytizing, with Justice Sonia Sotomayor calling it a "textbook" First Amendment violation of the free exercise and establishment clauses, as it favored certain religious practices over others.

"New York wants to browbeat nuns into paying for abortions for serving all in need," said Eric Baxter, Becket's vice president. "For the second time in four years, the Supreme Court has made clear that bully tactics like these have no place in our nation or our law. We are confident that these religious groups will finally be able to care for the most vulnerable consistent with their beliefs."

Noel J. Francisco of Jones Day added: "Religious groups in the Empire State should not be forced to provide insurance coverage that violates their deeply held religious beliefs."

The case mirrors the Little Sisters of the Poor's fight against a 2011 federal contraceptive mandate, where the Supreme Court ruled three times that religious groups cannot be forced to facilitate practices against their beliefs.

New York Gov. Kathy Hochul has defended the mandate as essential for women's health care, labeling the plaintiffs "extremists."

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The Freedom Group was founded in 2023 and works to help men gain freedom from pornography addiction. / Credit: Courtesy of Joe MasekCNA Staff, Jun 15, 2025 / 06:00 am (CNA).At 8 years old, Minnesota native Joe Masek was exposed to pornography for the first time and went on to struggle with an addiction to it for 23 years. Through a series of actions he finally gained freedom and after experiencing a calling to help other men, he founded a ministry called The Freedom Group in 2023.About 100 men have gone through the ministry's program each year since then. The group uses  a 12-month training system as well as additional courses and retreats to help men break free from porn addiction.The Porn Free training system includes weekly coaching calls with a Freedom Coach, group coaching calls, performance and mindset coaching, simple daily habits to build discipline and rhythm, access to an app to connect and track progress, and more. There are also several courses that help i...

The Freedom Group was founded in 2023 and works to help men gain freedom from pornography addiction. / Credit: Courtesy of Joe Masek

CNA Staff, Jun 15, 2025 / 06:00 am (CNA).

At 8 years old, Minnesota native Joe Masek was exposed to pornography for the first time and went on to struggle with an addiction to it for 23 years. Through a series of actions he finally gained freedom and after experiencing a calling to help other men, he founded a ministry called The Freedom Group in 2023.

About 100 men have gone through the ministry's program each year since then. The group uses  a 12-month training system as well as additional courses and retreats to help men break free from porn addiction.

The Porn Free training system includes weekly coaching calls with a Freedom Coach, group coaching calls, performance and mindset coaching, simple daily habits to build discipline and rhythm, access to an app to connect and track progress, and more. There are also several courses that help individuals understand the neurological aspect of addiction and how to rewire the brain.

Based in the Twin Cities, The Freedom Group also offers individuals the opportunity to attend nature retreats, where they are encouraged to encounter God and themselves in a deeper way. Through guided reflections, group sessions, time alone, and physical adventure, participants learn how to live free from their addiction and become grounded in their true purpose. 

Masek, now 32, said he was first exposed to porn while using Limewire, an audio file downloading program used during the early 2000s. Believing he was downloading a music file, he ended up downloading a video file that contained pornographic images.

Around the same time, Masek was also sexually abused by an older peer. 

"?As a young 7-, 8-year-old kid, I experienced all the symptoms [that] now that I understand and we understand as adults trying to help other people in that same sort of way — a lot of sort of disconnection in my own experience of who am I and feeling dirty and worthless, but also looking for it and starting to have seeking behavior," he told CNA in an interview.

He shared that the rest of his upbringing was "really good." He grew up in a middle-class family who attended church every Sunday and he was very involved in youth group. But as he got older, he began to experience an "ever-increasing sort of dichotomy through faith life and this hidden life."

Joe Masek, founder of The Freedom Group. Credit: Photo courtesy of Joe Masek
Joe Masek, founder of The Freedom Group. Credit: Photo courtesy of Joe Masek

It wasn't until college that Masek found himself in a men's group that was addressing sexual issues and was able to share his story in depth, releasing the "10,000-pound gorilla off my back."

"So this was my first introduction to shame flowing out the front door of the house of my heart and it was massive for me," he recalled. 

Soon afterward he went on a retreat and had his first confession in years, which he said was "a powerful experience."

However, Masek continued to struggle — experiencing periods of sobriety and then turning back to his addiction. After years of trying everything he could, he started to piece together everything he was learning and experiencing into what is now the approach used in The Freedom Group. 

"In a three-month span, I went from basically a two- to three-week cycle where I felt like I hit a wall and couldn't keep going to the point where I didn't even have an inclination to use anymore when familiar triggers would come," he said.

He then began leading a national marriage and family ministry and the more time he spent with young husbands and fathers, the more he saw this as a "core issue" and decided to leave that ministry to start The Freedom Group.

Masek shared that roughly 85% of the men his group works with are believers — either Catholic or evangelical. Therefore, faith does play a role in the program but "is really lived out in the experience."

He explained that "any addiction is an intimacy disorder." So The Freedom Group talks about intimacy in four dimensions: me and God, me and myself, me and others, and me and nature, or creation. These connections of intimacy then begin to shift as the brain begins to shift.

Masek gave the example of one man that he worked with who "had lived the model Christian life." He worked in campus ministry, got married young, and had a family. However, he was suffering from anxiety, was disconnected from himself, and was not experiencing connections in any of the four dimensions of intimacy. Three months into the process, this man shared with Masek that he had gone for a walk and sat down for 30 minutes in total stillness and felt God's presence.

"To me, that's like the greatest testimony I could ever get because I know the difference between 'I'm trying to do the right thing, go to church, or participate in the life of the church, and try to pray,' and to just be frazzled and out of control, and anxious, and avoidant through all of it. And then I know what it feels like to know how to slow down and to calm myself, to center myself, and connect to the living God. And I know how much that can change the way you show up then to your family, to others, the way that you see yourself then out of that connection."

A motto of The Freedom Group is "Pain is the path. Discomfort is your teacher." Masek explained how this highlights that life is hard but we are called to pick up our crosses.

"We only experience the Resurrection on the other end of our embrace of the suffering that's handed to us uniquely, and that's the invitation of our life — to be able to," he said. 

He added that true healing and transformation begins to be made visible when the individual also embraces the suffering he has been given and sees the good in it.

"That's our desire for this whole process is for men to, at the end of their journey with us, however long that they spend time with us, is to get to that point in their own lives. It goes from attraction or desire for something disordered to the point where they want to choose the good in good times and in bad," he said.

"I always tell guys, this is the worst possible year — if you're in our coaching process — to have the best year of your life because you won't learn very much," Masek added. "The goal is to have hard things happen to you and to stay in them and to welcome them as purposeful and see what happens because Jesus said, 'Pick up your cross and follow me.' And he promised that it would change us and even that it would bring us to freedom."

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Pope Leo XIV addresses Catholic faithful on the scoreboard at Rate Field, home to the Chicago White Sox, during a celebration and mass to honor his selection as Pope on June 14, 2025 in Chicago, Illinois. / Credit: Scott Olson/Getty ImagesVatican City, Jun 14, 2025 / 19:35 pm (CNA).The following is the full text of Pope Leo XIV's address to Catholics during the "Chicago Celebrates Pope Leo XIV" event at Rate Field, the home of the Chicago White Sox baseball team, on Saturday, June 14. My dear friends,It's a pleasure for me to greet all of you gathered together at White Sox Park on this great celebration as a community of faith in the Archdiocese of Chicago. A special greeting to Cardinal Cupich, to the auxiliary bishops, to all my friends who are gathered today on this: the feast of the Most Holy Trinity.And I begin with that because the Trinity is a model of God's love for us. God: Father, Son and Spirit. Three persons in one God live united in the depth of love, in community,...

Pope Leo XIV addresses Catholic faithful on the scoreboard at Rate Field, home to the Chicago White Sox, during a celebration and mass to honor his selection as Pope on June 14, 2025 in Chicago, Illinois. / Credit: Scott Olson/Getty Images

Vatican City, Jun 14, 2025 / 19:35 pm (CNA).

The following is the full text of Pope Leo XIV's address to Catholics during the "Chicago Celebrates Pope Leo XIV" event at Rate Field, the home of the Chicago White Sox baseball team, on Saturday, June 14.

My dear friends,

It's a pleasure for me to greet all of you gathered together at White Sox Park on this great celebration as a community of faith in the Archdiocese of Chicago. A special greeting to Cardinal Cupich, to the auxiliary bishops, to all my friends who are gathered today on this: the feast of the Most Holy Trinity.

And I begin with that because the Trinity is a model of God's love for us. God: Father, Son and Spirit. Three persons in one God live united in the depth of love, in community, sharing that communion with all of us.

So, as you gather today in this great celebration, I want to both express my gratitude to you and also [give] an encouragement to continue to build up community, friendship, as brothers and sisters in your daily lives, in your families, in your parishes, in the Archdiocese and throughout our world.

I'd like to send a special word of greeting to all the young people — those of you gathered together today, and many of you who are perhaps watching this greeting through technological means, on the Internet. As you grow up together, you may realize, especially having lived through the time of the pandemic — times of isolation, great difficulty, sometimes even difficulties in your families, or in our world today — sometimes it may be that the context of your life has not given you the opportunity to live the faith, to live as participants in a faith community, and I'd like to take this opportunity to invite each one of you to look into your own hearts, to recognize that God is present and that, perhaps in many different ways, God is reaching out to you, calling you, inviting you to know his Son Jesus Christ, through the Scriptures, perhaps through a friend or a relative, a grandparent, who might be a person of faith. But to discover how important it is for each one of us to pay attention to the presence of God in our own hearts, to that longing for love in our lives, for searching, a true searching, for finding the ways that we may be able to do something with our own lives to serve others.

And in that service to others we may find that coming together in friendship, building up community, we too can find true meaning in our lives. Moments of anxiety, of loneliness. So many people who suffer from different experiences of depression or sadness — they can discover that the love of God is truly healing, that it brings hope, and that actually, coming together as friends, as brothers and sisters, in community, in a parish, in an experience of living our faith together, we can find that the Lord's grace, that the love of God can truly heal us, can give us the strength that we need, can be the source of that hope that we all need in our lives.

To share that message of hope with one another — in outreach, in service, in looking for ways to make our world a better place — gives true life to all of us, and is a sign of hope for the whole world.

To, once again, the young people who are gathered here, I'd like to say that you are the promise of hope for so many of us. The world looks to you as you look around yourselves and say: We need you, we want you to come together to share with us in this common mission, as Church and in society, of announcing a message of true hope and of promoting peace, promoting harmony, among all peoples.

We have to look beyond our own — if you will — egotistical ways. We have to look for ways of coming together and promoting a message of hope. Saint Augustine says to us that if we want the world to be a better place, we have to begin with ourselves, we have to begin with our own lives, our own hearts (cf Speech 311; Comment on St John's Gospel, Homily 77).

And so, in this sense, as you gather together as a faith community, as you celebrate in the Archdiocese of Chicago, as you offer your own experience of joy and of hope, you can find out, you can discover that you, too, are indeed beacons of hope. That light, that perhaps on the horizon is not very easy to see, and yet, as we grow in our unity, as we come together in communion, we can discover that that light will grow brighter and brighter. That light which is indeed our faith in Jesus Christ. And we can become that message of hope, to promote peace and unity throughout our world.

We all live with many questions in our hearts. Saint Augustine speaks so often of our "restless" hearts and says: "Our hearts are restless until they rest in you, O God" (Confessions 1,1,1). That restlessness is not a bad thing, and we shouldn't look for ways to put out the fire, to eliminate or even numb ourselves to the tensions that we feel, the difficulties that we experience. We should rather get in touch with our own hearts and recognise that God can work in our lives, through our lives, and through us reach out to other people.

And so I'd like to conclude this brief message to all of you with an invitation to be, indeed, that light of hope. "Hope does not disappoint," Saint Paul tells us in his letter to the Romans (5,5). When I see each and every one of you, when I see how people gather together to celebrate their faith, I discover myself how much hope there is in the world.

In this Jubilee Year of Hope, Christ, who is our hope, indeed calls all of us to come together, that we might be that true living example: the light of hope in the world today.

So I would like to invite all of you to take a moment, to open up your own hearts to God, to God's love, to that peace which only the Lord can give us. To feel how deeply beautiful, how strong, how meaningful the love of God is in our lives. And to recognise that while we do nothing to earn God's love, God in his own generosity continues to pour out his love upon us. And as he gives us his love, he only asks us to be generous and to share what he has given us with others.

May you indeed be blessed as you gather together for this celebration. May the Lord's love and peace come upon each and every one of you, upon your families, and may God bless all of you, so that you might always be beacons of hope, a sign of hope and peace throughout our world.

And may the blessing of Almighty God, the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit come upon you and remain with you always. Amen.

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A Brooklyn Park police officer looks on while guarding the entrance to a neighborhood on June 14, 2025 in Brooklyn Park, Minnesota. / Credit: Stephen Maturen/Getty ImagesCNA Staff, Jun 14, 2025 / 15:16 pm (CNA).Catholic leaders in Minnesota responded with prayers and calls for peace following what authorities said were the politically motivated shootings of state lawmakers that left two dead.Former Minnesota House Speaker Melissa Hortman and her husband Mark were shot and killed early on Saturday in Brooklyn Park, Minnesota. State Sen. John Hoffman and his wife Yvette were also shot early on Saturday in their home in Champlin, with both reportedly expected to survive after surgery. Authorities said they engaged the suspect at Hortman's home, but the alleged killer was able to escape on foot. Police reportedly discovered a list of possible additional targets in the suspect's car, including state Gov. Tim Walz and U.S. Rep. Ilhan Omar. A manhunt for the killer was still underway ...

A Brooklyn Park police officer looks on while guarding the entrance to a neighborhood on June 14, 2025 in Brooklyn Park, Minnesota. / Credit: Stephen Maturen/Getty Images

CNA Staff, Jun 14, 2025 / 15:16 pm (CNA).

Catholic leaders in Minnesota responded with prayers and calls for peace following what authorities said were the politically motivated shootings of state lawmakers that left two dead.

Former Minnesota House Speaker Melissa Hortman and her husband Mark were shot and killed early on Saturday in Brooklyn Park, Minnesota. State Sen. John Hoffman and his wife Yvette were also shot early on Saturday in their home in Champlin, with both reportedly expected to survive after surgery.

Authorities said they engaged the suspect at Hortman's home, but the alleged killer was able to escape on foot. Police reportedly discovered a list of possible additional targets in the suspect's car, including state Gov. Tim Walz and U.S. Rep. Ilhan Omar.

A manhunt for the killer was still underway on Saturday afternoon.

'We must do everything in our power to regain a sense of civility'

On Saturday, Saint Paul and Minneapolis Archbishop Bernard Hebda in a statement called on "all people of goodwill to join me in prayer for the repose of the souls of Minnesota House Speaker-Emerita Melissa Hortman and her husband, along with prayers of recovery for Senator John Hoffman and his wife."

"I also ask you to pray for the members of law enforcement who are putting themselves at risk hunting down the person, or people, who inflicted this violence and terrorized communities," the archbishop said. "There is absolutely no reason for someone to commit such senseless violence on anyone, particularly those who are involved in public service."

Hebda described Hortman as "an honorable public servant" who met regularly with the Catholic bishops of the state.

"Although we disagreed on some issues, we worked collaboratively to find common ground on others in pursuit of the common good," he said.

Hoffman, meanwhile, "is always generous with his time, as well, meeting with the bishops whenever they are at the Capitol. He is a strong advocate for the most vulnerable, and Minnesota continues to need his leadership."

"At this time of fear and uncertainty, we need to rely even more on our loving God and that begins with prayer – both privately and communally," the archbishop said.

Also on Saturday, Jason Adkins, the executive director of the Minnesota Catholic Conference, said he was "deeply saddened and angered" by the shootings and killings, describing Hortman as a collaborative lawmaker and Hoffman as "a champion of vulnerable people" and "a friend."

"Resorting to violence in public life is never acceptable and begets more violence," he said. "Unfortunately, we, as a society, have increasingly embraced violence as a means of solving problems because we have lost a sense of the dignity of every human person created in the image and likeness of God."

"Until we recover a deeper sense of our common humanity and fraternity, we will continue to see the collapse of both civic discourse and the ability of our political process to mediate conflict and achieve the common good," Adkins said.

In a statement on Saturday, Gov. Tim Walz said: "We are not a country that settles our differences at gunpoint."

"We have demonstrated again and again in our state that it is possible to peacefully disagree, that our state is strengthened by civil public debate. We must stand united against all forms of violence – and I call on everyone to join me in that commitment," he said.

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Pope Leo XIV addresses Catholic faithful on the scoreboard at Rate Field, home to the Chicago White Sox, during a celebration and Mass to honor his selection as Pope on June 14, 2025 in Chicago, Illinois. / Credit: Scott Olson/Getty ImagesChicago, Ill., Jun 14, 2025 / 18:30 pm (CNA).Pope Leo XIV delivered a video message June 14 to thousands of Catholics gathered in his hometown of Chicago, making a special appeal to young people to be "beacons" of Christ's hope for others."You are the promise of hope for so many of us," the pope told young people attending the "Chicago Celebrates Pope Leo XIV" event at Rate Field, the home of the Chicago White Sox baseball team. "The world looks to you as you look around yourselves and say: We need you, we need you to come together to share with us in this common mission, as Church and in society, of announcing a message of true hope and of promoting peace, promoting harmony, among all peoples."The pope acknowledged some of the difficulties fa...

Pope Leo XIV addresses Catholic faithful on the scoreboard at Rate Field, home to the Chicago White Sox, during a celebration and Mass to honor his selection as Pope on June 14, 2025 in Chicago, Illinois. / Credit: Scott Olson/Getty Images

Chicago, Ill., Jun 14, 2025 / 18:30 pm (CNA).

Pope Leo XIV delivered a video message June 14 to thousands of Catholics gathered in his hometown of Chicago, making a special appeal to young people to be "beacons" of Christ's hope for others.

"You are the promise of hope for so many of us," the pope told young people attending the "Chicago Celebrates Pope Leo XIV" event at Rate Field, the home of the Chicago White Sox baseball team.

"The world looks to you as you look around yourselves and say: We need you, we need you to come together to share with us in this common mission, as Church and in society, of announcing a message of true hope and of promoting peace, promoting harmony, among all peoples."

The pope acknowledged some of the difficulties facing youth today, from isolation experienced during the COVID-19 pandemic to dwindling communities of faith. He invited young people gathered to look into their own hearts to see that God is present and "is reaching out to you, calling you, inviting you to know his Son Jesus Christ."

In turn, the pope said this discovery of Christ's love can inspire young people to serve others.

"And in that service to others we find that coming together in friendship, building up community, we too can find true meaning in our lives," the pope said. "To share that message of hope with one another — in outreach, in service, in looking for ways to make our world a better place — gives true life to all of us, and is a sign of hope for the whole world."

The eight-minute video message from Pope Leo XIV, who was seated and clad in white, was the first time the Chicago native has directly addressed the people of his hometown and home nation as pope.

And although he wasn't in person to deliver it, the pope's message made an impact on young people in attendance.

Michael Wyss, an 11-year-old student at Queen of Angels School in Chicago, said he was encouraged by the pope's message to "stay faithful" and be a witness of Christian love to those going through hard times.

"You'll be sharing hope with them and that hope could go on and be shared with everyone else," said Wyss, who was in attendance with his father, Joe.

Michael Wyss attends the"Chicago Celebrates Pope Leo XIV
Michael Wyss attends the"Chicago Celebrates Pope Leo XIV" event at Rate Field in Chicago, Saturday, June 14, 2025. Credit: Jonathan Liedl

Matthew Gamboa, a 15-year-old who attends St. Viator High School in Arlington Heights, Illinois, said he was inspired by the pope's encouragement to be "a beacon of light," even though he might be only a high schooler.

"I too should be a part of that and continue to spread God's message throughout our communities," said Gamboa, who said he felt inspired to engage in more service projects and possibly lector at Mass after hearing the pope's message.

Pope Leo XIV's unprecedented address was also the highlight of pre-Mass programming at the afternoon celebration.

Emceed by Chicago Bulls play-by-play announcer Chuck Swirksy, the program also included musical performances by a local parish and Catholic school, as well as an original piano ballad in honor of Pope Leo called "One of Us," written and performed by the pope's fellow Augustinian, Brother David Marshall.

Sister Dianne Bergant, Pope Leo XIV's former teacher, and Father John Merkelis, a fellow Augustinian and high school classmate of the pope, also shared insights into their friend during a panel discussion.

Outside the stadium, Chicago-area members of the Neocatechumenal Way celebrated the new pope with songs and dances of praise, while others tailgated in the baseball stadium parking lot. White Sox jerseys with "Da Pope" and "Pope Leo" emblazoned on the back were spotted throughout the crowds.

At the start of Mass, Chicago's Cardinal Blase Cupich said that Pope Leo was aware of and grateful for the celebration taking place at Rate Field.

A fan of the White Sox, the pope attended a World Series game at the stadium in 2005 when he was prior general of the Augustinian Order, and recently donned the ball club's trademark black hat for a photo op outside of St. Peter's Basilica. White Sox senior vice president Brooks Boyer, a Catholic and former Notre Dame basketball player, also took the opportunity at the Chicago event to publicly invite the South Side native to come back to Rate Field and throw out a ceremonial first pitch.

The Vatican has not indicated that Pope Leo has any plans to visit the United States. When Lester Holt of NBC News asked Leo at a May 12 Vatican audience if he would come to the U.S. soon, the pope responded: "I don't think so."

Nonethless, the pope's sports fan credentials may help him connect with young people in his homeland and beyond.

During his video message the pope also encouraged the youth of Chicago and the whole world to grapple with the "restlessness" they might experience, just like St. Augustine did.

"That restlessness is not a bad thing, and we shouldn't look for ways to put out the fire, to eliminate or even numb ourselves to the tensions that we feel, the difficulties that we experience," he said. "We should rather get in touch with our own hearts and recognize that God can work in our lives, through our lives, and through us reach out to other people."

Before concluding by imparting his apostolic blessing via video, the pope invited those gathered to "take a moment" and open their own hearts to God's love, "to that peace which only the Lord can give us."

"To recognize that while we do nothing to earn God's love, God in his own generosity continues to pour out his love upon us. And as he gives us his love, he only asks us to be generous and to share what he has given with us to others."

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The McCoppin family (from left): Alyssa, Courteney, James, Rhys, and Kelly, poses for a photo after entering the Catholic Church at the Easter Vigil on April 8, 2023, at Sacred Heart Church in Manassas. / Credit: Photo courtesy of the McCoppin familyLocust Grove, Virginia, Jun 14, 2025 / 06:00 am (CNA).High school can be tough, but on rare occasions it can be a place of grace. It was for the McCoppin family, and especially for eldest daughter Kelly, who just graduated from Saint John Paul the Great High School in Potomac Shores, Virginia. According to Kelly's mother, Courteney McCoppin, Kelly started out attending public school but due to a variety of social factors, coupled with the deaths of two grandparents, she sank into depression."Her freshman year in public school was just awful. She was spiraling," Courteney said. "I knew we had to get her out."A friend recommended Saint John Paul the Great Catholic High School, which is led by the Dominican Sisters of St. Cecilia....

The McCoppin family (from left): Alyssa, Courteney, James, Rhys, and Kelly, poses for a photo after entering the Catholic Church at the Easter Vigil on April 8, 2023, at Sacred Heart Church in Manassas. / Credit: Photo courtesy of the McCoppin family

Locust Grove, Virginia, Jun 14, 2025 / 06:00 am (CNA).

High school can be tough, but on rare occasions it can be a place of grace. It was for the McCoppin family, and especially for eldest daughter Kelly, who just graduated from Saint John Paul the Great High School in Potomac Shores, Virginia. 

According to Kelly's mother, Courteney McCoppin, Kelly started out attending public school but due to a variety of social factors, coupled with the deaths of two grandparents, she sank into depression.

"Her freshman year in public school was just awful. She was spiraling," Courteney said. "I knew we had to get her out."

A friend recommended Saint John Paul the Great Catholic High School, which is led by the Dominican Sisters of St. Cecilia. Courteney remembers going to the website and being so impressed that she quickly signed up for a tour.

"It was a beacon of light," she said. They enrolled Kelly and that summer she tried out for cheerleading. The opportunity for a fresh start was exciting, but there were still some reservations about the Catholic environment. 

"Kelly said to me, 'What if I become Catholic?'" Courteney shared with The Arlington Catholic Herald. "At the time, I was still in a position of being anti-Catholic. My mom, who had died, was Jewish and my dad was agnostic. Both became atheists later in life."

Courtney's father-in-law, on the other hand, had been Catholic. Before he passed away, he used every opportunity he could to teach the children about the faith.

"Every night when we would visit, our grandpa would pray with us," Kelly said. "He taught us the Our Father and Hail Mary. My sister Alyssa was the one who would pray the rosary with him and go to Mass with him."

As Kelly started her first year at Saint John Paul the Great, Courteney said she didn't care if her daughter became Catholic. In her mind, anything was better than what they had left behind. As soon as Kelly got to Saint John Paul the Great she became interested in the faith. 

"It was in my human persons class when we were studying Aquinas. It was his causation argument that really confirmed everything for me," Kelly said. 

"It was the logical explanation." 

She began to go to the chapel, meet with Father Christopher F. Tipton, the school's chaplain, and attend "Evenings with Jesus" events at the school. She then asked her family if they could start going to Mass on Sundays.

"While Kelly was opening up to the faith I was on my own journey," Courteney said. "I read her human person textbook as well as the book, 'A Song for Nagasaki' [by Paul Glynn]. I felt a strong connection to the author and I just got swept up."

That December, on the last Sunday before Christmas, the family agreed to go to church at Sacred Heart Catholic Church in Manassas. They've continued attending since. 

"Everything just fell into place," Courteney said. "That January in 2023 the parish set up an RCIA program customized for our whole family. We entered into the Church at the Easter Vigil, April 8, 2023. I was baptized and confirmed with Kelly, Alyssa, and our son, Rhys. My husband, James, was confirmed because he was already baptized."

The McCoppin family is grateful for the role Saint John Paul the Great High School played in their faith journey, especially Kelly, who just graduated in May. 

"I think John Paul the Great is the best school in the country and the bioethics program is so beautiful," Kelly said. "We have so many incredible opportunities and the teachers care so much." 

Kelly plans to attend Franciscan University in Steubenville, Ohio, this fall with the intent of studying Spanish and nursing. 

This story was first published by The Arlington Catholic Herald on June 5, 2025. It has been adapted by CNA and is reprinted here with permission.

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