Texas Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick, chair of the United States' recently created Religious Liberty Commission, talks with Raymond Arroyo on "The World Over" on June 19, 2025. / Credit: "The World Over with Raymond Arroyo"/ScreenshotWashington, D.C. Newsroom, Jun 20, 2025 / 14:11 pm (CNA).As the work of the presidential Religious Liberty Commission gets underway, the commission's chairman, Texas Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick, said he sees two major sets of domestic threats to religious liberty in the United States.The first set of threats, he said, has its origins in several mid-20th-century court decisions, while the second set of threats is due to apathy by people of faith, "because if you don't fight for it, you can lose it."Patrick made these observations during a June 19 interview on "The World Over with Raymond Arroyo" following the commission's opening June 16 hearing in Washington, D.C.Patrick said the commission's inaugural convocation addressed a range of topics including the intent of...
Texas Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick, chair of the United States' recently created Religious Liberty Commission, talks with Raymond Arroyo on "The World Over" on June 19, 2025. / Credit: "The World Over with Raymond Arroyo"/Screenshot
Washington, D.C. Newsroom, Jun 20, 2025 / 14:11 pm (CNA).
As the work of the presidential Religious Liberty Commission gets underway, the commission's chairman, Texas Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick, said he sees two major sets of domestic threats to religious liberty in the United States.
The first set of threats, he said, has its origins in several mid-20th-century court decisions, while the second set of threats is due to apathy by people of faith, "because if you don't fight for it, you can lose it."
Patrick made these observations during a June 19 interview on "The World Over with Raymond Arroyo" following the commission's opening June 16 hearing in Washington, D.C.
Patrick said the commission's inaugural convocation addressed a range of topics including the intent of the country's founders, "what the establishment clause was about … and how we lost it in this country through court decisions."
He explained that the courts, "particularly the Warren court and Hugo Black," took religious liberty away, "and now we're fighting to bring it back. Because if you lose religious liberty … all the other liberties fall by the wayside quickly."
Patrick said he and his 13 fellow commissioners, which include Bishop Robert Barron and Cardinal Timothy Dolan, received expert legal input on a number of religious liberty cases and the feedback included that "the Supreme Court needs to take up more cases, and they need to quit kicking them back down to the lower courts."
"We have to get the courts at every level to take more cases on these big decisions," Patrick said. During the commission's initial hearing, the U.S. Department of Justice, under which the commission operates, was also called upon to take a more proactive role in religious liberty cases.
Patrick indicated that the commission plans to hold another seven or eight hearings over the next year and then will deliver to President Donald Trump "a report on what he can do in executive orders or maybe legislation he'll recommend to Congress to take up," Patrick said.
Discussing the origins of the commission, Patrick said that "when I talked to the president about this last November, and he had already talked about religious liberty in his first four years, I said, 'I think the timing is right now.' And he just loved the idea."
Patrick said that "we have to be very smart about how we walk down this path with the president" and expressed his confidence that "we have a president who believes in God, who believes in Jesus Christ, and who has said, 'I want my government to reflect the values of where I know most of the country is.'"
The full "World Over with Raymond Arroyo" interview with Patrick can be viewed below.
Cardinal Fridolin Ambongo, president of the Symposium of Episcopal Conferences of Africa and Madagascar. / Credit: François-Régis Salefran CC BY-SA 4.0 DEEDVatican City, Jul 1, 2025 / 14:47 pm (CNA).The leader of Africa's Catholic bishops pushed back Tuesday on the narrative that it was only Africans who objected to a 2023 Vatican declaration permitting blessings for same-sex couples."The position taken by Africa [on the declaration] was also the position of so many bishops here in Europe. It's not just an African exception," Cardinal Fridolin Ambongo Besungu, OFM Cap, told EWTN News on July 1.The 65-year-old cardinal added that homosexuality is fundamentally a "doctrinal, theological problem," and Church moral teaching on the subject has not changed.Ambongo is archbishop of Kinshasa in the Democratic Republic of Congo and heads the Symposium of Episcopal Conferences of Africa and Madagascar (SECAM).After the Vatican's Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith (DDF) published Fid...
Credit: anonymous/ShutterstockWashington, D.C. Newsroom, Jun 30, 2025 / 15:47 pm (CNA).A coalition of 20 American Catholic bishops and religious leaders from other faiths has signed on to a letter urging lawmakers to vote against a proposed budget bill because of provisions to increase funding for immigration enforcement."From our various faith perspectives, the moral test of a nation is how it treats those most in need of support," the letter read. "In our view, this legislation will harm the poor and vulnerable in our nation, to the detriment of the common good."The letter's signatories included Cardinal Robert McElroy of the Archdiocese of Washington, D.C., and Cardinal Joseph Tobin of the Archdiocese of Newark, New Jersey. Phoenix Bishop John Dolan, Seattle Archbishop Paul Etienne, St. Louis Archbishop Mitchell Rozanski, and Sacramento, California, Bishop Jaime Soto were also among those who signed.In addition to the bishops, other signatories to the letter included the lea...
Bethany and Daniel Meola, a married couple with a special heart for adult children of divorce, created the Life-Giving Wounds apostolate, currently celebrating its five-year anniversary in 2025. / Credit: Photo courtesy of Life-Giving WoundsMiami, Fla., Jun 30, 2025 / 06:00 am (CNA).Kendra Beigel was 14 years old when her family life took a turn for the worse. In her small-town Minnesota home, she was used to her parents arguing, but her family situation further disintegrated when her mother intervened in her father's alcohol issues and her parents went to court."It was like the whole town decided to take a side and get involved in our family business," recalled Beigel, who was raised Catholic. "I had to grow up quickly… Each stage of the initial separation and how it comes out of the blue, then the divorce and everything that it brings, and then the subsequent annulment; each brought its own hurts and difficulties and it never was easier."Now an adult, Beigel remembers thinkin...