Posted on 05/17/2025 08:34 AM ()
Israel launches a major military operation in the Gaza Strip, following days of intensive strikes across the territory that killed hundreds of people.
Posted on 05/17/2025 07:58 AM ()
Fr. Robert Mehlhart, OP, President of the Pontifical Institute of Sacred Music, has begun offering singing lessons on social media, saying the initiative stems from a desire to help people join in song with Pope Leo XIV.
Posted on 05/17/2025 07:11 AM ()
At the Centesimus Annus Pro Pontifice Foundation conference on Friday, the Vatican Secretary of State highlights the crucial role of the Social Doctrine of the Church in addressing today’s crises of global governance and polarisation.
Posted on 05/17/2025 05:29 AM ()
During the Mass of Inauguration of his pontificate on May 18, Pope Leo XIV will receive the Ring of the Fisherman—a symbol of the Petrine Ministry with deep roots in the New Testament.
Posted on 05/17/2025 05:16 AM ()
The Apostolic Nuncio to Peru reflects on the strong ties between the new Pope and the South American nation where he spent much of his life in service.
Posted on 05/17/2025 02:48 AM ()
Pope Leo XIV challenges the Centesimus Annus Foundation to help develop the Church’s Social Doctrine with the “people of God, in this time of great social upheaval, through attentive listening and open dialogue to all.”
Posted on 05/17/2025 02:23 AM ()
The 3rd World Interfaith Harmony Week forum held in Addis Ababa has brought together global faith leaders to discuss issues such as peacebuilding, climate justice, and religious freedom, and saw a strong Catholic participation.
Posted on 05/17/2025 01:51 AM ()
As the Church celebrates the Fifth Sunday of Easter, Father Luke Gregory reflects on the theme, "Sowing seeds of love and hope."
Posted on 05/16/2025 22:03 PM (CNA Daily News)
Washington, D.C. Newsroom, May 16, 2025 / 18:03 pm (CNA).
U.S. President Donald Trump has tapped San Francisco Archbishop Salvatore J. Cordileone to serve on an advisory board for the country’s newly established Religious Liberty Commission, according to an announcement from the archdiocese.
Cordileone, who has served as archbishop since 2012, is the third member of the Catholic hierarchy to be given a role in the presidential commission’s work. Cardinal Timothy Dolan of the Archdiocese of New York and Bishop Robert Barron of the Diocese of Winona-Rochester, Minnesota, are members of the commission.
“Religious liberty is a critical issue in our time that needs to be defended and addressed,” Cordileone said in a statement. “I am happy to join my brother bishops in providing a Catholic voice on this important topic at a national level.”
Cordileone told CNA he does not know what the specific tasks on the advisory board will be but that one objective is to get the perspective of religious leaders. “It’s important to have a Catholic [voice]” on the advisory board to ensure the Church’s concerns are heard, he said.
The archbishop noted several state and federal attacks on religious liberty in recent years, such as the Affordable Care Act’s contraception mandate that was struck down by the U.S. Supreme Court. He expressed opposition to any possible insurance coverage mandates for in vitro fertilization (IVF), which the Church opposes.
He also raised concerns about a new Washington state law that tries to force priests to violate the seal of confession if they learn about child abuse during the sacrament of reconciliation. In 2019, he noted, lawmakers in California debated a similar bill, which “galvanized Catholics” to oppose its adoption. The U.S. Department of Justice is currently investigating the Washington state law.
Cordileone further emphasized the need to allow religious organizations to continue their services to the poor, the homeless, mothers, migrants, and others “without interference from the government.”
The archbishop said that religious organizations should be “able to serve the community in accordance with our moral values, which we get from our faith,” adding: “We don’t want our government defining for us what our religion is.”
Trump established the commission through an executive order on May 1, which coincided with the country’s National Day of Prayer.
The commission is tasked with creating a report on the current threats to religious freedom in the United States and providing strategies to improve legal protections for those rights. The report will also outline the foundations of religious liberty and include guidance on how to increase awareness about the peaceful religious pluralism in the United States.
Some of the key religious liberty subjects the report is tasked with handling include parental rights in education, school choice, conscience protections, free speech for religious bodies, institutional autonomy, and attacks on houses of worship.
The president established the commission because of concerns that some federal and state policies have infringed on those rights.
Other members of the commission include Protestant leaders, such as Pastor Paula White, along with rabbis and imams. Ethics and Public Policy Center President Ryan Anderson, who is Catholic, is also on the commission. Psychologist and television personality Dr. Phil McGraw and renowned neurosurgeon Dr. Ben Carson are also members.
Texas Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick, an evangelical Christian, is the commission’s chairman.
Posted on 05/16/2025 21:11 PM (CNA Daily News)
Paris, France, May 16, 2025 / 17:11 pm (CNA).
In 2025, the Church honors a saint whose impact has only grown with time. One hundred years after her canonization, the Jubilee of St. Thérèse of the Child Jesus and the Holy Face — the saint better known around the world as the Little Flower — is drawing pilgrims to her enduring message of trust, love, and joyful simplicity.
Canonized by Pope Pius XI in 1925, then declared a doctor of the Church by John Paul II in 1997, Thérèse of Lisieux is one of the most beloved spiritual figures in modern Catholicism. Her “little way,” rooted in childlike trust in divine mercy, continues to captivate the hearts of the faithful and spiritual seekers alike.
The centenary year began on Jan. 4 and will continue until next Christmas, with a weekend of celebrations taking place from May 16–18 in her hometown of Lisieux in northern France.
The theme chosen for the event, “Joy in Holiness,” resonates with Pope Francis’ call for the 2025 Jubilee Year, “Pilgrims of Hope.” For countless people, Thérèse is precisely that: a hopeful companion, guiding them along hidden but luminous paths toward God.
The main commemorative events began Friday evening with a candlelit procession of Thérèse’s relics from the local Carmelite convent — where the saint spent her religious life — to the basilica, followed by a singing vigil.
May 17, the centenary day, will open with a solemn gathering before the reliquary, featuring choral hymns and carillon bells. A Mass will follow at 11 a.m., broadcast live on various social media platforms. Throughout the afternoon, pilgrims will be invited to participate in a variety of spiritual, artistic, and family-oriented activities. These include guided tours of key sites in Thérèse’s life, a collaborative mosaic project reproducing her portrait and the façade of the basilica, and a screening of the film “A Giant Race,” dedicated to her life.
A highlight of the day will be the evening concert by French-Canadian singer Natasha St-Pier, whose musical interpretations of Thérèse’s poems have introduced a new generation to the saint’s mysticism. The artist, who has repeatedly described her personal devotion to the Carmelite nun, has become one of the most prominent cultural ambassadors of Thérèse’s spiritual message in the francophone world.
The final day, Sunday, May 18, will begin with a symbolic link to the Church’s present: the inauguration of Pope Leo XIV’s pontificate will be broadcast live from Rome to the basilica’s screens. Later in the afternoon, a special gathering will be held in front of the Carmel to recall the long list of miracles attributed to the saint’s intercession, recalling her enduring closeness to the faithful.
What continues to draw people to the Little Flower is the radical simplicity of her spiritual vision. In a culture driven by achievement, noise, and self-assertion, her “little way” of doing small things with great love offers an antidote.
Reflecting on the lasting influence of the Lisieux saint, Father Emmanuel Schwab, rector of the shrine, recently recalled Pope Francis’ 2023 apostolic exhortation C’est la Confiance (“It Is Trust”) dedicated to her, which opened with a line from the saint: “It is confidence and nothing but confidence that must lead us to love.”
“These last words sum up her ‘little way’: a distraught trust in God who saves, gives life, and leads us to love him beyond all else,” he explained in an interview with the Diocese of Paris.
Thérèse’s message is all the more relevant today, as her spiritual journey was not without trials. Born in Alençon in 1873, she entered the Carmel of Lisieux at just 15 and died of tuberculosis in 1897 at the age of 24. On Easter Sunday 1896, already gravely ill, she entered what she called her “night of faith.” For the last 18 months of her life, she experienced the absence of all her usual comforting images of God. This period of spiritual darkness, as described by theologian Father François Marxer, teaches us “not to make a pact or to enter into a confrontation but to put up with that part of atheism we all have within us,” aware that “this night is God himself.”
This capacity to speak to wounded, searching souls is part of what has drawn singer Natasha St-Pier so deeply into the saint’s orbit.
“Therese helped me discover a faith that’s simple to apply on a daily basis,” St-Pier said in a 2018 interview with La Croix. “It doesn’t require big actions, big demonstrations, or guilt-tripping. God loves us, even if we’re sinners, even if we’re not exceptional.”
The centenary celebrations extend beyond France. In the U.S., a major relics tour will span over a dozen cities from October to December, including stops at national shrines of the Little Flower in San Antonio, Texas; Michigan; and Florida. Other local parishes such as St. Thérèse Church in Alhambra, California, will offer Eucharistic processions and conferences around the May anniversary.
In Ireland, Knock Shrine will host a “St. Thérèse International Day” on July 13, combining relics’ veneration, Eucharistic celebration, rosary procession, conferences, and communal celebrations. The United Kingdom is also preparing national commemorations, particularly in parishes named after the saint, with a weeklong celebration culminating in solemn Masses on May 18.
As the faithful converge on Lisieux and gather across continents, they do so not only to honor a saint but also to reconnect with a spiritual intuition that continues to illuminate the dark corners of modern life. In celebrating the centenary of her canonization, the Church once again turns its gaze toward the childlike audacity of Thérèse’s promise: “I will spend my heaven doing good on earth.”