News

Profit is tool for measuring success, but people come first, pope says

Profit must never be a Christian's god, although it is one of the tools for measuring the effectiveness of business choices and the ability of a company to help workers feed their families, Pope Francis said.

Today’s teaching on the family

See the daily excerpt from the preparatory catechesis for the 2015 World Meeting of Families, “Love is Our Mission: The Family Fully Alive.”

Top-rated Saints avoid a shocker to win girls’ title

Few gave Archbishop Wood much of a chance against the nation’s number-one team, Neumann-Goretti, in the Catholic League championship. But the Saints prevailed narrowly, winning 50-45.

With league title win, it’s mission accomplished for Roman

Roman Catholic High School achieved its top goal this season by surviving a late run from six-time consecutive champion Neumann Goretti to capture the Catholic League boys basketball championship.

Father Theodore Hesburgh, higher education leader, diplomat, dies at 97

Holy Cross Father Theodore M. Hesburgh, who led the University of Notre Dame through a period of dramatic growth during his 35 years as president and held sway with political and civil rights leaders, died Feb. 26 at the age of 97.

Bishops’ communications chairman welcomes FCC vote on net neutrality

The Federal Communications Commission's vote Feb. 26 to preserve an "open Internet" and safeguard net neutrality was welcomed in many quarters of the country, including by the chairman of U.S. bishops' Committee on Communications.

San Francisco archbishop forms theology teachers’ committee

San Francisco Archbishop Salvatore J. Cordileone is forming a committee of theology teachers from the archdiocesan high schools to expand and adjust the language of proposed statements on Catholic teaching on sexual morality and religious practice to be included in the faculty and staff handbooks of the four archdiocesan high schools.

Latvian church officials: Keep calm and avoid propaganda wars

Catholic officials in Latvia are trying to stay out of the region's ideological war with neighboring Russia.

Texas bishop frames theological call to be ‘with the immigrant’

The faith and social justice considerations of immigration might be viewed theologically with an eye not just toward how migrants change "by being with us," said Bishop Daniel E. Flores of Brownsville, Texas, but also "are we willing to change by being with the immigrant?"

University president sees downsides to free community college

President Obama's plan to offer free tuition to community college at a cost of $60 billion over 10 years might cause an "adverse effect" on enrollment for four-year colleges, said the head of an Iowa Catholic university.