News

St. Charles Seminary will retain, rebrand college program

A task force appointed last March to analyze the viability of St. Charles Borromeo Seminary’s College Division has unanimously recommended that the division remain open, the seminary announced Tuesday, Oct. 22. Although plans still call for the closure of the 285,000 square foot college building, the program itself will receive a renewed focus "as a college that has a unique mission – to form young men in accord with a program of priestly formation, apart from the Theology Seminary which is quite successful as well," said the rector, Bishop Timothy C. Senior.

Pennsburg parish sits down for a meal and talk with priest-chef

St. Philip Neri Parish's pastor praised the new life evident at the Catholic Family Life Center, converted from the former parish school. He invited a priest with a popular televised cooking show to talk to parishioners on a Sunday afternoon about the value of sharing meals together as a family.

St. Charles Seminary’s open house offers afternoon of public tours

Seminarians will serve as hosts and tour guides as St. Charles Borromeo Seminary opens its doors to the public for the annual open house Sunday, Oct. 27. Visitors can choose from tours to view artwork treasures from the seminary’s collection or explore the daily life of seminarians and learn about educational programs open to the […]

By declining case, high court allows monks to make, sell simple caskets

UPDATED - NEW ORLEANS (CNS) -- By declining to review a lower court's ruling, the high court Oct. 15 left standing what Benedictine Abbot Justin Brown has known in his heart for the past six years: The Benedictine monks of St. Joseph Abbey in Covington are not breaking the law by handcrafting plain cypress caskets and selling them to Louisiana residents.

Call to ‘ask not …’ still resonates in commitment to public service

WASHINGTON (CNS) -- The president who admonished Americans to "Ask not what your country can do for you. Ask what you can do for your country," didn't live to see how it played out, but there are plenty of people trying to keep his vision alive.

Pope meets German bishop at center of spending controversy

VATICAN CITY (CNS) -- After giving a morning Mass homily on the virtue of poverty, Pope Francis held a private meeting Oct. 21 with a German bishop under fire for a massive building project that critics have denounced as extravagant.

Pope Francis receives Hackett, new U.S. envoy to Vatican

VATICAN CITY (CNS) -- Presenting his credentials to Pope Francis, Kenneth F. Hackett officially took over as U.S. ambassador to the Holy See Oct. 21, filling a role that had been vacant for nearly a year. Relations between Washington and the Vatican have been marked by tension over religious liberty concerns stemming from the HHS mandate.

Greed destroys, money is God’s gift to help others, pope says

VATICAN CITY (CNS) -- Money by itself isn't a problem, but greed and an attachment to money cause evil and destroy families and relationships, Pope Francis said. "Money is needed to bring about many good things," he said in his morning Mass homily Oct. 21, "but when your heart is attached (to money), it destroys you."

Time for Catholics, Lutherans to confront the Reformation, pope says

VATICAN CITY (CNS) -- As the 500th anniversary of the Protestant Reformation approaches, "Catholics and Lutherans can ask forgiveness for the harm they have caused one another and for their offenses committed in the sight of God," Pope Francis said.

Celluloid heaven: how popes took church, Gospel to the big screen

VATICAN CITY (CNS) -- When Pope Benedict XVI joined Twitter in 2012 and Pope Francis appeared on Instagram the following year, media watchers may have thought they were witnessing a Vatican revolution. In both cases, however, the pontiffs were merely following in a long tradition.