World News
Four Catholics die in latest Burkina Faso church attack
Suspected Muslim extremists attacked another Catholic church in Burkina Faso, killing four people and raising the death toll among Christians to 20 in wave of violence in the West Africa nation.
In Australia, costs rising in payouts to abuse survivors
Victims of sexual abuse in the Melbourne Archdiocese have received money but waived their rights to sue for more. Under state laws permitting new suits for damages, payments have increased one hundred-fold.
Financial controversy involving Indian cardinal flares anew
The archdiocese is seeking an investigation by India's Central Bureau of Investigation into allegedly fake documents related to financial transactions that, it said, are aimed at defaming the cardinal.
‘Startling’ inaction on climate change must end, pope says
Addressing a Vatican climate change conference for finance ministers from around the world May 27, the pope said that the current crisis is "caused by a confusion of our moral ledger with our financial ledger."
Guilty handouts, soulless bureaucratic aid are fake charity, pope says
Charity should be given freely and lived humbly with the poor, never letting it become hypocrisy, a slick business or a way to soothe a troubled conscience, Pope Francis said.
Prenatal diagnosis of illness is no excuse for abortion, pope says
Addressing participants at a Vatican meeting on medical care for "extremely fragile" babies and on the pastoral care of their parents, Pope Francis said the Catholic Church's total opposition to abortion is not primarily a religious position, but a human one.
Exclusion of migrants is red flag of society in moral decline, pope says
Being indifferent to or excluding migrants is a sign of a deteriorating morality that will soon spread and risk marginalizing everyone who fails to fit in, Pope Francis said.
Pope Francis denies knowing of allegations against McCarrick
UPDATED -- Pope Francis denied claims that he and other church officials failed to act on accusations of abuse by former Cardinal Theodore McCarrick, saying, "I don't remember if (Archbishop Vigano) spoke to me about this."
Former secretary says officials knew McCarrick’s ministry was restricted
Msgr. Anthony Figueiredo, a secretary of former Cardinal Theodore McCarrick, said Pope Benedict XVI had imposed restrictions on McCarrick's public ministry in 2008 but they were not formal and not followed.
All children deserve a home, pope says, encouraging adoption
With so many children in the world needing a good home and so many couples unable to have children, there must be a way to make adoption easier and less costly, Pope Francis said.