Servant of God Sister Thea Bowman’s voice needed ‘more than ever’ #Catholic African American Servant of God Sister Thea Bowman’s ability to bridge divides shines as a witness needed today, according to those who knew her, and her cause for canonization may create a pathway for other African Americans on their ways to sainthood.More than three decades after her death, Bowman should be remembered for “her charism, gifts, prophetic voice, charismatic personality, and real strong commitment to the Church — truly being Catholic,” Bishop Joseph Kopacz of the Diocese of Jackson, Mississippi, told EWTN News.Bowman, the granddaughter of a slave, challenged the Church in the 20th century to confront its history of racial exclusion and to embrace Black Catholics through her work as a scholar, teacher, and speaker.The Diocese of Jackson officially closed its proceedings regarding her potential sainthood on Feb. 9 after Kopacz opened her cause in November 2018. The records are now being sent to the Dicastery for the Causes of Saints at the Vatican.“People around the world will be very excited and will celebrate what we hope will be the occasion of her canonization. And that’s because people, Catholic and non-Catholics alike, are drawn to her story,” Veryl Miles, law professor and leader of the Sister Thea Bowman Committee at The Catholic University of America, told EWTN News.Sister Thea’s life and legacyBowman was born Dec. 29, 1937, in Yazoo City, Mississippi, and was given the name Bertha Elizabeth Bowman. While her family was Methodist, Bowman was called to the Catholic faith at a young age.“At 9 years old, she told her parents she wanted to be Catholic. The sisters who were teaching at the school, the parish where she was, had such an impact on her. Then six years later, she joined their religious community,” Kopacz said.She joined the Franciscan Sisters of Perpetual Adoration at age 15 and enrolled in Viterbo University, which was run by the Franciscan sisters. Three years into formation, she took the religious name Thea, which means “of God” and is a version of her father’s name, Theon.“She was so focused on serving the Lord as a religious, and in this community, because they loved her as a young child,” Kopaz said. Bowman knew: “This is who I know. This is who I love. This is where I want to be.”She was the first and only African American woman in her religious community, often facing racism both within and beyond the Church, leading her to become an advocate for the dignity of Black people, their culture, and Black Catholic spirituality.Bowman went on to study at The Catholic University of America, earning a doctorate in English in 1972. Bowman helped found the National Black Sisters’ Conference and taught the university’s first Black literature course.Bowman, who taught for many years, was “a master teacher,” Franciscan Sister of Perpetual Adoration Charlene Smith, a close friend of Bowman’s and co-author of her biography “Thea’s Song,” told EWTN News.Smith and Bowman met in 1954 in La Crosse, Wisconsin, at St. Rose Convent. “She was just like me. We both wanted to be Franciscans, we both wanted to teach, and we both wanted to major in English in college, and we did all three of those things,” Smith said.After having moved away for graduate school, Bowman returned to La Crosse to teach in the English Department at Viterbo University. Smith also returned to serve as the school’s dean of students.“When I got back to La Crosse, they told me that I should beware of Sister Thea Bowman because she was ‘the most powerful woman on campus.’ They didn’t know that we were really good friends,” Smith said.“Being the dean, I was able to go to any classroom. I would go to Thea’s classrooms, and she would always come bounding in with a song, and she would get everybody into a really good mood,” Smith said.Bowman would also teach at parishes about Black liturgy and music. Eventually she starting to speak at a national level, becoming the first African American woman to address the U.S. bishops’ conference.She often used music to help evangelize and bridge interracial divides, and became a major contributor to the development of “Lead Me, Guide Me,” the Black Catholic hymnal published in 1987.Smith reflected on Bowman’s “marvelous” and “magnetic” personality. “We were invited to a dinner at a hotel, and she was going to give a speech. We got there early, so we went to sit down in the lobby … a pianist from Argentina was playing songs from ‘Porgy and Bess,’ and Thea got up and started singing ‘Summertime.’”“She got a standing ovation and an encore,” Smith said. “I think one of the greatest gifts, graces, in my life was my friendship with her. She was very kind to me, and she was very kind to all the people that she met.”At age 54, on March 30, 1990, Bowman died of breast cancer. She was buried at Elmwood Cemetery in Memphis, Tennessee, alongside her parents.Impact of Bowman’s causeBowman’s journey toward sainthood could have an especially effective impact today with the present division in the nation, as she would preach how we are “all human beings, and we should love everybody,” Smith said.“She was not interested in the melting pot at all,” Smith said. “She was more interested in a salad bowl because she said: ‘In a salad, people keep their identity, whereas in a melting pot, they’re all mushed together.’”Bowman “welcomed all in the universal body of Christ” Kopacz said. “She said the Church needs to truly be actively universal, and embrace different cultures and all the gifts that people bring.”“So today, more than ever, that voice is needed in our society as we can get more divisive,” Kopacz said. “I just think it’s perfect for our time and our Church.”“Her message is so universal,” Miles said. Especially “understanding the relationship between faith and identity among its members.”“She really understood and articulated so beautifully that we are people of faith and we are people of identities. The Church is a global church. There’s so many different people who are part of this Church  — people of different races, different ethnicities, and nationalities.”‘An impetus’ for other African Americans on their way to sainthoodCurrently, there are no canonized African American saints, but the Church honors Black saints from other nations, including St. Josephine Bakhita, St. Martin de Porres, St. Monica of Hippo, and St. Augustine of Hippo, among others.Bowman is among seven African American Catholics with active canonization causes — dubbed the “Saintly Seven.” The group also includes Venerable Pierre Toussaint, Venerable Mother Mary Lange, Venerable Mother Henriette Delille, Venerable Father Augustus Tolton, Servant of God Julia Greeley, and Servant of God Friar Martin de Porres Maria Ward.Even before her potential canonization, Bowman will “draw attention” to the group, Kopacz said. If she becomes venerable, which the bishop expects she will, he believes Bowman “will be an impetus” for the causes of other African Americans to move forward. “She’s going to be an important part, and she’ll move the other causes along,” he said.Since people “can relate” to Bowman’s story as it “is so contemporary and so special,” Miles said she also hopes the other stories of the seven Catholics “will become highlighted” by her cause.“People will be more interested in finding out about the other African Americans who are in the process of canonization, because their stories are very special and very unique, too,” Miles said.

Servant of God Sister Thea Bowman’s voice needed ‘more than ever’ #Catholic African American Servant of God Sister Thea Bowman’s ability to bridge divides shines as a witness needed today, according to those who knew her, and her cause for canonization may create a pathway for other African Americans on their ways to sainthood.More than three decades after her death, Bowman should be remembered for “her charism, gifts, prophetic voice, charismatic personality, and real strong commitment to the Church — truly being Catholic,” Bishop Joseph Kopacz of the Diocese of Jackson, Mississippi, told EWTN News.Bowman, the granddaughter of a slave, challenged the Church in the 20th century to confront its history of racial exclusion and to embrace Black Catholics through her work as a scholar, teacher, and speaker.The Diocese of Jackson officially closed its proceedings regarding her potential sainthood on Feb. 9 after Kopacz opened her cause in November 2018. The records are now being sent to the Dicastery for the Causes of Saints at the Vatican.“People around the world will be very excited and will celebrate what we hope will be the occasion of her canonization. And that’s because people, Catholic and non-Catholics alike, are drawn to her story,” Veryl Miles, law professor and leader of the Sister Thea Bowman Committee at The Catholic University of America, told EWTN News.Sister Thea’s life and legacyBowman was born Dec. 29, 1937, in Yazoo City, Mississippi, and was given the name Bertha Elizabeth Bowman. While her family was Methodist, Bowman was called to the Catholic faith at a young age.“At 9 years old, she told her parents she wanted to be Catholic. The sisters who were teaching at the school, the parish where she was, had such an impact on her. Then six years later, she joined their religious community,” Kopacz said.She joined the Franciscan Sisters of Perpetual Adoration at age 15 and enrolled in Viterbo University, which was run by the Franciscan sisters. Three years into formation, she took the religious name Thea, which means “of God” and is a version of her father’s name, Theon.“She was so focused on serving the Lord as a religious, and in this community, because they loved her as a young child,” Kopaz said. Bowman knew: “This is who I know. This is who I love. This is where I want to be.”She was the first and only African American woman in her religious community, often facing racism both within and beyond the Church, leading her to become an advocate for the dignity of Black people, their culture, and Black Catholic spirituality.Bowman went on to study at The Catholic University of America, earning a doctorate in English in 1972. Bowman helped found the National Black Sisters’ Conference and taught the university’s first Black literature course.Bowman, who taught for many years, was “a master teacher,” Franciscan Sister of Perpetual Adoration Charlene Smith, a close friend of Bowman’s and co-author of her biography “Thea’s Song,” told EWTN News.Smith and Bowman met in 1954 in La Crosse, Wisconsin, at St. Rose Convent. “She was just like me. We both wanted to be Franciscans, we both wanted to teach, and we both wanted to major in English in college, and we did all three of those things,” Smith said.After having moved away for graduate school, Bowman returned to La Crosse to teach in the English Department at Viterbo University. Smith also returned to serve as the school’s dean of students.“When I got back to La Crosse, they told me that I should beware of Sister Thea Bowman because she was ‘the most powerful woman on campus.’ They didn’t know that we were really good friends,” Smith said.“Being the dean, I was able to go to any classroom. I would go to Thea’s classrooms, and she would always come bounding in with a song, and she would get everybody into a really good mood,” Smith said.Bowman would also teach at parishes about Black liturgy and music. Eventually she starting to speak at a national level, becoming the first African American woman to address the U.S. bishops’ conference.She often used music to help evangelize and bridge interracial divides, and became a major contributor to the development of “Lead Me, Guide Me,” the Black Catholic hymnal published in 1987.Smith reflected on Bowman’s “marvelous” and “magnetic” personality. “We were invited to a dinner at a hotel, and she was going to give a speech. We got there early, so we went to sit down in the lobby … a pianist from Argentina was playing songs from ‘Porgy and Bess,’ and Thea got up and started singing ‘Summertime.’”“She got a standing ovation and an encore,” Smith said. “I think one of the greatest gifts, graces, in my life was my friendship with her. She was very kind to me, and she was very kind to all the people that she met.”At age 54, on March 30, 1990, Bowman died of breast cancer. She was buried at Elmwood Cemetery in Memphis, Tennessee, alongside her parents.Impact of Bowman’s causeBowman’s journey toward sainthood could have an especially effective impact today with the present division in the nation, as she would preach how we are “all human beings, and we should love everybody,” Smith said.“She was not interested in the melting pot at all,” Smith said. “She was more interested in a salad bowl because she said: ‘In a salad, people keep their identity, whereas in a melting pot, they’re all mushed together.’”Bowman “welcomed all in the universal body of Christ” Kopacz said. “She said the Church needs to truly be actively universal, and embrace different cultures and all the gifts that people bring.”“So today, more than ever, that voice is needed in our society as we can get more divisive,” Kopacz said. “I just think it’s perfect for our time and our Church.”“Her message is so universal,” Miles said. Especially “understanding the relationship between faith and identity among its members.”“She really understood and articulated so beautifully that we are people of faith and we are people of identities. The Church is a global church. There’s so many different people who are part of this Church  — people of different races, different ethnicities, and nationalities.”‘An impetus’ for other African Americans on their way to sainthoodCurrently, there are no canonized African American saints, but the Church honors Black saints from other nations, including St. Josephine Bakhita, St. Martin de Porres, St. Monica of Hippo, and St. Augustine of Hippo, among others.Bowman is among seven African American Catholics with active canonization causes — dubbed the “Saintly Seven.” The group also includes Venerable Pierre Toussaint, Venerable Mother Mary Lange, Venerable Mother Henriette Delille, Venerable Father Augustus Tolton, Servant of God Julia Greeley, and Servant of God Friar Martin de Porres Maria Ward.Even before her potential canonization, Bowman will “draw attention” to the group, Kopacz said. If she becomes venerable, which the bishop expects she will, he believes Bowman “will be an impetus” for the causes of other African Americans to move forward. “She’s going to be an important part, and she’ll move the other causes along,” he said.Since people “can relate” to Bowman’s story as it “is so contemporary and so special,” Miles said she also hopes the other stories of the seven Catholics “will become highlighted” by her cause.“People will be more interested in finding out about the other African Americans who are in the process of canonization, because their stories are very special and very unique, too,” Miles said.

Bowman’s ability to see the dignity of each individual, and embrace all gifts and cultures, is an essential message for Catholics and non-Catholics alike.

Read More
Diocesan senior leadership reflects on mission during Morristown retreat #Catholic - Diocesan senior staff members came together for a Lenten Day of Reflection for Leadership at the Loyola Jesuit Center in Morristown Feb 20. Brian Corbin, executive vice president of Member Services and senior vice president of Social Policy at Catholic Charities USA, was the speaker for the retreat.
The retreat was meant to be a day of prayer and reflection in the mission and in serving the work of the Paterson Diocese with the guidance of Bishop Kevin Sweeney.

Click here to subscribe to our weekly newsletter.

 [See image gallery at beaconnj.org]

Diocesan senior leadership reflects on mission during Morristown retreat #Catholic –

Diocesan senior staff members came together for a Lenten Day of Reflection for Leadership at the Loyola Jesuit Center in Morristown Feb 20. Brian Corbin, executive vice president of Member Services and senior vice president of Social Policy at Catholic Charities USA, was the speaker for the retreat.

The retreat was meant to be a day of prayer and reflection in the mission and in serving the work of the Paterson Diocese with the guidance of Bishop Kevin Sweeney.


Click here to subscribe to our weekly newsletter.

[See image gallery at beaconnj.org] – Diocesan senior staff members came together for a Lenten Day of Reflection for Leadership at the Loyola Jesuit Center in Morristown Feb 20. Brian Corbin, executive vice president of Member Services and senior vice president of Social Policy at Catholic Charities USA, was the speaker for the retreat. The retreat was meant to be a day of prayer and reflection in the mission and in serving the work of the Paterson Diocese with the guidance of Bishop Kevin Sweeney. Click here to subscribe to our weekly newsletter.  

Read More
The U.S. Just Attacked Iran: Here’s What Happens Next #BabylonBee – The United States launched a major military attack on Iran overnight, striking dozens of high-level targets across the nation. As the dust settles, everyone is asking the question: what happens next? Here is what’s about to go down:

The United States launched a major military attack on Iran overnight, striking dozens of high-level targets across the nation. As the dust settles, everyone is asking the question: what happens next? Here is what’s about to go down:

Read More

Gospel and Word of the Day – 01 March 2026 – A reading from the Book of Genesis 12:1-4a The LORD said to Abram: “Go forth from the land of your kinsfolk and from your father’s house to a land that I will show you. “I will make of you a great nation, and I will bless you; I will make your name great, so that you will be a blessing. I will bless those who bless you and curse those who curse you. All the communities of the earth shall find blessing in you.” Abram went as the LORD directed him.   A reading from the Second Letter of St. Paul to Timothy 2, 1:8b-10 Beloved: Bear your share of hardship for the gospel with the strength that comes from God. He saved us and called us to a holy life, not according to our works but according to his own design and the grace bestowed on us in Christ Jesus before time began, but now made manifest through the appearance of our savior Christ Jesus, who destroyed death and brought life and immortality to light through the gospel.From the Gospel according to Matthew 17:1-9 Jesus took Peter, James, and John his brother, and led them up a high mountain by themselves. And he was transfigured before them; his face shone like the sun and his clothes became white as light. And behold, Moses and Elijah appeared to them, conversing with him. Then Peter said to Jesus in reply, “Lord, it is good that we are here. If you wish, I will make three tents here, one for you, one for Moses, and one for Elijah.” While he was still speaking, behold, a bright cloud cast a shadow over them, then from the cloud came a voice that said, “This is my beloved Son, with whom I am well pleased; listen to him.” When the disciples heard this, they fell prostrate and were very much afraid. But Jesus came and touched them, saying, “Rise, and do not be afraid.” And when the disciples raised their eyes, they saw no one else but Jesus alone. As they were coming down from the mountain, Jesus charged them, “Do not tell the vision to anyone until the Son of Man has been raised from the dead.”The ‘brightness’ which characterises this extraordinary event symbolises its purpose: to enlighten the minds and hearts of the disciples so that they may clearly understand who their Teacher is. It is a flash of light which suddenly opens onto the mystery of Jesus and illuminates his whole person and his whole story. (…) Transfigured on Mount Tabor, Jesus wanted to show his disciples his glory, not for them to circumvent the Cross, but to show where the Cross leads. Those who die with Jesus, shall rise again with Jesus. The Cross is the door to Resurrection. Whoever struggles alongside him will triumph with him. This is the message of hope contained in Jesus’ Cross, urging us to be strong in our existence. The Christian Cross is not the furnishings of a house or adornments to wear but rather, the Christian Cross is a call to the love with which Jesus sacrificed himself to save humanity from evil and sin. In this Lenten season, we contemplate with devotion the image of the Crucifix, Jesus on the Cross: this is the symbol of Christian Faith, the emblem of Jesus, who died and rose for us. Let us ensure that the Cross marks the stages of our Lenten journey in order to understand ever better the seriousness of sin and the value of the sacrifice by which the Saviour has saved us all. (Pope Francis, Angelus, 12 March 2017)

A reading from the Book of Genesis
12:1-4a

The LORD said to Abram:
“Go forth from the land of your kinsfolk
and from your father’s house to a land that I will show you.

“I will make of you a great nation,
and I will bless you;
I will make your name great,
so that you will be a blessing.
I will bless those who bless you
and curse those who curse you.
All the communities of the earth
shall find blessing in you.”

Abram went as the LORD directed him.

 

A reading from the Second Letter of St. Paul to Timothy
2, 1:8b-10

Beloved:
Bear your share of hardship for the gospel
with the strength that comes from God.

He saved us and called us to a holy life,
not according to our works
but according to his own design
and the grace bestowed on us in Christ Jesus before time began,
but now made manifest
through the appearance of our savior Christ Jesus,
who destroyed death and brought life and immortality
to light through the gospel.

From the Gospel according to Matthew
17:1-9

Jesus took Peter, James, and John his brother,
and led them up a high mountain by themselves.
And he was transfigured before them;
his face shone like the sun
and his clothes became white as light.
And behold, Moses and Elijah appeared to them,
conversing with him.
Then Peter said to Jesus in reply,
“Lord, it is good that we are here.
If you wish, I will make three tents here,
one for you, one for Moses, and one for Elijah.”
While he was still speaking, behold,
a bright cloud cast a shadow over them,
then from the cloud came a voice that said,
“This is my beloved Son, with whom I am well pleased;
listen to him.”
When the disciples heard this, they fell prostrate
and were very much afraid.
But Jesus came and touched them, saying,
“Rise, and do not be afraid.”
And when the disciples raised their eyes,
they saw no one else but Jesus alone.

As they were coming down from the mountain,
Jesus charged them,
“Do not tell the vision to anyone
until the Son of Man has been raised from the dead.”

The ‘brightness’ which characterises this extraordinary event symbolises its purpose: to enlighten the minds and hearts of the disciples so that they may clearly understand who their Teacher is. It is a flash of light which suddenly opens onto the mystery of Jesus and illuminates his whole person and his whole story. (…)

Transfigured on Mount Tabor, Jesus wanted to show his disciples his glory, not for them to circumvent the Cross, but to show where the Cross leads. Those who die with Jesus, shall rise again with Jesus. The Cross is the door to Resurrection. Whoever struggles alongside him will triumph with him. This is the message of hope contained in Jesus’ Cross, urging us to be strong in our existence. The Christian Cross is not the furnishings of a house or adornments to wear but rather, the Christian Cross is a call to the love with which Jesus sacrificed himself to save humanity from evil and sin. In this Lenten season, we contemplate with devotion the image of the Crucifix, Jesus on the Cross: this is the symbol of Christian Faith, the emblem of Jesus, who died and rose for us. Let us ensure that the Cross marks the stages of our Lenten journey in order to understand ever better the seriousness of sin and the value of the sacrifice by which the Saviour has saved us all. (Pope Francis, Angelus, 12 March 2017)

Read More
Students pray for Notre Dame’s Catholic identity after dispute over pro-abortion professor #Catholic Students at the University of Notre Dame gathered on Feb. 27 for a candlelit prayer service to offer thanksgiving for the university’s Catholic identity.The event was originally planned as a protest in response to the university’s appointment of abortion advocate Professor Susan Ostermann as the head of the Liu Institute for Asia and Asian Studies. After Ostermann withdrew from the position earlier this week, the student organizers turned the event into a prayer vigil offered “in thanksgiving and support for Notre Dame’s Catholic mission.”A group of about 150 students, community members, faculty and priests from the Congregation of Holy Cross met on the south quad of campus, where they were greeted by students Luke Woodyard and Gabe Ortner, the event’s organizers. After a blessing of candles, those present processed to the Grotto of Our Lady of Lourdes, where they prayed the Rosary.
 
 Students gather to pray the Rosary at the Grotto of Our Lady of Lourdes at the University of Notre Dame, Friday, Feb. 27, 2026 | Credit: Notre Dame Right to Life
 
 The event was co-sponsored by the major Catholic clubs on campus: Right to Life, Militia Immaculata, Children of Mary, the Knights of Columbus, and Students for Child-Oriented Policy.According to Woodyard, while a protest would have drawn a greater number of attendees, organizers agreed that changing the event to a prayer vigil would be a more appropriate response to the news of Ostermann’s withdrawal.“The big reason we changed the protest to a prayer vigil was because we won, we got Ostermann to not be appointed. And even though this was a victory in a battle, not the [larger] war, we can celebrate this victory now," Woodyard said.“If we came here with a bunch of protests, it would make us seem like we weren't grateful for the university listening to us," he added. "And we really are. We praise [President] Father [Robert] Dowd for any impact that he had on Ostermann withdrawing, and we pray for the future of Notre Dame.”Ostermann, whose appointment was announced in January, has publicly supported abortion on multiple occasions, calling it “freedom-enhancing” and “consistent with integral human development that emphasizes social justice and human dignity."She has also argued that the pro-life movement has its roots in “white supremacy and racism” and has described pregnancy resource centers “anti-abortion propaganda sites."Since the appointment was announced in January, the university has faced backlash from Catholics across the country, including students, alumni, faculty, and more than a dozen bishops. The university continued to defend Ostermann’s promotion amid the criticism, citing her expertise in Asian studies and her past research. When Ostermann withdrew from the position on Feb. 26, students were surprised at the unexpected reversal but grateful for the desired outcome.Maria Madigan, a sophomore who serves as the head of service for Notre Dame Right to Life, told EWTN News that the grateful and loving spirit of the prayer service was the same spirit in which the protest had been planned.“[The planned protest] was never filled with hate or any [kind of] malicious intent. …We love Notre Dame because of her Catholic mission and her identity," she said. "We wanted to protest the Ostermann appointment because we felt it that went against our mission. And then when Ostermann withdrew, the focus shifted, because… we want to think about having a positive vision going forward for Notre Dame.”Regarding Ostermann’s withdrawal, Woodyard said: “We don't know what happened behind the scenes — hopefully that will come out in the coming weeks — but what we do know is that she did withdraw, and so we're thankful for that, and that's why we're here, but at some point, we have to make sure this doesn't happen again.”Organizer Gabe Ortner emphasized that although the planned protest was turned into a prayer vigil, the defense of Notre Dame’s Catholic mission is far from over.“We have to recognize the work that Father Dowd has done in leading this university. He's clearly been working tirelessly on this with Bishop Rhoades, and I admire the direction that he seems to be taking Notre Dame in, and that gives me a lot of hope," Ortner said. "However, at the same time, there also seem to be particular members of the administration who do not entirely share the Catholic vision of Notre Dame," he said.“Ultimately, Notre Dame should be united in its Catholic identity among all of the members of administration, with no exception.”If the protest had gone forward, speakers would have included Anna Kelley,  president of the school's Right to Life group; Lucy Spence, editor-in-chief of the Irish Rover student newspaper; and Theo Austin, vice president of Students for Child-Oriented Policy.Students have expressed concern that the appointment shows a willingness of university administration — particularly on the part of Provost John McGreevy, who approved the appointment — to deviate from the university’s Catholic mission.Max McNiff, a student who attended the prayer vigil, shared his hopes that the controversy that precipitated Ostermann’s withdrawal would send a clear signal to the university.“I think this sets a sets a good precedent for stuff like this in the future. I think that the administration is going to be very cautious, and hopefully nothing like this will happen again.”“I think this also sets a precedent that researchers who are considered maybe ‘elite’ by secular academic standards, but who very manifestly publicly contradict Catholic doctrine [on matters] such as abortion, should not expect to come into leadership positions at Notre Dame," he said. Ultimately, however, students expressed their gratitude at the reversal of Ostermann’s appointment, calling it a “victory” in the battle for Notre Dame’s Catholic identity.“Having the opportunity to gather together and to thank God for his faithfulness, and the faithfulness of the university, is really beautiful, and I think you can see it in the passion of the students," Madigan said. "Everyone here knew it wasn’t a protest anymore, but they were still coming.”“We're all here because we care and we love this university and we want to uphold its Catholic mission and its pro-life mission as much as possible," she said. "And at the end of the day, whether one person showed up, or whether 200 people showed up, this was a prayer service, and it was to God, and the words that were said here were to him." "And that's what I really want the focus of this whole event to be on, praise and thanksgiving to the Lord for his faithfulness and to Our Lady for protecting her university.”

Students pray for Notre Dame’s Catholic identity after dispute over pro-abortion professor #Catholic Students at the University of Notre Dame gathered on Feb. 27 for a candlelit prayer service to offer thanksgiving for the university’s Catholic identity.The event was originally planned as a protest in response to the university’s appointment of abortion advocate Professor Susan Ostermann as the head of the Liu Institute for Asia and Asian Studies. After Ostermann withdrew from the position earlier this week, the student organizers turned the event into a prayer vigil offered “in thanksgiving and support for Notre Dame’s Catholic mission.”A group of about 150 students, community members, faculty and priests from the Congregation of Holy Cross met on the south quad of campus, where they were greeted by students Luke Woodyard and Gabe Ortner, the event’s organizers. After a blessing of candles, those present processed to the Grotto of Our Lady of Lourdes, where they prayed the Rosary. Students gather to pray the Rosary at the Grotto of Our Lady of Lourdes at the University of Notre Dame, Friday, Feb. 27, 2026 | Credit: Notre Dame Right to Life The event was co-sponsored by the major Catholic clubs on campus: Right to Life, Militia Immaculata, Children of Mary, the Knights of Columbus, and Students for Child-Oriented Policy.According to Woodyard, while a protest would have drawn a greater number of attendees, organizers agreed that changing the event to a prayer vigil would be a more appropriate response to the news of Ostermann’s withdrawal.“The big reason we changed the protest to a prayer vigil was because we won, we got Ostermann to not be appointed. And even though this was a victory in a battle, not the [larger] war, we can celebrate this victory now," Woodyard said.“If we came here with a bunch of protests, it would make us seem like we weren't grateful for the university listening to us," he added. "And we really are. We praise [President] Father [Robert] Dowd for any impact that he had on Ostermann withdrawing, and we pray for the future of Notre Dame.”Ostermann, whose appointment was announced in January, has publicly supported abortion on multiple occasions, calling it “freedom-enhancing” and “consistent with integral human development that emphasizes social justice and human dignity."She has also argued that the pro-life movement has its roots in “white supremacy and racism” and has described pregnancy resource centers “anti-abortion propaganda sites."Since the appointment was announced in January, the university has faced backlash from Catholics across the country, including students, alumni, faculty, and more than a dozen bishops. The university continued to defend Ostermann’s promotion amid the criticism, citing her expertise in Asian studies and her past research. When Ostermann withdrew from the position on Feb. 26, students were surprised at the unexpected reversal but grateful for the desired outcome.Maria Madigan, a sophomore who serves as the head of service for Notre Dame Right to Life, told EWTN News that the grateful and loving spirit of the prayer service was the same spirit in which the protest had been planned.“[The planned protest] was never filled with hate or any [kind of] malicious intent. …We love Notre Dame because of her Catholic mission and her identity," she said. "We wanted to protest the Ostermann appointment because we felt it that went against our mission. And then when Ostermann withdrew, the focus shifted, because… we want to think about having a positive vision going forward for Notre Dame.”Regarding Ostermann’s withdrawal, Woodyard said: “We don't know what happened behind the scenes — hopefully that will come out in the coming weeks — but what we do know is that she did withdraw, and so we're thankful for that, and that's why we're here, but at some point, we have to make sure this doesn't happen again.”Organizer Gabe Ortner emphasized that although the planned protest was turned into a prayer vigil, the defense of Notre Dame’s Catholic mission is far from over.“We have to recognize the work that Father Dowd has done in leading this university. He's clearly been working tirelessly on this with Bishop Rhoades, and I admire the direction that he seems to be taking Notre Dame in, and that gives me a lot of hope," Ortner said. "However, at the same time, there also seem to be particular members of the administration who do not entirely share the Catholic vision of Notre Dame," he said.“Ultimately, Notre Dame should be united in its Catholic identity among all of the members of administration, with no exception.”If the protest had gone forward, speakers would have included Anna Kelley,  president of the school's Right to Life group; Lucy Spence, editor-in-chief of the Irish Rover student newspaper; and Theo Austin, vice president of Students for Child-Oriented Policy.Students have expressed concern that the appointment shows a willingness of university administration — particularly on the part of Provost John McGreevy, who approved the appointment — to deviate from the university’s Catholic mission.Max McNiff, a student who attended the prayer vigil, shared his hopes that the controversy that precipitated Ostermann’s withdrawal would send a clear signal to the university.“I think this sets a sets a good precedent for stuff like this in the future. I think that the administration is going to be very cautious, and hopefully nothing like this will happen again.”“I think this also sets a precedent that researchers who are considered maybe ‘elite’ by secular academic standards, but who very manifestly publicly contradict Catholic doctrine [on matters] such as abortion, should not expect to come into leadership positions at Notre Dame," he said. Ultimately, however, students expressed their gratitude at the reversal of Ostermann’s appointment, calling it a “victory” in the battle for Notre Dame’s Catholic identity.“Having the opportunity to gather together and to thank God for his faithfulness, and the faithfulness of the university, is really beautiful, and I think you can see it in the passion of the students," Madigan said. "Everyone here knew it wasn’t a protest anymore, but they were still coming.”“We're all here because we care and we love this university and we want to uphold its Catholic mission and its pro-life mission as much as possible," she said. "And at the end of the day, whether one person showed up, or whether 200 people showed up, this was a prayer service, and it was to God, and the words that were said here were to him." "And that's what I really want the focus of this whole event to be on, praise and thanksgiving to the Lord for his faithfulness and to Our Lady for protecting her university.”

The event was originally planned as a protest in response to the university’s appointment of abortion advocate Professor Susan Ostermann as the head of the Liu Institute for Asia and Asian Studies.

Read More
Meta blocks AI chatbot from discussing abortion with minors #Catholic Meta blocks AI chatbot from discussing abortion with minorsMeta won’t allow its AI chatbot to discuss abortion with minors, according to a report from the progressive outlet Mother Jones.Citing internal Meta documents, Mother Jones reported that Meta’s chatbot policy guidelines for interactions with minors prevent the chatbot from advising them on “content that provides advice or opinion" about "sexual health” or offering information helping them obtain an abortion.According to the report, a Meta spokesperson disputed claims of bias, saying that “any claims of enforcement based on group affiliation or advocacy are baseless” and that the company allows "posts and ads promoting health care services like abortion, as well as discussion and debate around them, as long as they follow our policies. We also give people the opportunity to appeal decisions if they think we’ve got it wrong.”When asked about the leaked documents, a company spokesperson told EWTN News: "Our AIs are trained to engage in age-appropriate discussions with teens, and to connect them with expert resources and support when appropriate." "They provide factual information on sexual health but refrain from offering advice or opinions. We continuously review and improve our protections so that teens have access to helpful information with default safeguards in place.”The Meta spokesperson also responded to advertisement censorship claims.“Every organization and individual on our platforms is subject to the same set of rules, and any claims of enforcement based on group affiliation or advocacy are baseless," the spokesperson said. United Kingdom assisted suicide bill falters as local measures advanceA national assisted suicide bill is failing to pass in the United Kingdom this week, even as local measures advance.According to a statement by the advocacy group Right to Life UK, on Feb. 26 the national bill was “widely pronounced as dead by commentators after it was revealed that it will 'almost certainly' run out of time”In Wales, the regional parliament voted on Feb. 24 in favor of the National Health Service to oversee assisted suicide if the Terminally Ill Adults Bill passes in the House of Lords.Archbishop Mark O'Toole of Cardiff-Menevia called the vote “a sad day for Wales’s most vulnerable" in a Feb. 25 statement.The island of Jersey similarly passed a law to legalize assisted suicide in a 32-to-16 vote on Feb. 26 by members of the States Assembly. The measure applies to “mentally competent” adults with terminal illnesses and who have been residents of Jersey for 12 months. Before the bill can become law, it will need royal assent.Ohio Appeals Court upholds ban on aborted baby burial requirementOhio judges on Wednesday upheld a ban on a law requiring abortion clinics to dispose of the remains of babies via burial or cremation.The appellate court in Cincinnati upheld a lower court ruling permanently blocking the law.Ohio in 2023 passed a constitutional amendment enshrining a right to abortion.Executive Director of Ohio Right to Life Carrie Snyder condemned the decision.“It’s unfortunate, but not a surprise, that the First District Court of Appeals sided with the abortion industry to stop Ohio’s fetal remains law from taking effect. Sadly, clinics will continue treating these precious little ones like garbage to be disposed of as cheaply as possible,” Snyder said in a Feb. 26 statement. “This really underscores that abortion is not health care, and that clinics are going to do everything within their power to boost their profit margin.”A Planned Parenthood spokeswoman, meanwhile, celebrated the decision, claiming the burial law was "cruel" and "nothing more than an opportunity to shame and stigmatize" women who get abortions.Texas attorney general sues mail-in abortion company for alleged illegal shipmentsTexas Attorney General Ken Paxton sued mail-in abortion company Aid Access along with California abortionist Remy Coeytaux and abortionist and founder of Aid Access Rebecca Gomperts for allegedly illegally shipping abortion drugs to Texas.Aid Access’s website advertises its shipping to all states including Texas, according to Paxton’s press release.“These unlawful shipments have had real and devastating consequences for Texas families,” the press release read. “In 2025, a Nueces County man allegedly used abortion-inducing drugs obtained from an out-of-state provider to secretly poison his girlfriend, resulting in the death of their unborn child.”“Every unborn child is a life worth protecting,” Paxton said, adding that he will “relentlessly enforce our state’s pro-life laws against Aid Access and other radicals like it.”

Meta blocks AI chatbot from discussing abortion with minors #Catholic Meta blocks AI chatbot from discussing abortion with minorsMeta won’t allow its AI chatbot to discuss abortion with minors, according to a report from the progressive outlet Mother Jones.Citing internal Meta documents, Mother Jones reported that Meta’s chatbot policy guidelines for interactions with minors prevent the chatbot from advising them on “content that provides advice or opinion" about "sexual health” or offering information helping them obtain an abortion.According to the report, a Meta spokesperson disputed claims of bias, saying that “any claims of enforcement based on group affiliation or advocacy are baseless” and that the company allows "posts and ads promoting health care services like abortion, as well as discussion and debate around them, as long as they follow our policies. We also give people the opportunity to appeal decisions if they think we’ve got it wrong.”When asked about the leaked documents, a company spokesperson told EWTN News: "Our AIs are trained to engage in age-appropriate discussions with teens, and to connect them with expert resources and support when appropriate." "They provide factual information on sexual health but refrain from offering advice or opinions. We continuously review and improve our protections so that teens have access to helpful information with default safeguards in place.”The Meta spokesperson also responded to advertisement censorship claims.“Every organization and individual on our platforms is subject to the same set of rules, and any claims of enforcement based on group affiliation or advocacy are baseless," the spokesperson said. United Kingdom assisted suicide bill falters as local measures advanceA national assisted suicide bill is failing to pass in the United Kingdom this week, even as local measures advance.According to a statement by the advocacy group Right to Life UK, on Feb. 26 the national bill was “widely pronounced as dead by commentators after it was revealed that it will 'almost certainly' run out of time”In Wales, the regional parliament voted on Feb. 24 in favor of the National Health Service to oversee assisted suicide if the Terminally Ill Adults Bill passes in the House of Lords.Archbishop Mark O'Toole of Cardiff-Menevia called the vote “a sad day for Wales’s most vulnerable" in a Feb. 25 statement.The island of Jersey similarly passed a law to legalize assisted suicide in a 32-to-16 vote on Feb. 26 by members of the States Assembly. The measure applies to “mentally competent” adults with terminal illnesses and who have been residents of Jersey for 12 months. Before the bill can become law, it will need royal assent.Ohio Appeals Court upholds ban on aborted baby burial requirementOhio judges on Wednesday upheld a ban on a law requiring abortion clinics to dispose of the remains of babies via burial or cremation.The appellate court in Cincinnati upheld a lower court ruling permanently blocking the law.Ohio in 2023 passed a constitutional amendment enshrining a right to abortion.Executive Director of Ohio Right to Life Carrie Snyder condemned the decision.“It’s unfortunate, but not a surprise, that the First District Court of Appeals sided with the abortion industry to stop Ohio’s fetal remains law from taking effect. Sadly, clinics will continue treating these precious little ones like garbage to be disposed of as cheaply as possible,” Snyder said in a Feb. 26 statement. “This really underscores that abortion is not health care, and that clinics are going to do everything within their power to boost their profit margin.”A Planned Parenthood spokeswoman, meanwhile, celebrated the decision, claiming the burial law was "cruel" and "nothing more than an opportunity to shame and stigmatize" women who get abortions.Texas attorney general sues mail-in abortion company for alleged illegal shipmentsTexas Attorney General Ken Paxton sued mail-in abortion company Aid Access along with California abortionist Remy Coeytaux and abortionist and founder of Aid Access Rebecca Gomperts for allegedly illegally shipping abortion drugs to Texas.Aid Access’s website advertises its shipping to all states including Texas, according to Paxton’s press release.“These unlawful shipments have had real and devastating consequences for Texas families,” the press release read. “In 2025, a Nueces County man allegedly used abortion-inducing drugs obtained from an out-of-state provider to secretly poison his girlfriend, resulting in the death of their unborn child.”“Every unborn child is a life worth protecting,” Paxton said, adding that he will “relentlessly enforce our state’s pro-life laws against Aid Access and other radicals like it.”

A roundup of recent pro-life and abortion-related news.

Read More
10 things to know about St. Frances Xavier Cabrini #Catholic A statue of St. Frances Xavier Cabrini, the first American saint, will replace a statue of Christopher Columbus at Arrigo Park in Chicago — an area known as Little Italy — Chicago Park District officials announced Feb. 18.Cabrini, who served poor Italian immigrants in Chicago, received roughly 38% of the almost 4,000 votes cast during an online contest to pick three nominees for the honor.The park district is now looking for artists who want to create the statue and are asking that applications be submitted by March 1.Here are 10 things to know about this beloved Catholic saint:1. She was the first American citizen to be canonized.Though born in Italy, Frances Xavier Cabrini became a naturalized U.S. citizen in 1909. In 1946, she was canonized by Pope Pius XII, becoming the first American citizen to be declared a saint.2. She originally wanted to be a missionary to China.Inspired by St. Francis Xavier, Cabrini hoped to evangelize in China. Instead, Pope Leo XIII directed her westward, telling her to serve immigrants in the United States, “not to the East, but to the West.”3. She arrived in New York with almost nothing.In 1889, Cabrini landed in New York City with six fellow sisters and limited resources. What awaited her was not a warm welcome but housing instability and overwhelming poverty among Italian immigrants.4. She founded the Missionary Sisters of the Sacred Heart.In 1880, she established the Missionary Sisters of the Sacred Heart of Jesus, a religious order dedicated to education, health care, and missionary work. The order continues its work worldwide today.5. She built an empire of schools and hospitals.By the time of her death, Cabrini had founded nearly 70 institutions, including orphanages, schools, and hospitals across the United States, Europe, and Latin America.6. She served Italian immigrants during a time of intense prejudice.In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, Italian immigrants faced widespread discrimination in America. Cabrini advocated fiercely for their dignity, education, and health care.7. She became a U.S. citizen in 1909.Cabrini’s naturalization reflected her long-term commitment to serving American communities, particularly in cities like New York and Chicago.8. She died in Chicago in 1917.Cabrini passed away on Dec. 22, 1917, in Chicago after years of tireless travel and work. The doctor attributed her death to chronic endocarditis, or heart disease. Her body is preserved for veneration at the National Shrine of St. Frances Xavier Cabrini.9. She is the patron saint of immigrants.In 1950, Pope Pius XII officially named her the patron saint of immigrants, recognizing her lifelong dedication to displaced and marginalized communities.10. Her legacy remains visible across the U.S.Hospitals, schools, and institutions bearing her name continue her mission of faith-driven service and education.

10 things to know about St. Frances Xavier Cabrini #Catholic A statue of St. Frances Xavier Cabrini, the first American saint, will replace a statue of Christopher Columbus at Arrigo Park in Chicago — an area known as Little Italy — Chicago Park District officials announced Feb. 18.Cabrini, who served poor Italian immigrants in Chicago, received roughly 38% of the almost 4,000 votes cast during an online contest to pick three nominees for the honor.The park district is now looking for artists who want to create the statue and are asking that applications be submitted by March 1.Here are 10 things to know about this beloved Catholic saint:1. She was the first American citizen to be canonized.Though born in Italy, Frances Xavier Cabrini became a naturalized U.S. citizen in 1909. In 1946, she was canonized by Pope Pius XII, becoming the first American citizen to be declared a saint.2. She originally wanted to be a missionary to China.Inspired by St. Francis Xavier, Cabrini hoped to evangelize in China. Instead, Pope Leo XIII directed her westward, telling her to serve immigrants in the United States, “not to the East, but to the West.”3. She arrived in New York with almost nothing.In 1889, Cabrini landed in New York City with six fellow sisters and limited resources. What awaited her was not a warm welcome but housing instability and overwhelming poverty among Italian immigrants.4. She founded the Missionary Sisters of the Sacred Heart.In 1880, she established the Missionary Sisters of the Sacred Heart of Jesus, a religious order dedicated to education, health care, and missionary work. The order continues its work worldwide today.5. She built an empire of schools and hospitals.By the time of her death, Cabrini had founded nearly 70 institutions, including orphanages, schools, and hospitals across the United States, Europe, and Latin America.6. She served Italian immigrants during a time of intense prejudice.In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, Italian immigrants faced widespread discrimination in America. Cabrini advocated fiercely for their dignity, education, and health care.7. She became a U.S. citizen in 1909.Cabrini’s naturalization reflected her long-term commitment to serving American communities, particularly in cities like New York and Chicago.8. She died in Chicago in 1917.Cabrini passed away on Dec. 22, 1917, in Chicago after years of tireless travel and work. The doctor attributed her death to chronic endocarditis, or heart disease. Her body is preserved for veneration at the National Shrine of St. Frances Xavier Cabrini.9. She is the patron saint of immigrants.In 1950, Pope Pius XII officially named her the patron saint of immigrants, recognizing her lifelong dedication to displaced and marginalized communities.10. Her legacy remains visible across the U.S.Hospitals, schools, and institutions bearing her name continue her mission of faith-driven service and education.

St. Frances Xavier Cabrini was the first American citizen to be canonized and is the patron saint of immigrants. A new statue of her will be erected in Chicago’s Little Italy.

Read More

On Feb. 28, 1997, the Gamma Ray Burst Monitor on the Italian-Dutch Satellite BeppoSAX detected GRB 970228. The gamma ray burst (GRB) lasted about 80 seconds. BeppoSAX’s rapid determination of its position allowed multiple other observatories to quickly begin campaigns in multiple wavelengths.  On March 27, the Hubble Space Telescope began observing GRB 970228 and,Continue reading “Feb. 28, 1997: GRB 970228 bursts on the scene”

The post Feb. 28, 1997: GRB 970228 bursts on the scene appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

Read More

The Carbothermal Reduction Demonstration (CaRD) project aims to demonstrate the carbothermal reduction of lunar regolith to produce oxygen on the Moon’s South Pole. For this test, the team integrated the solar concentrator, mirrors, and software and confirmed the production of carbon monoxide.

Read More

Gospel and Word of the Day – 28 February 2026 – A reading from the Book of Deuteronomy 26:16-19 Moses spoke to the people, saying: "This day the LORD, your God, commands you to observe these statutes and decrees. Be careful, then, to observe them with all your heart and with all your soul. Today you are making this agreement with the LORD: he is to be your God and you are to walk in his ways and observe his statutes, commandments and decrees, and to hearken to his voice. And today the LORD is making this agreement with you: you are to be a people peculiarly his own, as he promised you; and provided you keep all his commandments, he will then raise you high in praise and renown and glory above all other nations he has made, and you will be a people sacred to the LORD, your God, as he promised."From the Gospel according to Matthew 5:43-48 Jesus said to his disciples: "You have heard that it was said, You shall love your neighbor and hate your enemy. But I say to you, love your enemies, and pray for those who persecute you, that you may be children of your heavenly Father, for he makes his sun rise on the bad and the good, and causes rain to fall on the just and the unjust. For if you love those who love you, what recompense will you have? Do not the tax collectors do the same? And if you greet your brothers and sisters only, what is unusual about that? Do not the pagans do the same? So be perfect, just as your heavenly Father is perfect."This Gospel passage is rightly considered the magna carta of Christian non-violence. It does not consist in succumbing to evil, as a false interpretation of "turning the other cheek" (cf. Lk 6: 29) claims, but in responding to evil with good (cf. Rom 12: 17-21) and thereby breaking the chain of injustice. One then understands that for Christians, non-violence is not merely tactical behaviour but a person’s way of being, the attitude of one who is so convinced of God’s love and power that he is not afraid to tackle evil with the weapons of love and truth alone. Love of one’s enemy constitutes the nucleus of the "Christian revolution", a revolution not based on strategies of economic, political or media power: the revolution of love, a love that does not rely ultimately on human resources but is a gift of God which is obtained by trusting solely and unreservedly in his merciful goodness. Here is the newness of the Gospel which silently changes the world! Here is the heroism of the "lowly" who believe in God’s love and spread it, even at the cost of their lives. (Pope Benedict XVI, Angelus, 18 February 2007)

A reading from the Book of Deuteronomy
26:16-19

Moses spoke to the people, saying:
"This day the LORD, your God,
commands you to observe these statutes and decrees.
Be careful, then,
to observe them with all your heart and with all your soul.
Today you are making this agreement with the LORD:
he is to be your God and you are to walk in his ways
and observe his statutes, commandments and decrees,
and to hearken to his voice.
And today the LORD is making this agreement with you:
you are to be a people peculiarly his own, as he promised you;
and provided you keep all his commandments,
he will then raise you high in praise and renown and glory
above all other nations he has made,
and you will be a people sacred to the LORD, your God,
as he promised."

From the Gospel according to Matthew
5:43-48

Jesus said to his disciples:
"You have heard that it was said,
You shall love your neighbor and hate your enemy.
But I say to you, love your enemies,
and pray for those who persecute you,
that you may be children of your heavenly Father,
for he makes his sun rise on the bad and the good,
and causes rain to fall on the just and the unjust.
For if you love those who love you, what recompense will you have?
Do not the tax collectors do the same?
And if you greet your brothers and sisters only,
what is unusual about that?
Do not the pagans do the same?
So be perfect, just as your heavenly Father is perfect."

This Gospel passage is rightly considered the magna carta of Christian non-violence. It does not consist in succumbing to evil, as a false interpretation of "turning the other cheek" (cf. Lk 6: 29) claims, but in responding to evil with good (cf. Rom 12: 17-21) and thereby breaking the chain of injustice.

One then understands that for Christians, non-violence is not merely tactical behaviour but a person’s way of being, the attitude of one who is so convinced of God’s love and power that he is not afraid to tackle evil with the weapons of love and truth alone.

Love of one’s enemy constitutes the nucleus of the "Christian revolution", a revolution not based on strategies of economic, political or media power: the revolution of love, a love that does not rely ultimately on human resources but is a gift of God which is obtained by trusting solely and unreservedly in his merciful goodness. Here is the newness of the Gospel which silently changes the world! Here is the heroism of the "lowly" who believe in God’s love and spread it, even at the cost of their lives. (Pope Benedict XVI, Angelus, 18 February 2007)

Read More
10 Amazing Perks Of Becoming A Catholic #BabylonBee – There may be a bias toward Protestantism here, but being Catholic has its perks, too (reportedly). A delegation from The Babylon Bee flew out to Rome to meet with the College of Cardinals to find out the best reasons to be Catholic.

There may be a bias toward Protestantism here, but being Catholic has its perks, too (reportedly). A delegation from The Babylon Bee flew out to Rome to meet with the College of Cardinals to find out the best reasons to be Catholic.

Read More

NASA is reshuffling the Artemis program’s mission architecture, adding an intermediate test flight in 2027 and committing to annual lunar landings starting in 2028 as the agency pushes to accelerate its return to the Moon. Artemis 2 is currently set to launch in April, assuming engineers can resolve a helium flow issue that cropped upContinue reading “NASA overhauls Artemis, adds second mission before first lunar landing”

The post NASA overhauls Artemis, adds second mission before first lunar landing appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

Read More
Confirmation candidates participate in Antioch weekend at Pompton Plains parish #Catholic – Confirmation candidates at Our Lady of Good Counsel Parish in Pompton Plains, N.J., participated in Antioch weekend on Saturday, Feb. 21. The candidates experienced witness talks, discussion groups, adoration of the Blessed Sacrament, recitation of the rosary, reconciliation and a closing Mass celebrated by Father Darwin Lastra, pastor.

Click here to subscribe to our weekly newsletter.

Confirmation candidates participate in Antioch weekend at Pompton Plains parish #Catholic –

Confirmation candidates at Our Lady of Good Counsel Parish in Pompton Plains, N.J., participated in Antioch weekend on Saturday, Feb. 21. The candidates experienced witness talks, discussion groups, adoration of the Blessed Sacrament, recitation of the rosary, reconciliation and a closing Mass celebrated by Father Darwin Lastra, pastor.


Click here to subscribe to our weekly newsletter.

Confirmation candidates at Our Lady of Good Counsel Parish in Pompton Plains, N.J., participated in Antioch weekend on Saturday, Feb. 21. The candidates experienced witness talks, discussion groups, adoration of the Blessed Sacrament, recitation of the rosary, reconciliation and a closing Mass celebrated by Father Darwin Lastra, pastor. Click here to subscribe to our weekly newsletter.

Read More

Gospel and Word of the Day – 27 February 2026 – A reading from the Book of Ezekiel 18:21-28 Thus says the Lord GOD: If the wicked man turns away from all the sins he committed, if he keeps all my statutes and does what is right and just, he shall surely live, he shall not die. None of the crimes he committed shall be remembered against him; he shall live because of the virtue he has practiced. Do I indeed derive any pleasure from the death of the wicked? says the Lord GOD. Do I not rather rejoice when he turns from his evil way that he may live? And if the virtuous man turns from the path of virtue to do evil, the same kind of abominable things that the wicked man does, can he do this and still live? None of his virtuous deeds shall be remembered, because he has broken faith and committed sin; because of this, he shall die. You say, "The LORD’s way is not fair!" Hear now, house of Israel: Is it my way that is unfair, or rather, are not your ways unfair? When someone virtuous turns away from virtue to commit iniquity, and dies, it is because of the iniquity he committed that he must die. But if the wicked, turning from the wickedness he has committed, does what is right and just, he shall preserve his life; since he has turned away from all the sins that he committed, he shall surely live, he shall not die.From the Gospel according to Matthew 5:20-26 Jesus said to his disciples: "I tell you, unless your righteousness surpasses that of the scribes and Pharisees, you will not enter into the Kingdom of heaven. "You have heard that it was said to your ancestors, You shall not kill; and whoever kills will be liable to judgment. But I say to you, whoever is angry with his brother will be liable to judgment, and whoever says to his brother, Raqa, will be answerable to the Sanhedrin, and whoever says, ‘You fool,’ will be liable to fiery Gehenna. Therefore, if you bring your gift to the altar, and there recall that your brother has anything against you, leave your gift there at the altar, go first and be reconciled with your brother, and then come and offer your gift. Settle with your opponent quickly while on the way to court. Otherwise your opponent will hand you over to the judge, and the judge will hand you over to the guard, and you will be thrown into prison. Amen, I say to you, you will not be released until you have paid the last penny."We think of Jesus’ words: "If you are offering your gift at the altar, and there remember that your brother has something against you, leave your gift there before the altar and go; first be reconciled to your brother, and then come and offer your gift" (Mt 5: 23ff.). God, knowing that we were unreconciled and seeing that we have something against him, rose up and came to meet us, even though he alone was in the right. He came to meet us even to the Cross, in order to reconcile us. This is what it means to give freely: a willingness to take the first step; to be the first to reach out to the other, to offer reconciliation, to accept the suffering entailed in giving up being in the right. To persevere in the desire for reconciliation: God gave us an example, and this is the way for us to become like him; it is an attitude constantly needed in our world. Today we must learn once more how to acknowledge guilt, we must shake off the illusion of being innocent. We must learn how to do penance, to let ourselves be transformed; to reach out to the other and to let God give us the courage and strength for this renewal. (Address ok Pope Benedict XVI to the members of the Roman Curia and Papal representatives for the traditional Exchange of Christmas greetings, 21 December 2009)

A reading from the Book of Ezekiel
18:21-28

Thus says the Lord GOD:
If the wicked man turns away from all the sins he committed,
if he keeps all my statutes and does what is right and just,
he shall surely live, he shall not die.
None of the crimes he committed shall be remembered against him;
he shall live because of the virtue he has practiced.
Do I indeed derive any pleasure from the death of the wicked?
says the Lord GOD.
Do I not rather rejoice when he turns from his evil way
that he may live?

And if the virtuous man turns from the path of virtue to do evil,
the same kind of abominable things that the wicked man does,
can he do this and still live?
None of his virtuous deeds shall be remembered,
because he has broken faith and committed sin;
because of this, he shall die.
You say, "The LORD’s way is not fair!"
Hear now, house of Israel:
Is it my way that is unfair, or rather, are not your ways unfair?
When someone virtuous turns away from virtue to commit iniquity, and dies,
it is because of the iniquity he committed that he must die.
But if the wicked, turning from the wickedness he has committed,
does what is right and just,
he shall preserve his life;
since he has turned away from all the sins that he committed,
he shall surely live, he shall not die.

From the Gospel according to Matthew
5:20-26

Jesus said to his disciples:
"I tell you,
unless your righteousness surpasses that
of the scribes and Pharisees,
you will not enter into the Kingdom of heaven.

"You have heard that it was said to your ancestors,
You shall not kill; and whoever kills will be liable to judgment.
But I say to you, whoever is angry with his brother
will be liable to judgment,
and whoever says to his brother, Raqa,
will be answerable to the Sanhedrin,
and whoever says, ‘You fool,’ will be liable to fiery Gehenna.
Therefore, if you bring your gift to the altar,
and there recall that your brother
has anything against you,
leave your gift there at the altar,
go first and be reconciled with your brother,
and then come and offer your gift.
Settle with your opponent quickly while on the way to court.
Otherwise your opponent will hand you over to the judge,
and the judge will hand you over to the guard,
and you will be thrown into prison.
Amen, I say to you,
you will not be released until you have paid the last penny."

We think of Jesus’ words: "If you are offering your gift at the altar, and there remember that your brother has something against you, leave your gift there before the altar and go; first be reconciled to your brother, and then come and offer your gift" (Mt 5: 23ff.). God, knowing that we were unreconciled and seeing that we have something against him, rose up and came to meet us, even though he alone was in the right. He came to meet us even to the Cross, in order to reconcile us. This is what it means to give freely: a willingness to take the first step; to be the first to reach out to the other, to offer reconciliation, to accept the suffering entailed in giving up being in the right. To persevere in the desire for reconciliation: God gave us an example, and this is the way for us to become like him; it is an attitude constantly needed in our world. Today we must learn once more how to acknowledge guilt, we must shake off the illusion of being innocent. We must learn how to do penance, to let ourselves be transformed; to reach out to the other and to let God give us the courage and strength for this renewal. (Address ok Pope Benedict XVI to the members of the Roman Curia and Papal representatives for the traditional Exchange of Christmas greetings, 21 December 2009)

Read More
Bishop Kevin J. Sweeney’s Schedule: March, 2026 #Catholic – 



3/1
Sun., 9 a.m. Vocation Discernment Retreat, Loyola, Morristown.


3/2
Mon., 11 a.m. Vocations Board Meeting – Chancery, Clifton.


3/3
Tue., 10:30 a.m. Mass – Saint Joseph’s Seminary in Yonkers.


3/5
Thu., 6:30 p.m. Mental Health Matters Conference on Mental Health – St. Mary Parish, Pompton Lakes.


3/7
Sat., 5:30 p.m. Mass – Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary Parish, Morristown, Pueri Cantores Festival Vigil Mass.


3/8
Sun., 10 a.m. Confirmation – Our Lady of Pompei Parish, Paterson; 1 p.m. Mass – Our Lady of Good Counsel Parish, Pompton Plains.


3/10
Tue., 12 noon Priest Lenten Day of Recollection – Loyola, Morristown.


3/11
Wed., 6:30 p.m. Stations of the Cross and Lenten Talk – Our Lady of the Mountain Parish, Long Valley.


3/12
Thu., 10 a.m. March for Meals – Catholic Charities.


3/13
Fri., 7 p.m. Confirmation – The Cathedral of St. John Baptist, Paterson.


3/14
Sat., 11 a.m. Confirmation – St. Jude Parish, Hardyston (Hamburg); 5 p.m. Confirmation – St. Mary Parish, Paterson.


3/15
Sun., 9:30 a.m. Mass – St. Patrick Parish, Chatham, in honor of St. Patrick; 12 noon Confirmation – St. Jude Parish, Budd Lake.


3/16
Mon., 1 p.m. Presbyteral Council – Chancery, Clifton; 5 p.m. Mass – Immaculate Conception Seminary, Seton Hall.


3/17
Tue., 8:30 a.m. St. Patrick’s Day Mass – St. Patrick’s Cathedral, NYC.


3/18
Wed., 6 p.m. Mass – St. Joseph Parish, West Milford, for the Vigil of the Feast Day.


3/19
Thu., 8:30 a.m. School Mass – Holy Spirit Parish, Pequannock; 6 p.m. Mass – St. Joseph, Passaic, for the feast of St. Joseph.


3/20
Fri., 5 p.m. Confirmation – St. Catherine of Siena Parish, Mountain Lakes.


3/21
Sat., 9 a.m. Mass – St. Catherine Parish, Ringwood, before the Ringwood St. Patrick’s Day Parade; 11 a.m. Confirmation – St. Matthew the Apostle Parish, Randolph; 5 p.m. Confirmation – Good Shepherd Parish, Andover.


3/22
Sun., 12 noon Confirmation – St. Francis de Sales Parish, McAfee; 3 p.m. Legion of Mary Annual Acies – Sacred Heart Parish, Clifton.


3/23
Mon., 1 p.m. Dean’s Meeting, Chancery, Clifton.


3/24
Tue., 11 a.m. Vocations Board Meeting – Chancery, Clifton.


3/25
Wed., 6:30 p.m. Mass – Christ the King Parish, New Vernon.


3/26
Thu., 10:30 a.m. Seton Hall Board of Regents Quarterly Meeting.


3/27
Fri., 7 p.m. Confirmation – Our Lady Star of the Sea Parish, Lake Hopatcong.


3/28
Sat., 11 a.m. Confirmation – Holy Family Parish, Florham Park; 6:30 p.m. Palm Sunday Vigil Mass in Spanish – St. Paul Parish, Clifton.


3/29
Sun., 9:30 a.m. Palm Sunday Mass – Our Lady of Fatima and St. Nicholas Parish, Passaic; 1 p.m. Palm Sunday Mass – The Cathedral of St. John the Baptist, Paterson.


3/31
Tue., 7 p.m. Chrism Mass – The Cathedral of St. John the Baptist, Paterson.

Bishop Kevin J. Sweeney’s Schedule: March, 2026 #Catholic – 3/1 Sun., 9 a.m. Vocation Discernment Retreat, Loyola, Morristown. 3/2 Mon., 11 a.m. Vocations Board Meeting – Chancery, Clifton. 3/3 Tue., 10:30 a.m. Mass – Saint Joseph’s Seminary in Yonkers. 3/5 Thu., 6:30 p.m. Mental Health Matters Conference on Mental Health – St. Mary Parish, Pompton Lakes. 3/7 Sat., 5:30 p.m. Mass – Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary Parish, Morristown, Pueri Cantores Festival Vigil Mass. 3/8 Sun., 10 a.m. Confirmation – Our Lady of Pompei Parish, Paterson; 1 p.m. Mass – Our Lady of Good Counsel Parish, Pompton Plains. 3/10 Tue., 12 noon Priest Lenten Day of Recollection – Loyola, Morristown. 3/11 Wed., 6:30 p.m. Stations of the Cross and Lenten Talk – Our Lady of the Mountain Parish, Long Valley. 3/12 Thu., 10 a.m. March for Meals – Catholic Charities. 3/13 Fri., 7 p.m. Confirmation – The Cathedral of St. John Baptist, Paterson. 3/14 Sat., 11 a.m. Confirmation – St. Jude Parish, Hardyston (Hamburg); 5 p.m. Confirmation – St. Mary Parish, Paterson. 3/15 Sun., 9:30 a.m. Mass – St. Patrick Parish, Chatham, in honor of St. Patrick; 12 noon Confirmation – St. Jude Parish, Budd Lake. 3/16 Mon., 1 p.m. Presbyteral Council – Chancery, Clifton; 5 p.m. Mass – Immaculate Conception Seminary, Seton Hall. 3/17 Tue., 8:30 a.m. St. Patrick’s Day Mass – St. Patrick’s Cathedral, NYC. 3/18 Wed., 6 p.m. Mass – St. Joseph Parish, West Milford, for the Vigil of the Feast Day. 3/19 Thu., 8:30 a.m. School Mass – Holy Spirit Parish, Pequannock; 6 p.m. Mass – St. Joseph, Passaic, for the feast of St. Joseph. 3/20 Fri., 5 p.m. Confirmation – St. Catherine of Siena Parish, Mountain Lakes. 3/21 Sat., 9 a.m. Mass – St. Catherine Parish, Ringwood, before the Ringwood St. Patrick’s Day Parade; 11 a.m. Confirmation – St. Matthew the Apostle Parish, Randolph; 5 p.m. Confirmation – Good Shepherd Parish, Andover. 3/22 Sun., 12 noon Confirmation – St. Francis de Sales Parish, McAfee; 3 p.m. Legion of Mary Annual Acies – Sacred Heart Parish, Clifton. 3/23 Mon., 1 p.m. Dean’s Meeting, Chancery, Clifton. 3/24 Tue., 11 a.m. Vocations Board Meeting – Chancery, Clifton. 3/25 Wed., 6:30 p.m. Mass – Christ the King Parish, New Vernon. 3/26 Thu., 10:30 a.m. Seton Hall Board of Regents Quarterly Meeting. 3/27 Fri., 7 p.m. Confirmation – Our Lady Star of the Sea Parish, Lake Hopatcong. 3/28 Sat., 11 a.m. Confirmation – Holy Family Parish, Florham Park; 6:30 p.m. Palm Sunday Vigil Mass in Spanish – St. Paul Parish, Clifton. 3/29 Sun., 9:30 a.m. Palm Sunday Mass – Our Lady of Fatima and St. Nicholas Parish, Passaic; 1 p.m. Palm Sunday Mass – The Cathedral of St. John the Baptist, Paterson. 3/31 Tue., 7 p.m. Chrism Mass – The Cathedral of St. John the Baptist, Paterson.

Bishop Kevin J. Sweeney’s Schedule: March, 2026 #Catholic –

3/1 Sun., 9 a.m. Vocation Discernment Retreat, Loyola, Morristown.
3/2 Mon., 11 a.m. Vocations Board Meeting – Chancery, Clifton.
3/3 Tue., 10:30 a.m. Mass – Saint Joseph’s Seminary in Yonkers.
3/5 Thu., 6:30 p.m. Mental Health Matters Conference on Mental Health – St. Mary Parish, Pompton Lakes.
3/7 Sat., 5:30 p.m. Mass – Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary Parish, Morristown, Pueri Cantores Festival Vigil Mass.
3/8 Sun., 10 a.m. Confirmation – Our Lady of Pompei Parish, Paterson; 1 p.m. Mass – Our Lady of Good Counsel Parish, Pompton Plains.
3/10 Tue., 12 noon Priest Lenten Day of Recollection – Loyola, Morristown.
3/11 Wed., 6:30 p.m. Stations of the Cross and Lenten Talk – Our Lady of the Mountain Parish, Long Valley.
3/12 Thu., 10 a.m. March for Meals – Catholic Charities.
3/13 Fri., 7 p.m. Confirmation – The Cathedral of St. John Baptist, Paterson.
3/14 Sat., 11 a.m. Confirmation – St. Jude Parish, Hardyston (Hamburg); 5 p.m. Confirmation – St. Mary Parish, Paterson.
3/15 Sun., 9:30 a.m. Mass – St. Patrick Parish, Chatham, in honor of St. Patrick; 12 noon Confirmation – St. Jude Parish, Budd Lake.
3/16 Mon., 1 p.m. Presbyteral Council – Chancery, Clifton; 5 p.m. Mass – Immaculate Conception Seminary, Seton Hall.
3/17 Tue., 8:30 a.m. St. Patrick’s Day Mass – St. Patrick’s Cathedral, NYC.
3/18 Wed., 6 p.m. Mass – St. Joseph Parish, West Milford, for the Vigil of the Feast Day.
3/19 Thu., 8:30 a.m. School Mass – Holy Spirit Parish, Pequannock; 6 p.m. Mass – St. Joseph, Passaic, for the feast of St. Joseph.
3/20 Fri., 5 p.m. Confirmation – St. Catherine of Siena Parish, Mountain Lakes.
3/21 Sat., 9 a.m. Mass – St. Catherine Parish, Ringwood, before the Ringwood St. Patrick’s Day Parade; 11 a.m. Confirmation – St. Matthew the Apostle Parish, Randolph; 5 p.m. Confirmation – Good Shepherd Parish, Andover.
3/22 Sun., 12 noon Confirmation – St. Francis de Sales Parish, McAfee; 3 p.m. Legion of Mary Annual Acies – Sacred Heart Parish, Clifton.
3/23 Mon., 1 p.m. Dean’s Meeting, Chancery, Clifton.
3/24 Tue., 11 a.m. Vocations Board Meeting – Chancery, Clifton.
3/25 Wed., 6:30 p.m. Mass – Christ the King Parish, New Vernon.
3/26 Thu., 10:30 a.m. Seton Hall Board of Regents Quarterly Meeting.
3/27 Fri., 7 p.m. Confirmation – Our Lady Star of the Sea Parish, Lake Hopatcong.
3/28 Sat., 11 a.m. Confirmation – Holy Family Parish, Florham Park; 6:30 p.m. Palm Sunday Vigil Mass in Spanish – St. Paul Parish, Clifton.
3/29 Sun., 9:30 a.m. Palm Sunday Mass – Our Lady of Fatima and St. Nicholas Parish, Passaic; 1 p.m. Palm Sunday Mass – The Cathedral of St. John the Baptist, Paterson.
3/31 Tue., 7 p.m. Chrism Mass – The Cathedral of St. John the Baptist, Paterson.

3/1 Sun., 9 a.m. Vocation Discernment Retreat, Loyola, Morristown. 3/2 Mon., 11 a.m. Vocations Board Meeting – Chancery, Clifton. 3/3 Tue., 10:30 a.m. Mass – Saint Joseph’s Seminary in Yonkers. 3/5 Thu., 6:30 p.m. Mental Health Matters Conference on Mental Health – St. Mary Parish, Pompton Lakes. 3/7 Sat., 5:30 p.m. Mass – Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary Parish, Morristown, Pueri Cantores Festival Vigil Mass. 3/8 Sun., 10 a.m. Confirmation – Our Lady of Pompei Parish, Paterson; 1 p.m. Mass – Our Lady of Good Counsel Parish, Pompton Plains. 3/10 Tue., 12 noon Priest Lenten Day of Recollection –

Read More
8 Most Horribly Divisive Statements From Trump’s State Of The Union #BabylonBee – With last night’s polarizing State of the Union, President Trump continued fracturing the country with pointed rhetoric designed only to widen the chasm between the country’s left and right. From the many awful things Trump said, here are the eight most divisive statement’s from last night’s speech:

With last night’s polarizing State of the Union, President Trump continued fracturing the country with pointed rhetoric designed only to widen the chasm between the country’s left and right. From the many awful things Trump said, here are the eight most divisive statement’s from last night’s speech:

Read More
Picture of the day





One Hundred Horses by Giuseppe Castiglione, painted in 1728. Collected by the National Palace Museum in Taipei, Taiwan. Today is Chinese New Year. In traditional Chinese culture, today marks the beginning of Horse Year.
 #ImageOfTheDay
Picture of the day
One Hundred Horses by Giuseppe Castiglione, painted in 1728. Collected by the National Palace Museum in Taipei, Taiwan. Today is Chinese New Year. In traditional Chinese culture, today marks the beginning of Horse Year.
Read More
Father Zollner: Catholics need to pray more for survivors of sexual abuse #Catholic – (OSV News) — Jesuit Father Hans Zollner is urging Catholics to make prayer for abuse victims a central focus this Lent, saying the Church’s spiritual response to sexual abuse remains underdeveloped. The director of the Institute of Anthropology at Rome’s Pontifical Gregorian University said that while safeguarding policies and research have grown, prayer for victims and secondary victims is often overlooked.
Father Zollner spoke to OSV News as cases of abuse made global news with abuse survivor Gisèle Pelicot meeting Queen Camilla Feb. 23, and with two high profile figures — Andrew Mountbatten Windsor and Peter Mandelson, former British ambassador to the U.S. — arrested due to their connections with Jeffrey Epstein.
Pelicot was drugged by her now-former husband and raped in their French home by strangers while she lay unconscious. Her book, “Hymn to Life: Shame Has to Change Sides,” was launched in London, where actress Kate Winslet, among other stars, read passages from the memoir that left Queen Camilla, as she said in her own words, “speechless.”
Mountbatten Windsor, a former British Prince, allegedly abused Virginia Giuffre, who described her abuse at the hands of associates of Jeffrey Epstein — in what the BBC called “appalling detail” — in a book published posthumously after she took her own life in 2025.
Many cases connected to Catholic priests, including high profile ones, such as Father Marko Rupnik, are also ongoing.

Click here to subscribe to our weekly newsletter.

sked for a Catholic response to such harrowing cases, Father Zollner, one of the world’s top experts in sexual abuse and safeguarding, with research spanning more than two decades, told OSV News that while “canonical, psychological, or sociological analysis” in the Church is much needed and developed, one aspect is still lacking in broader Catholic response to abuse in general: prayer. — and Lent is the best time to remind about it.
 
Father Zollner said “a spiritual reckoning and a spiritual way of understanding” abuse is something everyone in the Church should be paying attention to.
“We pray for the poor, we pray for the homeless, we pray for the sick — but when do we pray for victims?” he asked in a phone conversation with OSV News.
“Our discovery over the last months has been that more and more people are aware that the spirituality of safeguarding, and the theology of safeguarding in the face of abuse, is very much underdeveloped,” Father Zollner said.
“Very often, I ask at conferences — and have asked over the years — participants: ‘When did you pray for victims of abuse last time?’ Most of the time, there is a dead silence after that question, and many people say that they didn’t think about it.”
He said days of prayers once a year are not enough.
“When do we pray for victims? For secondary victims? When do we pray for perpetrators? When do we pray for Church leaders who have to deal with these situations?” he asked.
It’s not only a question of “credibility,” but a “question of how we understand redemption, how we understand ecclesial life, leadership in the Church, power, and authority from a theological and spiritual point of view.”
“I have been working on these issues for almost 20 years now, and I have asked these questions many times. Many people are startled because they had never thought about them.
For me, one of the really astonishing things is that there is very little faith response to this.”
“What does God want us to do when this is brought before us over and over again over the last 40 years? Where is the response from a strictly faith perspective?” Father Zollner asked.
The Institute of Anthropology in Rome has announced it will offer a series of Lenten reflections focused on safeguarding, underscoring its longstanding commitment to integrating safeguarding awareness into the Church’s spiritual and liturgical life.
“Our Institute has always emphasized the importance of fostering reflection on safeguarding, including within our liturgical life,” the IADC website states.
The reflections highlight the need for parishes and faith communities to keep the suffering of vulnerable people at the forefront of prayer and pastoral concern.
“In every parish and every community of the faithful, the suffering of vulnerable persons should also become a focus of our prayer. At the same time, we seek to strengthen our sensitivity, to be ready to receive God’s grace and joy, and to encourage those working in safeguarding.”
The Institute is inviting the faithful to take part during the Lenten season, framing the initiative as both a spiritual and practical call to action.
While Father Zollner said “we must be cautious about presenting the Church as an authority in this area, because we are not through this process ourselves,” he admitted that when he read about the stories of abuse on Epstein Island “it was very harrowing.”
“These were girls who were trafficked, who suffered the most despicable horrors at the hands of people who had promised them luxury, influence and wealth,” Father Zollner said. “They were probably also longing for real love and understanding — and what they found was hell.”
What was also striking was that “this was happening in front of many people’s eyes.”
“Why do we have millions of pages of documentation, photos, and other material? Because people wrote about it. This did not happen anonymously or in the dark of night — it happened in plain daylight,” he said. “Yet for years, nobody spoke up. Even today, victims have to fight, and some no longer have the the energy and commit suicide, as we have seen.”
For Father Zollner, “This confirms one of the main discoveries of recent years: sexual violence and sexual exploitation have been with humankind from the beginning. And they will not simply end.”
“Even if we do everything we can for safeguarding, even if we tighten laws, human nature requires that we reckon with this reality,” he said.
“As religions, as churches, as societies, we need to step up our efforts to make abuse more difficult,” Father Zollner said “That means education, raising awareness, and engagement at all levels of society and in all sectors. This is not confined to the Catholic Church or to religion — it is everywhere. Nor is it confined to the poorest levels of society; as we see, it exists among the richest as well.”
Asked why both in the Church and in broader society people tend to put the reputation of a powerful person over the dignity of the victim, Father Zollner replied that main two elements are involved — one connected to emotions, the other to the issue of power.
“One is that human beings find it difficult to stand up for the dignity of others if they do not feel close to them or have an emotional connection to them. If someone is outside my family or circle of friends, I may feel sorry for them, but truly engaging in restoring their dignity becomes more difficult. If it is someone close to me, I will be committed and angry. But if the person is distant — an abstract number of victims — it becomes less convincing and less impactful.”
Father Zollner highlighted that for many years, the World Health Organization has said that 20% of girls in any society are sexually abused before the age of 18.
“That is an abstract number,” he said. But translated to absolute figures it means that, in France alone, between 2.5 to 3.5 million women have been victims of abuse. “The same would be true in Germany, in Poland, and in the United States,” Father Zollner said.
Those numbers will remain abstract unless one listens “to one particular victim.”When you sit down with someone and hear their story, it becomes entirely different,” he said.
“The second element is the question of power, influence and perceived position,” Father Zollner said. “I say perceived because sometimes the power is not even real, but connected to an image — nobility, royalty, hierarchy. There is an elevation and protection around such people that goes beyond the normal citizen. Psychological processes of fear, submissiveness or lack of courage in confronting wrongdoing come into play.”
“There is often a layer of awe, respect and submissiveness attached to certain individuals, which combines with a sense of entitlement — the belief that one is beyond reproach and can do whatever one wishes. Fortunately, in some cases, this spell has begun to break.”
For Father Zollner, confronted with such reflection on the state of human nature, the time of Lent offers a unique opportunity for Catholics to contemplate Christ’s suffering “in which the Son of Man, the Son of God, saves us … identifying with the most vulnerable, marginalized and wounded.”
“This is part of the central message of the Gospel and of Jesus’ life: it is not about my well-being, but about the lives of others. Love of self must always be in relation to love of others,” Rome’s Anthropology Institute’s director said.
Paulina Guzik is international editor for OSV News. Follow her on X @Guzik_Paulina
 

Father Zollner: Catholics need to pray more for survivors of sexual abuse #Catholic – (OSV News) — Jesuit Father Hans Zollner is urging Catholics to make prayer for abuse victims a central focus this Lent, saying the Church’s spiritual response to sexual abuse remains underdeveloped. The director of the Institute of Anthropology at Rome’s Pontifical Gregorian University said that while safeguarding policies and research have grown, prayer for victims and secondary victims is often overlooked. Father Zollner spoke to OSV News as cases of abuse made global news with abuse survivor Gisèle Pelicot meeting Queen Camilla Feb. 23, and with two high profile figures — Andrew Mountbatten Windsor and Peter Mandelson, former British ambassador to the U.S. — arrested due to their connections with Jeffrey Epstein. Pelicot was drugged by her now-former husband and raped in their French home by strangers while she lay unconscious. Her book, “Hymn to Life: Shame Has to Change Sides,” was launched in London, where actress Kate Winslet, among other stars, read passages from the memoir that left Queen Camilla, as she said in her own words, “speechless.” Mountbatten Windsor, a former British Prince, allegedly abused Virginia Giuffre, who described her abuse at the hands of associates of Jeffrey Epstein — in what the BBC called “appalling detail” — in a book published posthumously after she took her own life in 2025. Many cases connected to Catholic priests, including high profile ones, such as Father Marko Rupnik, are also ongoing. Click here to subscribe to our weekly newsletter. sked for a Catholic response to such harrowing cases, Father Zollner, one of the world’s top experts in sexual abuse and safeguarding, with research spanning more than two decades, told OSV News that while “canonical, psychological, or sociological analysis” in the Church is much needed and developed, one aspect is still lacking in broader Catholic response to abuse in general: prayer. — and Lent is the best time to remind about it.   Father Zollner said “a spiritual reckoning and a spiritual way of understanding” abuse is something everyone in the Church should be paying attention to. “We pray for the poor, we pray for the homeless, we pray for the sick — but when do we pray for victims?” he asked in a phone conversation with OSV News. “Our discovery over the last months has been that more and more people are aware that the spirituality of safeguarding, and the theology of safeguarding in the face of abuse, is very much underdeveloped,” Father Zollner said. “Very often, I ask at conferences — and have asked over the years — participants: ‘When did you pray for victims of abuse last time?’ Most of the time, there is a dead silence after that question, and many people say that they didn’t think about it.” He said days of prayers once a year are not enough. “When do we pray for victims? For secondary victims? When do we pray for perpetrators? When do we pray for Church leaders who have to deal with these situations?” he asked. It’s not only a question of “credibility,” but a “question of how we understand redemption, how we understand ecclesial life, leadership in the Church, power, and authority from a theological and spiritual point of view.” “I have been working on these issues for almost 20 years now, and I have asked these questions many times. Many people are startled because they had never thought about them. For me, one of the really astonishing things is that there is very little faith response to this.” “What does God want us to do when this is brought before us over and over again over the last 40 years? Where is the response from a strictly faith perspective?” Father Zollner asked. The Institute of Anthropology in Rome has announced it will offer a series of Lenten reflections focused on safeguarding, underscoring its longstanding commitment to integrating safeguarding awareness into the Church’s spiritual and liturgical life. “Our Institute has always emphasized the importance of fostering reflection on safeguarding, including within our liturgical life,” the IADC website states. The reflections highlight the need for parishes and faith communities to keep the suffering of vulnerable people at the forefront of prayer and pastoral concern. “In every parish and every community of the faithful, the suffering of vulnerable persons should also become a focus of our prayer. At the same time, we seek to strengthen our sensitivity, to be ready to receive God’s grace and joy, and to encourage those working in safeguarding.” The Institute is inviting the faithful to take part during the Lenten season, framing the initiative as both a spiritual and practical call to action. While Father Zollner said “we must be cautious about presenting the Church as an authority in this area, because we are not through this process ourselves,” he admitted that when he read about the stories of abuse on Epstein Island “it was very harrowing.” “These were girls who were trafficked, who suffered the most despicable horrors at the hands of people who had promised them luxury, influence and wealth,” Father Zollner said. “They were probably also longing for real love and understanding — and what they found was hell.” What was also striking was that “this was happening in front of many people’s eyes.” “Why do we have millions of pages of documentation, photos, and other material? Because people wrote about it. This did not happen anonymously or in the dark of night — it happened in plain daylight,” he said. “Yet for years, nobody spoke up. Even today, victims have to fight, and some no longer have the the energy and commit suicide, as we have seen.” For Father Zollner, “This confirms one of the main discoveries of recent years: sexual violence and sexual exploitation have been with humankind from the beginning. And they will not simply end.” “Even if we do everything we can for safeguarding, even if we tighten laws, human nature requires that we reckon with this reality,” he said. “As religions, as churches, as societies, we need to step up our efforts to make abuse more difficult,” Father Zollner said “That means education, raising awareness, and engagement at all levels of society and in all sectors. This is not confined to the Catholic Church or to religion — it is everywhere. Nor is it confined to the poorest levels of society; as we see, it exists among the richest as well.” Asked why both in the Church and in broader society people tend to put the reputation of a powerful person over the dignity of the victim, Father Zollner replied that main two elements are involved — one connected to emotions, the other to the issue of power. “One is that human beings find it difficult to stand up for the dignity of others if they do not feel close to them or have an emotional connection to them. If someone is outside my family or circle of friends, I may feel sorry for them, but truly engaging in restoring their dignity becomes more difficult. If it is someone close to me, I will be committed and angry. But if the person is distant — an abstract number of victims — it becomes less convincing and less impactful.” Father Zollner highlighted that for many years, the World Health Organization has said that 20% of girls in any society are sexually abused before the age of 18. “That is an abstract number,” he said. But translated to absolute figures it means that, in France alone, between 2.5 to 3.5 million women have been victims of abuse. “The same would be true in Germany, in Poland, and in the United States,” Father Zollner said. Those numbers will remain abstract unless one listens “to one particular victim.”When you sit down with someone and hear their story, it becomes entirely different,” he said. “The second element is the question of power, influence and perceived position,” Father Zollner said. “I say perceived because sometimes the power is not even real, but connected to an image — nobility, royalty, hierarchy. There is an elevation and protection around such people that goes beyond the normal citizen. Psychological processes of fear, submissiveness or lack of courage in confronting wrongdoing come into play.” “There is often a layer of awe, respect and submissiveness attached to certain individuals, which combines with a sense of entitlement — the belief that one is beyond reproach and can do whatever one wishes. Fortunately, in some cases, this spell has begun to break.” For Father Zollner, confronted with such reflection on the state of human nature, the time of Lent offers a unique opportunity for Catholics to contemplate Christ’s suffering “in which the Son of Man, the Son of God, saves us … identifying with the most vulnerable, marginalized and wounded.” “This is part of the central message of the Gospel and of Jesus’ life: it is not about my well-being, but about the lives of others. Love of self must always be in relation to love of others,” Rome’s Anthropology Institute’s director said. Paulina Guzik is international editor for OSV News. Follow her on X @Guzik_Paulina  

Father Zollner: Catholics need to pray more for survivors of sexual abuse #Catholic –

(OSV News) — Jesuit Father Hans Zollner is urging Catholics to make prayer for abuse victims a central focus this Lent, saying the Church’s spiritual response to sexual abuse remains underdeveloped. The director of the Institute of Anthropology at Rome’s Pontifical Gregorian University said that while safeguarding policies and research have grown, prayer for victims and secondary victims is often overlooked.

Father Zollner spoke to OSV News as cases of abuse made global news with abuse survivor Gisèle Pelicot meeting Queen Camilla Feb. 23, and with two high profile figures — Andrew Mountbatten Windsor and Peter Mandelson, former British ambassador to the U.S. — arrested due to their connections with Jeffrey Epstein.

Pelicot was drugged by her now-former husband and raped in their French home by strangers while she lay unconscious. Her book, “Hymn to Life: Shame Has to Change Sides,” was launched in London, where actress Kate Winslet, among other stars, read passages from the memoir that left Queen Camilla, as she said in her own words, “speechless.”

Mountbatten Windsor, a former British Prince, allegedly abused Virginia Giuffre, who described her abuse at the hands of associates of Jeffrey Epstein — in what the BBC called “appalling detail” — in a book published posthumously after she took her own life in 2025.

Many cases connected to Catholic priests, including high profile ones, such as Father Marko Rupnik, are also ongoing.


Click here to subscribe to our weekly newsletter.

sked for a Catholic response to such harrowing cases, Father Zollner, one of the world’s top experts in sexual abuse and safeguarding, with research spanning more than two decades, told OSV News that while “canonical, psychological, or sociological analysis” in the Church is much needed and developed, one aspect is still lacking in broader Catholic response to abuse in general: prayer. — and Lent is the best time to remind about it.

 

Father Zollner said “a spiritual reckoning and a spiritual way of understanding” abuse is something everyone in the Church should be paying attention to.

“We pray for the poor, we pray for the homeless, we pray for the sick — but when do we pray for victims?” he asked in a phone conversation with OSV News.

“Our discovery over the last months has been that more and more people are aware that the spirituality of safeguarding, and the theology of safeguarding in the face of abuse, is very much underdeveloped,” Father Zollner said.

“Very often, I ask at conferences — and have asked over the years — participants: ‘When did you pray for victims of abuse last time?’ Most of the time, there is a dead silence after that question, and many people say that they didn’t think about it.”

He said days of prayers once a year are not enough.

“When do we pray for victims? For secondary victims? When do we pray for perpetrators? When do we pray for Church leaders who have to deal with these situations?” he asked.

It’s not only a question of “credibility,” but a “question of how we understand redemption, how we understand ecclesial life, leadership in the Church, power, and authority from a theological and spiritual point of view.”

“I have been working on these issues for almost 20 years now, and I have asked these questions many times. Many people are startled because they had never thought about them.

For me, one of the really astonishing things is that there is very little faith response to this.”

“What does God want us to do when this is brought before us over and over again over the last 40 years? Where is the response from a strictly faith perspective?” Father Zollner asked.

The Institute of Anthropology in Rome has announced it will offer a series of Lenten reflections focused on safeguarding, underscoring its longstanding commitment to integrating safeguarding awareness into the Church’s spiritual and liturgical life.

“Our Institute has always emphasized the importance of fostering reflection on safeguarding, including within our liturgical life,” the IADC website states.

The reflections highlight the need for parishes and faith communities to keep the suffering of vulnerable people at the forefront of prayer and pastoral concern.

“In every parish and every community of the faithful, the suffering of vulnerable persons should also become a focus of our prayer. At the same time, we seek to strengthen our sensitivity, to be ready to receive God’s grace and joy, and to encourage those working in safeguarding.”

The Institute is inviting the faithful to take part during the Lenten season, framing the initiative as both a spiritual and practical call to action.

While Father Zollner said “we must be cautious about presenting the Church as an authority in this area, because we are not through this process ourselves,” he admitted that when he read about the stories of abuse on Epstein Island “it was very harrowing.”

“These were girls who were trafficked, who suffered the most despicable horrors at the hands of people who had promised them luxury, influence and wealth,” Father Zollner said. “They were probably also longing for real love and understanding — and what they found was hell.”

What was also striking was that “this was happening in front of many people’s eyes.”

“Why do we have millions of pages of documentation, photos, and other material? Because people wrote about it. This did not happen anonymously or in the dark of night — it happened in plain daylight,” he said. “Yet for years, nobody spoke up. Even today, victims have to fight, and some no longer have the the energy and commit suicide, as we have seen.”

For Father Zollner, “This confirms one of the main discoveries of recent years: sexual violence and sexual exploitation have been with humankind from the beginning. And they will not simply end.”

“Even if we do everything we can for safeguarding, even if we tighten laws, human nature requires that we reckon with this reality,” he said.

“As religions, as churches, as societies, we need to step up our efforts to make abuse more difficult,” Father Zollner said “That means education, raising awareness, and engagement at all levels of society and in all sectors. This is not confined to the Catholic Church or to religion — it is everywhere. Nor is it confined to the poorest levels of society; as we see, it exists among the richest as well.”

Asked why both in the Church and in broader society people tend to put the reputation of a powerful person over the dignity of the victim, Father Zollner replied that main two elements are involved — one connected to emotions, the other to the issue of power.

“One is that human beings find it difficult to stand up for the dignity of others if they do not feel close to them or have an emotional connection to them. If someone is outside my family or circle of friends, I may feel sorry for them, but truly engaging in restoring their dignity becomes more difficult. If it is someone close to me, I will be committed and angry. But if the person is distant — an abstract number of victims — it becomes less convincing and less impactful.”

Father Zollner highlighted that for many years, the World Health Organization has said that 20% of girls in any society are sexually abused before the age of 18.

“That is an abstract number,” he said. But translated to absolute figures it means that, in France alone, between 2.5 to 3.5 million women have been victims of abuse. “The same would be true in Germany, in Poland, and in the United States,” Father Zollner said.

Those numbers will remain abstract unless one listens “to one particular victim.”When you sit down with someone and hear their story, it becomes entirely different,” he said.

“The second element is the question of power, influence and perceived position,” Father Zollner said. “I say perceived because sometimes the power is not even real, but connected to an image — nobility, royalty, hierarchy. There is an elevation and protection around such people that goes beyond the normal citizen. Psychological processes of fear, submissiveness or lack of courage in confronting wrongdoing come into play.”

“There is often a layer of awe, respect and submissiveness attached to certain individuals, which combines with a sense of entitlement — the belief that one is beyond reproach and can do whatever one wishes. Fortunately, in some cases, this spell has begun to break.”

For Father Zollner, confronted with such reflection on the state of human nature, the time of Lent offers a unique opportunity for Catholics to contemplate Christ’s suffering “in which the Son of Man, the Son of God, saves us … identifying with the most vulnerable, marginalized and wounded.”

“This is part of the central message of the Gospel and of Jesus’ life: it is not about my well-being, but about the lives of others. Love of self must always be in relation to love of others,” Rome’s Anthropology Institute’s director said.

Paulina Guzik is international editor for OSV News. Follow her on X @Guzik_Paulina

 

(OSV News) — Jesuit Father Hans Zollner is urging Catholics to make prayer for abuse victims a central focus this Lent, saying the Church’s spiritual response to sexual abuse remains underdeveloped. The director of the Institute of Anthropology at Rome’s Pontifical Gregorian University said that while safeguarding policies and research have grown, prayer for victims and secondary victims is often overlooked. Father Zollner spoke to OSV News as cases of abuse made global news with abuse survivor Gisèle Pelicot meeting Queen Camilla Feb. 23, and with two high profile figures — Andrew Mountbatten Windsor and Peter Mandelson, former British ambassador

Read More
Ukrainian Church transformed by 4 years of war, Kyiv’s bishop says #Catholic – (OSV News) — Four years after Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine, the war has fundamentally reshaped the Catholic Church’s mission — turning parishes into shelters, priests into chaplains and charity into daily survival, Ukrainian bishop and leader of charity efforts told OSV News.
“Everything has changed. The country will never again be what it was before Feb. 24, 2022,” Auxiliary Bishop Oleksandr Yazlovetskiy of Kyiv-Zhytomyr, head of Caritas-Spes Ukraine, told OSV News in a conversation marking the anniversary.
As Ukraine enters a fifth year of war amid continued missile attacks, mounting casualties and growing international uncertainty about future aid, Church leaders say the conflict has brought the Church back to its most basic identity.
“The war revealed the essence of the Church — to be close to those who suffer,” the bishop said. “Not only to preach, but to be present: to listen, to support, to share fear and hope.”
Russia’s full-scale invasion triggered Europe’s largest humanitarian crisis since World War II.

Click here to subscribe to our weekly newsletter.

According to United Nations agencies, some 3.7 million Ukrainians remain internally displaced, while nearly 6.9 million continue to live as refugees across Europe and beyond. Entire communities have been uprooted multiple times as missile and drone attacks repeatedly damage homes, hospitals, schools and energy infrastructure — forcing reconstruction efforts to begin anew even before previous repairs are completed.
Nearly four years into the war, humanitarian needs remain massive, with millions still dependent on international aid for basic survival.
In that reality, pastoral ministry and humanitarian work have become inseparable.
“Since 2022, pastoral care cannot be separated from humanitarian service,” Bishop Yazlovetskiy told OSV News. Caritas organizations in Ukraine — both Roman Catholic Caritas-Spes Ukraine and the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Caritas Ukraine — rapidly evolved from modest social service groups into nationwide emergency networks.
“From small organizations of social assistance, Caritas became a powerful structure with centers across the country,” Bishop Yazlovetskiy said, crediting support from Caritas Europe, the global Caritas network and Church and governmental donors from across the globe.
“Unfortunately, help is already decreasing, while needs are not,” he said. “Mercy has become an everyday, urgent mission.”
The Church’s transformation is visible in moments of crisis. After Russian strikes destroyed parts of Ukraine’s energy system and cities were plunged into cold and darkness, Catholic parishes opened what were called “points of warmth and hope.”
“The Church fed people and kept them warm,” the bishop said.
War also reshaped relations among Christian communities. Pre-war disputes and competition between churches gave way to cooperation through the Ukrainian Council of Churches and Religious Organizations, representing the vast majority of believers in the country.
“The tragedy of war united us,” Kyiv’s bishop said. “All churches returned to their primary mission — helping the vulnerable both in word and in action.”
That visible service has changed how Ukrainians perceive the Church.
“Where the Church truly helps, trust grows,” Bishop Yazlovetskiy told OSV News. “The witness of love became more convincing than any words.”
He pointed especially to military chaplains serving alongside soldiers and in hospitals. Government approval allowing priests to serve officially with military units has brought clergy closer to frontline realities.
“In this way, the Church is also with its soldiers,” the bishop said.
International solidarity remains essential, particularly assistance from the United States.
“American aid is vital — humanitarian and military,” he said. “Americans should know that their support saves lives every day. Without this help, especially military assistance, we will not endure.” Delays in support quickly translate into loss of life, he added. “Every delay in aid is later seen in the growing number of funerals of our soldiers.”
At the same time, global spiritual solidarity continues to accompany Ukraine.
Catholic communities around the world marked the anniversary with prayer initiatives promoted by the Commission of the Bishops’ Conferences of the European Union, known as COMECE, and the Centesimus Annus Pro Pontifice Foundation, echoing repeated appeals from Pope Leo XIV for peace in Ukraine.
“Four years have passed since the beginning of the war against Ukraine,” Pope Leo said during his Angelus prayer Feb. 22. “My heartfelt thoughts remain focused on the tragic situation unfolding before the eyes of the whole world: so many victims, so many lives and families shattered, such immense destruction, such unspeakable suffering!”
Prayer gatherings were taking place in many countries, including Rome, where Cardinal Matteo Zuppi of Bologna will preside over prayer vigil of the Community of Sant’Egidio Feb. 24 at 8 p.m.
Such gestures, and prayer, Bishop Yazlovetskiy said, matter deeply.
“When we hear that the United States and European countries support us, it gives hope and strengthens people,” he said. “But when someone turns away — even one political statement — the burden of war suddenly becomes much heavier.”
Behind geopolitical debates stand deeply personal stories. The bishop recalled a widowed Catholic mother from his hometown who raised six children alone. Two of her sons have been killed in the war, while a third now fights at the front.
“Despite everything, she continues to come to church,” he said. “She writes poetry through her pain. People call her ‘a mother who cries in poems.’ Saints do not look at us only from icons — they live among us.”
Prayer in Ukraine today however reflects exhaustion more than triumph.
“People pray for a just peace, for soldiers, prisoners, the wounded and the dead,” the bishop said. “No one prays for victory. Ukrainians pray for peace — again and again, peace.”
For Bishop Yazlovetskiy, faith has not eliminated fear but has made endurance possible.
“God never shows us the entire length of the thorny road,” he told OSV News. “He lights only a few steps ahead, like a flashlight in the darkness. If people had known four years ago how long this war would last, despair would have been unbearable.”
Still, he insists hope remains stronger than despair.
“We believe love is stronger than hatred,” he said. “God is present even where darkness seems to reign. The greatest darkness today is in Ukraine — and we believe God is with us.”
Katarzyna Szalajko writes for OSV News from Warsaw, Poland.

Ukrainian Church transformed by 4 years of war, Kyiv’s bishop says #Catholic – (OSV News) — Four years after Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine, the war has fundamentally reshaped the Catholic Church’s mission — turning parishes into shelters, priests into chaplains and charity into daily survival, Ukrainian bishop and leader of charity efforts told OSV News. “Everything has changed. The country will never again be what it was before Feb. 24, 2022,” Auxiliary Bishop Oleksandr Yazlovetskiy of Kyiv-Zhytomyr, head of Caritas-Spes Ukraine, told OSV News in a conversation marking the anniversary. As Ukraine enters a fifth year of war amid continued missile attacks, mounting casualties and growing international uncertainty about future aid, Church leaders say the conflict has brought the Church back to its most basic identity. “The war revealed the essence of the Church — to be close to those who suffer,” the bishop said. “Not only to preach, but to be present: to listen, to support, to share fear and hope.” Russia’s full-scale invasion triggered Europe’s largest humanitarian crisis since World War II. Click here to subscribe to our weekly newsletter. According to United Nations agencies, some 3.7 million Ukrainians remain internally displaced, while nearly 6.9 million continue to live as refugees across Europe and beyond. Entire communities have been uprooted multiple times as missile and drone attacks repeatedly damage homes, hospitals, schools and energy infrastructure — forcing reconstruction efforts to begin anew even before previous repairs are completed. Nearly four years into the war, humanitarian needs remain massive, with millions still dependent on international aid for basic survival. In that reality, pastoral ministry and humanitarian work have become inseparable. “Since 2022, pastoral care cannot be separated from humanitarian service,” Bishop Yazlovetskiy told OSV News. Caritas organizations in Ukraine — both Roman Catholic Caritas-Spes Ukraine and the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Caritas Ukraine — rapidly evolved from modest social service groups into nationwide emergency networks. “From small organizations of social assistance, Caritas became a powerful structure with centers across the country,” Bishop Yazlovetskiy said, crediting support from Caritas Europe, the global Caritas network and Church and governmental donors from across the globe. “Unfortunately, help is already decreasing, while needs are not,” he said. “Mercy has become an everyday, urgent mission.” The Church’s transformation is visible in moments of crisis. After Russian strikes destroyed parts of Ukraine’s energy system and cities were plunged into cold and darkness, Catholic parishes opened what were called “points of warmth and hope.” “The Church fed people and kept them warm,” the bishop said. War also reshaped relations among Christian communities. Pre-war disputes and competition between churches gave way to cooperation through the Ukrainian Council of Churches and Religious Organizations, representing the vast majority of believers in the country. “The tragedy of war united us,” Kyiv’s bishop said. “All churches returned to their primary mission — helping the vulnerable both in word and in action.” That visible service has changed how Ukrainians perceive the Church. “Where the Church truly helps, trust grows,” Bishop Yazlovetskiy told OSV News. “The witness of love became more convincing than any words.” He pointed especially to military chaplains serving alongside soldiers and in hospitals. Government approval allowing priests to serve officially with military units has brought clergy closer to frontline realities. “In this way, the Church is also with its soldiers,” the bishop said. International solidarity remains essential, particularly assistance from the United States. “American aid is vital — humanitarian and military,” he said. “Americans should know that their support saves lives every day. Without this help, especially military assistance, we will not endure.” Delays in support quickly translate into loss of life, he added. “Every delay in aid is later seen in the growing number of funerals of our soldiers.” At the same time, global spiritual solidarity continues to accompany Ukraine. Catholic communities around the world marked the anniversary with prayer initiatives promoted by the Commission of the Bishops’ Conferences of the European Union, known as COMECE, and the Centesimus Annus Pro Pontifice Foundation, echoing repeated appeals from Pope Leo XIV for peace in Ukraine. “Four years have passed since the beginning of the war against Ukraine,” Pope Leo said during his Angelus prayer Feb. 22. “My heartfelt thoughts remain focused on the tragic situation unfolding before the eyes of the whole world: so many victims, so many lives and families shattered, such immense destruction, such unspeakable suffering!” Prayer gatherings were taking place in many countries, including Rome, where Cardinal Matteo Zuppi of Bologna will preside over prayer vigil of the Community of Sant’Egidio Feb. 24 at 8 p.m. Such gestures, and prayer, Bishop Yazlovetskiy said, matter deeply. “When we hear that the United States and European countries support us, it gives hope and strengthens people,” he said. “But when someone turns away — even one political statement — the burden of war suddenly becomes much heavier.” Behind geopolitical debates stand deeply personal stories. The bishop recalled a widowed Catholic mother from his hometown who raised six children alone. Two of her sons have been killed in the war, while a third now fights at the front. “Despite everything, she continues to come to church,” he said. “She writes poetry through her pain. People call her ‘a mother who cries in poems.’ Saints do not look at us only from icons — they live among us.” Prayer in Ukraine today however reflects exhaustion more than triumph. “People pray for a just peace, for soldiers, prisoners, the wounded and the dead,” the bishop said. “No one prays for victory. Ukrainians pray for peace — again and again, peace.” For Bishop Yazlovetskiy, faith has not eliminated fear but has made endurance possible. “God never shows us the entire length of the thorny road,” he told OSV News. “He lights only a few steps ahead, like a flashlight in the darkness. If people had known four years ago how long this war would last, despair would have been unbearable.” Still, he insists hope remains stronger than despair. “We believe love is stronger than hatred,” he said. “God is present even where darkness seems to reign. The greatest darkness today is in Ukraine — and we believe God is with us.” Katarzyna Szalajko writes for OSV News from Warsaw, Poland.

Ukrainian Church transformed by 4 years of war, Kyiv’s bishop says #Catholic –

(OSV News) — Four years after Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine, the war has fundamentally reshaped the Catholic Church’s mission — turning parishes into shelters, priests into chaplains and charity into daily survival, Ukrainian bishop and leader of charity efforts told OSV News.

“Everything has changed. The country will never again be what it was before Feb. 24, 2022,” Auxiliary Bishop Oleksandr Yazlovetskiy of Kyiv-Zhytomyr, head of Caritas-Spes Ukraine, told OSV News in a conversation marking the anniversary.

As Ukraine enters a fifth year of war amid continued missile attacks, mounting casualties and growing international uncertainty about future aid, Church leaders say the conflict has brought the Church back to its most basic identity.

“The war revealed the essence of the Church — to be close to those who suffer,” the bishop said. “Not only to preach, but to be present: to listen, to support, to share fear and hope.”

Russia’s full-scale invasion triggered Europe’s largest humanitarian crisis since World War II.


Click here to subscribe to our weekly newsletter.

According to United Nations agencies, some 3.7 million Ukrainians remain internally displaced, while nearly 6.9 million continue to live as refugees across Europe and beyond. Entire communities have been uprooted multiple times as missile and drone attacks repeatedly damage homes, hospitals, schools and energy infrastructure — forcing reconstruction efforts to begin anew even before previous repairs are completed.

Nearly four years into the war, humanitarian needs remain massive, with millions still dependent on international aid for basic survival.

In that reality, pastoral ministry and humanitarian work have become inseparable.

“Since 2022, pastoral care cannot be separated from humanitarian service,” Bishop Yazlovetskiy told OSV News. Caritas organizations in Ukraine — both Roman Catholic Caritas-Spes Ukraine and the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Caritas Ukraine — rapidly evolved from modest social service groups into nationwide emergency networks.

“From small organizations of social assistance, Caritas became a powerful structure with centers across the country,” Bishop Yazlovetskiy said, crediting support from Caritas Europe, the global Caritas network and Church and governmental donors from across the globe.

“Unfortunately, help is already decreasing, while needs are not,” he said. “Mercy has become an everyday, urgent mission.”

The Church’s transformation is visible in moments of crisis. After Russian strikes destroyed parts of Ukraine’s energy system and cities were plunged into cold and darkness, Catholic parishes opened what were called “points of warmth and hope.”

“The Church fed people and kept them warm,” the bishop said.

War also reshaped relations among Christian communities. Pre-war disputes and competition between churches gave way to cooperation through the Ukrainian Council of Churches and Religious Organizations, representing the vast majority of believers in the country.

“The tragedy of war united us,” Kyiv’s bishop said. “All churches returned to their primary mission — helping the vulnerable both in word and in action.”

That visible service has changed how Ukrainians perceive the Church.

“Where the Church truly helps, trust grows,” Bishop Yazlovetskiy told OSV News. “The witness of love became more convincing than any words.”

He pointed especially to military chaplains serving alongside soldiers and in hospitals. Government approval allowing priests to serve officially with military units has brought clergy closer to frontline realities.

“In this way, the Church is also with its soldiers,” the bishop said.

International solidarity remains essential, particularly assistance from the United States.

“American aid is vital — humanitarian and military,” he said. “Americans should know that their support saves lives every day. Without this help, especially military assistance, we will not endure.” Delays in support quickly translate into loss of life, he added. “Every delay in aid is later seen in the growing number of funerals of our soldiers.”

At the same time, global spiritual solidarity continues to accompany Ukraine.

Catholic communities around the world marked the anniversary with prayer initiatives promoted by the Commission of the Bishops’ Conferences of the European Union, known as COMECE, and the Centesimus Annus Pro Pontifice Foundation, echoing repeated appeals from Pope Leo XIV for peace in Ukraine.

“Four years have passed since the beginning of the war against Ukraine,” Pope Leo said during his Angelus prayer Feb. 22. “My heartfelt thoughts remain focused on the tragic situation unfolding before the eyes of the whole world: so many victims, so many lives and families shattered, such immense destruction, such unspeakable suffering!”

Prayer gatherings were taking place in many countries, including Rome, where Cardinal Matteo Zuppi of Bologna will preside over prayer vigil of the Community of Sant’Egidio Feb. 24 at 8 p.m.

Such gestures, and prayer, Bishop Yazlovetskiy said, matter deeply.

“When we hear that the United States and European countries support us, it gives hope and strengthens people,” he said. “But when someone turns away — even one political statement — the burden of war suddenly becomes much heavier.”

Behind geopolitical debates stand deeply personal stories. The bishop recalled a widowed Catholic mother from his hometown who raised six children alone. Two of her sons have been killed in the war, while a third now fights at the front.

“Despite everything, she continues to come to church,” he said. “She writes poetry through her pain. People call her ‘a mother who cries in poems.’ Saints do not look at us only from icons — they live among us.”

Prayer in Ukraine today however reflects exhaustion more than triumph.

“People pray for a just peace, for soldiers, prisoners, the wounded and the dead,” the bishop said. “No one prays for victory. Ukrainians pray for peace — again and again, peace.”

For Bishop Yazlovetskiy, faith has not eliminated fear but has made endurance possible.

“God never shows us the entire length of the thorny road,” he told OSV News. “He lights only a few steps ahead, like a flashlight in the darkness. If people had known four years ago how long this war would last, despair would have been unbearable.”

Still, he insists hope remains stronger than despair.

“We believe love is stronger than hatred,” he said. “God is present even where darkness seems to reign. The greatest darkness today is in Ukraine — and we believe God is with us.”

Katarzyna Szalajko writes for OSV News from Warsaw, Poland.

(OSV News) — Four years after Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine, the war has fundamentally reshaped the Catholic Church’s mission — turning parishes into shelters, priests into chaplains and charity into daily survival, Ukrainian bishop and leader of charity efforts told OSV News. “Everything has changed. The country will never again be what it was before Feb. 24, 2022,” Auxiliary Bishop Oleksandr Yazlovetskiy of Kyiv-Zhytomyr, head of Caritas-Spes Ukraine, told OSV News in a conversation marking the anniversary. As Ukraine enters a fifth year of war amid continued missile attacks, mounting casualties and growing international uncertainty about future

Read More
Obispos: El pueblo ucraniano ‘resiste, confía y reza’ mientras se cumplen cuatro años de la invasión a gran escala de Rusia #Catholic – FILADELFIA (OSV News) — En el cuarto aniversario de la invasión a gran escala de Ucrania por parte de Rusia, los obispos católicos ucranianos de Estados Unidos afirmaron que “el pueblo de Dios resiste, confía y reza” a pesar de las “innumerables muertes y millones de víctimas” que ha causado el brutal conflicto en 12 años de guerra.
Los obispos, encabezados por el arzobispo metropolitano Borys A. Gudziak, de la Arquidiócesis Católica Ucraniana de Filadelfia (o Archieparquía de Filadelfia), emitieron un comunicado un día antes del aniversario de la invasión rusa del 24 de febrero de 2022, al tiempo que recordaban que la guerra comenzó con los ataques respaldados por Rusia contra el país en 2014.
En su comunicado, los obispos afirmaron que “la intención genocida es manifiesta”, ya que Rusia ha bombardeado regularmente la red energética de Ucrania, dejando a millones de personas sin calefacción ni electricidad durante días, en medio de un invierno que ha sido “el más duro en años”.
El frío intenso, con temperaturas muy por debajo de cero de forma sostenida, “se ha explotado deliberadamente para quebrantar el espíritu de una nación… que defiende la libertad, la justicia, la democracia y la dignidad humana otorgada por Dios”.
“Es una guerra contra el pueblo”, afirmaron los obispos.
Destacaron que “Rusia ha atacado sistemáticamente la infraestructura social y espiritual de Ucrania”, señalando “al menos 2.881 ataques” contra centros y personal sanitario en todo el país.

Para suscribirse a nuestro boletín electrónico semanal, haga click aquí.

Más de 4.000 instituciones educativas han sufrido daños y 408 han sido destruidas, afirmaron los obispos, señalando que los ataques de Rusia contra las escuelas ucranianas –que han obligado a los niños a trasladarse a aulas subterráneas o a renunciar por completo a la educación– afectan a “millones de niños”, una cifra que las Naciones Unidas han estimado recientemente en unos 4,6 millones.
Rusia también ha puesto en su punto de mira a las comunidades religiosas de Ucrania, según los obispos, que explicaron que la Iglesia católica y otros cristianos no afiliados a la Iglesia ortodoxa rusa han sido sistemáticamente perseguidos bajo la ocupación rusa.
“Más de 600 iglesias y lugares de culto, que representan a diversas confesiones, han sido dañados o arrasados”, afirmaron, señalando que “los prisioneros civiles, incluido el clero, son torturados sin piedad”.
En marzo de 2024, la Iglesia Ortodoxa Rusa declaró la guerra de Rusia contra Ucrania como una “guerra santa”. El patriarca Kirill, jefe de dicha iglesia, dijo a los creyentes en un sermón de septiembre de 2022 que los militares rusos muertos en Ucrania verán “todos sus pecados” lavados por su muerte.
Las autoridades rusas de la región ocupada de Zaporizhzhia “prohibieron” formalmente la Iglesia greco-católica ucraniana (conocida como UGCC, por sus siglas en inglés), los Caballeros de Colón y Cáritas.
Dos sacerdotes redentoristas de la UGCC, el padre Ivan Levitsky y el padre Bohdan Geleta, fueron secuestrados a finales de 2022 y sometidos a tortura mientras permanecieron bajo custodia rusa durante unos 18 meses antes de su liberación, negociada por el Vaticano.
Múltiples informes de derechos humanos han documentado que la tortura –incluidas palizas, mutilaciones y quemaduras– y la ejecución son prácticas habituales y sistemáticas en medio del cautiverio ruso.
Los obispos subrayaron estos hechos para destacar cómo los ucranianos “se enfrentan y luchan contra el mal y la tiranía para vivir y dar testimonio de la verdad” a un costo enorme.
“A pesar de todo”, dijeron los obispos, los ucranianos “viven con gratitud. En primer lugar, hacia Dios. Y hacia todas las personas que les ayudan”.
“Agradecen a los estadounidenses y a todas las personas de buena voluntad de todo el mundo sus oraciones”, dijeron los obispos. “Las oraciones mueven montañas”.
Además, los ucranianos “están agradecidos a todos los que se mantienen informados, que contrarrestan la desinformación y que abogan por la justicia, una paz verdaderamente justa”, dijeron los obispos.
Concluyeron: “En su nombre, les pedimos que continúen hasta que prevalezca la verdad de Dios. Lo hará. Nuestra fe y nuestra esperanza están en el Señor”.
Gina Christian es reportera multimedia de OSV News. Síguela en X @GinaJesseReina.
 

Obispos: El pueblo ucraniano ‘resiste, confía y reza’ mientras se cumplen cuatro años de la invasión a gran escala de Rusia #Catholic – FILADELFIA (OSV News) — En el cuarto aniversario de la invasión a gran escala de Ucrania por parte de Rusia, los obispos católicos ucranianos de Estados Unidos afirmaron que “el pueblo de Dios resiste, confía y reza” a pesar de las “innumerables muertes y millones de víctimas” que ha causado el brutal conflicto en 12 años de guerra. Los obispos, encabezados por el arzobispo metropolitano Borys A. Gudziak, de la Arquidiócesis Católica Ucraniana de Filadelfia (o Archieparquía de Filadelfia), emitieron un comunicado un día antes del aniversario de la invasión rusa del 24 de febrero de 2022, al tiempo que recordaban que la guerra comenzó con los ataques respaldados por Rusia contra el país en 2014. En su comunicado, los obispos afirmaron que “la intención genocida es manifiesta”, ya que Rusia ha bombardeado regularmente la red energética de Ucrania, dejando a millones de personas sin calefacción ni electricidad durante días, en medio de un invierno que ha sido “el más duro en años”. El frío intenso, con temperaturas muy por debajo de cero de forma sostenida, “se ha explotado deliberadamente para quebrantar el espíritu de una nación… que defiende la libertad, la justicia, la democracia y la dignidad humana otorgada por Dios”. “Es una guerra contra el pueblo”, afirmaron los obispos. Destacaron que “Rusia ha atacado sistemáticamente la infraestructura social y espiritual de Ucrania”, señalando “al menos 2.881 ataques” contra centros y personal sanitario en todo el país. Para suscribirse a nuestro boletín electrónico semanal, haga click aquí. Más de 4.000 instituciones educativas han sufrido daños y 408 han sido destruidas, afirmaron los obispos, señalando que los ataques de Rusia contra las escuelas ucranianas –que han obligado a los niños a trasladarse a aulas subterráneas o a renunciar por completo a la educación– afectan a “millones de niños”, una cifra que las Naciones Unidas han estimado recientemente en unos 4,6 millones. Rusia también ha puesto en su punto de mira a las comunidades religiosas de Ucrania, según los obispos, que explicaron que la Iglesia católica y otros cristianos no afiliados a la Iglesia ortodoxa rusa han sido sistemáticamente perseguidos bajo la ocupación rusa. “Más de 600 iglesias y lugares de culto, que representan a diversas confesiones, han sido dañados o arrasados”, afirmaron, señalando que “los prisioneros civiles, incluido el clero, son torturados sin piedad”. En marzo de 2024, la Iglesia Ortodoxa Rusa declaró la guerra de Rusia contra Ucrania como una “guerra santa”. El patriarca Kirill, jefe de dicha iglesia, dijo a los creyentes en un sermón de septiembre de 2022 que los militares rusos muertos en Ucrania verán “todos sus pecados” lavados por su muerte. Las autoridades rusas de la región ocupada de Zaporizhzhia “prohibieron” formalmente la Iglesia greco-católica ucraniana (conocida como UGCC, por sus siglas en inglés), los Caballeros de Colón y Cáritas. Dos sacerdotes redentoristas de la UGCC, el padre Ivan Levitsky y el padre Bohdan Geleta, fueron secuestrados a finales de 2022 y sometidos a tortura mientras permanecieron bajo custodia rusa durante unos 18 meses antes de su liberación, negociada por el Vaticano. Múltiples informes de derechos humanos han documentado que la tortura –incluidas palizas, mutilaciones y quemaduras– y la ejecución son prácticas habituales y sistemáticas en medio del cautiverio ruso. Los obispos subrayaron estos hechos para destacar cómo los ucranianos “se enfrentan y luchan contra el mal y la tiranía para vivir y dar testimonio de la verdad” a un costo enorme. “A pesar de todo”, dijeron los obispos, los ucranianos “viven con gratitud. En primer lugar, hacia Dios. Y hacia todas las personas que les ayudan”. “Agradecen a los estadounidenses y a todas las personas de buena voluntad de todo el mundo sus oraciones”, dijeron los obispos. “Las oraciones mueven montañas”. Además, los ucranianos “están agradecidos a todos los que se mantienen informados, que contrarrestan la desinformación y que abogan por la justicia, una paz verdaderamente justa”, dijeron los obispos. Concluyeron: “En su nombre, les pedimos que continúen hasta que prevalezca la verdad de Dios. Lo hará. Nuestra fe y nuestra esperanza están en el Señor”. Gina Christian es reportera multimedia de OSV News. Síguela en X @GinaJesseReina.  

Obispos: El pueblo ucraniano ‘resiste, confía y reza’ mientras se cumplen cuatro años de la invasión a gran escala de Rusia #Catholic –

FILADELFIA (OSV News) — En el cuarto aniversario de la invasión a gran escala de Ucrania por parte de Rusia, los obispos católicos ucranianos de Estados Unidos afirmaron que “el pueblo de Dios resiste, confía y reza” a pesar de las “innumerables muertes y millones de víctimas” que ha causado el brutal conflicto en 12 años de guerra.

Los obispos, encabezados por el arzobispo metropolitano Borys A. Gudziak, de la Arquidiócesis Católica Ucraniana de Filadelfia (o Archieparquía de Filadelfia), emitieron un comunicado un día antes del aniversario de la invasión rusa del 24 de febrero de 2022, al tiempo que recordaban que la guerra comenzó con los ataques respaldados por Rusia contra el país en 2014.

En su comunicado, los obispos afirmaron que “la intención genocida es manifiesta”, ya que Rusia ha bombardeado regularmente la red energética de Ucrania, dejando a millones de personas sin calefacción ni electricidad durante días, en medio de un invierno que ha sido “el más duro en años”.

El frío intenso, con temperaturas muy por debajo de cero de forma sostenida, “se ha explotado deliberadamente para quebrantar el espíritu de una nación… que defiende la libertad, la justicia, la democracia y la dignidad humana otorgada por Dios”.
“Es una guerra contra el pueblo”, afirmaron los obispos.

Destacaron que “Rusia ha atacado sistemáticamente la infraestructura social y espiritual de Ucrania”, señalando “al menos 2.881 ataques” contra centros y personal sanitario en todo el país.


Para suscribirse a nuestro boletín electrónico semanal, haga click aquí.

Más de 4.000 instituciones educativas han sufrido daños y 408 han sido destruidas, afirmaron los obispos, señalando que los ataques de Rusia contra las escuelas ucranianas –que han obligado a los niños a trasladarse a aulas subterráneas o a renunciar por completo a la educación– afectan a “millones de niños”, una cifra que las Naciones Unidas han estimado recientemente en unos 4,6 millones.

Rusia también ha puesto en su punto de mira a las comunidades religiosas de Ucrania, según los obispos, que explicaron que la Iglesia católica y otros cristianos no afiliados a la Iglesia ortodoxa rusa han sido sistemáticamente perseguidos bajo la ocupación rusa.

“Más de 600 iglesias y lugares de culto, que representan a diversas confesiones, han sido dañados o arrasados”, afirmaron, señalando que “los prisioneros civiles, incluido el clero, son torturados sin piedad”.

En marzo de 2024, la Iglesia Ortodoxa Rusa declaró la guerra de Rusia contra Ucrania como una “guerra santa”. El patriarca Kirill, jefe de dicha iglesia, dijo a los creyentes en un sermón de septiembre de 2022 que los militares rusos muertos en Ucrania verán “todos sus pecados” lavados por su muerte.

Las autoridades rusas de la región ocupada de Zaporizhzhia “prohibieron” formalmente la Iglesia greco-católica ucraniana (conocida como UGCC, por sus siglas en inglés), los Caballeros de Colón y Cáritas.

Dos sacerdotes redentoristas de la UGCC, el padre Ivan Levitsky y el padre Bohdan Geleta, fueron secuestrados a finales de 2022 y sometidos a tortura mientras permanecieron bajo custodia rusa durante unos 18 meses antes de su liberación, negociada por el Vaticano.

Múltiples informes de derechos humanos han documentado que la tortura –incluidas palizas, mutilaciones y quemaduras– y la ejecución son prácticas habituales y sistemáticas en medio del cautiverio ruso.

Los obispos subrayaron estos hechos para destacar cómo los ucranianos “se enfrentan y luchan contra el mal y la tiranía para vivir y dar testimonio de la verdad” a un costo enorme.

“A pesar de todo”, dijeron los obispos, los ucranianos “viven con gratitud. En primer lugar, hacia Dios. Y hacia todas las personas que les ayudan”.

“Agradecen a los estadounidenses y a todas las personas de buena voluntad de todo el mundo sus oraciones”, dijeron los obispos. “Las oraciones mueven montañas”.

Además, los ucranianos “están agradecidos a todos los que se mantienen informados, que contrarrestan la desinformación y que abogan por la justicia, una paz verdaderamente justa”, dijeron los obispos.

Concluyeron: “En su nombre, les pedimos que continúen hasta que prevalezca la verdad de Dios. Lo hará. Nuestra fe y nuestra esperanza están en el Señor”.

Gina Christian es reportera multimedia de OSV News. Síguela en X @GinaJesseReina.

 

FILADELFIA (OSV News) — En el cuarto aniversario de la invasión a gran escala de Ucrania por parte de Rusia, los obispos católicos ucranianos de Estados Unidos afirmaron que “el pueblo de Dios resiste, confía y reza” a pesar de las “innumerables muertes y millones de víctimas” que ha causado el brutal conflicto en 12 años de guerra. Los obispos, encabezados por el arzobispo metropolitano Borys A. Gudziak, de la Arquidiócesis Católica Ucraniana de Filadelfia (o Archieparquía de Filadelfia), emitieron un comunicado un día antes del aniversario de la invasión rusa del 24 de febrero de 2022, al tiempo que

Read More

Born Feb. 26, 1842, in France, Camille Flammarion started early on what would be a long literary and scientific career: At only 16 years old, he wrote a 500-page tome entitled Cosmologie Universelle. The same year, Flammarion obtained a position as an assistant at the Paris Observatory and after a five-year break in his careerContinue reading “Feb. 26, 1842: The birth of Camille Flammarion”

The post Feb. 26, 1842: The birth of Camille Flammarion appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

Read More
Making an Entrance – NASA astronaut and SpaceX Crew-12 Pilot Jack Hathaway enters the International Space Station after docking aboard the Dragon spacecraft to join Expedition 74 and begin a long-duration microgravity research mission.

NASA astronaut and SpaceX Crew-12 Pilot Jack Hathaway enters the International Space Station after docking aboard the Dragon spacecraft to join Expedition 74 and begin a long-duration microgravity research mission.

Read More
Huh? Kamala Harris Responds to Trump’s State of the Union: “Full of lies… Reminds Me of Our Kids Going to Show and Tell at School” (VIDEO) – 
Kamala Harris reacted to President Trump’s State of the Union Address on Wednesday, calling it “full of lies” and comparing it to a child’s show-and-tell.   During an interview with left-wing podcaster Aaron Parnas, Harris bizarrely said Trump’s speech reminded her of “kids going to show and tell at school.” “It was nothing that was true about, really, how the American people right now, so many are suffering under the weight of high prices, unaffordable health care, and affordable housing,” Harris continued.
The post Huh? Kamala Harris Responds to Trump’s State of the Union: “Full of lies… Reminds Me of Our Kids Going to Show and Tell at School” (VIDEO) appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.

Close-up of a woman with medium-length brown hair speaking passionately in front of a dark background, conveying a serious message.

Close-up of a woman with medium-length brown hair speaking passionately in front of a dark background, conveying a serious message.

Kamala Harris reacted to President Trump’s State of the Union Address on Wednesday, calling it “full of lies” and comparing it to a child’s show-and-tell.   During an interview with left-wing podcaster Aaron Parnas, Harris bizarrely said Trump’s speech reminded her of “kids going to show and tell at school.” “It was nothing that was true about, really, how the American people right now, so many are suffering under the weight of high prices, unaffordable health care, and affordable housing,” Harris continued.

The post Huh? Kamala Harris Responds to Trump’s State of the Union: “Full of lies… Reminds Me of Our Kids Going to Show and Tell at School” (VIDEO) appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.

Read More
Trinitarian Brother David Sommer, 80 #Catholic – A Mass of Christian Burial was held on Feb. 25 at the Shrine of St. Joseph in the Stirling neighborhood of Long Hill Township, N.J., for Trinitarian Brother David Sommer, who died on Feb. 21. He was 80.
A faithful servant of Christ, Brother Sommer spent more than 50 years living his vocation with humility, dedication, and joy as a member of the Missionary Servants of the Most Holy Trinity, who operate the Shrine of St. Joseph. They are also known as Trinitarians.
Brother Sommer professed his perpetual vows as a brother of the Missionary Servants in 1971. He faithfully embraced his call to religious life and missionary service. His life was marked by quiet generosity, steadfast prayer, deep devotion to the Eucharist, and a joyful dedication to God’s people.
Over the years, Brother Sommer’s missionary service took him to Native American communities, into the mountains of Appalachia, and to the John XXIII Center in Alabama, where he helped provide food and support to families in need. He served with compassionate care, reflecting the love of Christ in both word and action.
Most recently, Brother Sommer served at the Shrine of St. Joseph, where he made each person feel seen, heard, and valued. Those who encountered him experienced his kindness, attentive listening, and sincere love for the Lord.

Click here to subscribe to our weekly newsletter.

 

Trinitarian Brother David Sommer, 80 #Catholic –

A Mass of Christian Burial was held on Feb. 25 at the Shrine of St. Joseph in the Stirling neighborhood of Long Hill Township, N.J., for Trinitarian Brother David Sommer, who died on Feb. 21. He was 80.

A faithful servant of Christ, Brother Sommer spent more than 50 years living his vocation with humility, dedication, and joy as a member of the Missionary Servants of the Most Holy Trinity, who operate the Shrine of St. Joseph. They are also known as Trinitarians.

Brother Sommer professed his perpetual vows as a brother of the Missionary Servants in 1971. He faithfully embraced his call to religious life and missionary service. His life was marked by quiet generosity, steadfast prayer, deep devotion to the Eucharist, and a joyful dedication to God’s people.

Over the years, Brother Sommer’s missionary service took him to Native American communities, into the mountains of Appalachia, and to the John XXIII Center in Alabama, where he helped provide food and support to families in need. He served with compassionate care, reflecting the love of Christ in both word and action.

Most recently, Brother Sommer served at the Shrine of St. Joseph, where he made each person feel seen, heard, and valued. Those who encountered him experienced his kindness, attentive listening, and sincere love for the Lord.


Click here to subscribe to our weekly newsletter.

 

A Mass of Christian Burial was held on Feb. 25 at the Shrine of St. Joseph in the Stirling neighborhood of Long Hill Township, N.J., for Trinitarian Brother David Sommer, who died on Feb. 21. He was 80. A faithful servant of Christ, Brother Sommer spent more than 50 years living his vocation with humility, dedication, and joy as a member of the Missionary Servants of the Most Holy Trinity, who operate the Shrine of St. Joseph. They are also known as Trinitarians. Brother Sommer professed his perpetual vows as a brother of the Missionary Servants in 1971. He faithfully

Read More
Pope John Zero Robotics place fourth in World Finals #Catholic – The Zero Robotics Team Kühlschrank of Pope John XXIII Regional High School from Sparta, N.J., placed fourth in the world finals competition at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in Cambridge, Mass., on Feb. 21.
Ninety-one teams from 17 countries applied to participate in the zero-gravity programming competition sponsored by MIT and NASA. The program centers on small robotic satellites called Astrobees aboard the International Space Station, which can be programmed to perform tasks in microgravity.
According to the official Zero Robotics website, the competing teams of high school students must “Write code to control satellite speed, rotation, and direction” and “navigate obstacles, collect virtual objects, and manage resources like fuel and power.” Then MIT will “Test strategies in a simulation environment that mimics real satellites,” as successful teams “advance through virtual rounds to earn a spot in the finals.” Finally, the code of the finalist alliances is run head-to-head using drones to determine which solutions are most effective, and declare a winner.

Click here to subscribe to our weekly newsletter.

The purpose of this year’s competition was to simulate greenhouse farming in space using the Astrobees. It is an initiative NASA is exploring to enable astronauts to have access to fresh produce in the harsh conditions of space.
Using carefully crafted strategy and programming, Team Kühlschrank planted, watered, and harvested crops within a 4-minute window, optimizing resource use and meeting time constraints for the best possible outcome. It successfully harvested more produce and earned more points than most of the competing teams, earning its place in the semi-finals. They were then defeated by the second-place alliance, finishing fourth.
“I am extremely proud of the team’s hard work and dedication that they showed throughout the competition,” said Joseph Giovannone, coach of Pope John Zero Robotics and head of the Pope John math department. “Many of the students were new to Zero Robotics this year, but their ability and willingness to work together to strategize and solve a challenging problem contributed greatly to their success. I am very excited to see what the team is capable of next year now that they have had this valuable experience.”
Team Kühlschrank was established in 2011, in the early years of Pope John’s Zero Robotics program, and has had success in competition finals many times since.
The 2026 team is comprised of 8th-12th-grade students. Assisting Giovannone are alum team members Suraj Bose, Evan Rizzo, and Michael Pacholarz.
Team Kühlschrank members are Mia Rizzo, Ak Burke, John Lubchansky, Maci Gnecco, Artem Taylor, Rylan Chintada, Diana Renninger, Chance Cosenza-Schaming, Adrian Oozeerally, William Franco, and Matthew Gazzillo.

Pope John Zero Robotics place fourth in World Finals #Catholic – The Zero Robotics Team Kühlschrank of Pope John XXIII Regional High School from Sparta, N.J., placed fourth in the world finals competition at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in Cambridge, Mass., on Feb. 21. Ninety-one teams from 17 countries applied to participate in the zero-gravity programming competition sponsored by MIT and NASA. The program centers on small robotic satellites called Astrobees aboard the International Space Station, which can be programmed to perform tasks in microgravity. According to the official Zero Robotics website, the competing teams of high school students must “Write code to control satellite speed, rotation, and direction” and “navigate obstacles, collect virtual objects, and manage resources like fuel and power.” Then MIT will “Test strategies in a simulation environment that mimics real satellites,” as successful teams “advance through virtual rounds to earn a spot in the finals.” Finally, the code of the finalist alliances is run head-to-head using drones to determine which solutions are most effective, and declare a winner. Click here to subscribe to our weekly newsletter. The purpose of this year’s competition was to simulate greenhouse farming in space using the Astrobees. It is an initiative NASA is exploring to enable astronauts to have access to fresh produce in the harsh conditions of space. Using carefully crafted strategy and programming, Team Kühlschrank planted, watered, and harvested crops within a 4-minute window, optimizing resource use and meeting time constraints for the best possible outcome. It successfully harvested more produce and earned more points than most of the competing teams, earning its place in the semi-finals. They were then defeated by the second-place alliance, finishing fourth. “I am extremely proud of the team’s hard work and dedication that they showed throughout the competition,” said Joseph Giovannone, coach of Pope John Zero Robotics and head of the Pope John math department. “Many of the students were new to Zero Robotics this year, but their ability and willingness to work together to strategize and solve a challenging problem contributed greatly to their success. I am very excited to see what the team is capable of next year now that they have had this valuable experience.” Team Kühlschrank was established in 2011, in the early years of Pope John’s Zero Robotics program, and has had success in competition finals many times since. The 2026 team is comprised of 8th-12th-grade students. Assisting Giovannone are alum team members Suraj Bose, Evan Rizzo, and Michael Pacholarz. Team Kühlschrank members are Mia Rizzo, Ak Burke, John Lubchansky, Maci Gnecco, Artem Taylor, Rylan Chintada, Diana Renninger, Chance Cosenza-Schaming, Adrian Oozeerally, William Franco, and Matthew Gazzillo.

Pope John Zero Robotics place fourth in World Finals #Catholic –

The Zero Robotics Team Kühlschrank of Pope John XXIII Regional High School from Sparta, N.J., placed fourth in the world finals competition at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in Cambridge, Mass., on Feb. 21.

Ninety-one teams from 17 countries applied to participate in the zero-gravity programming competition sponsored by MIT and NASA. The program centers on small robotic satellites called Astrobees aboard the International Space Station, which can be programmed to perform tasks in microgravity.

According to the official Zero Robotics website, the competing teams of high school students must “Write code to control satellite speed, rotation, and direction” and “navigate obstacles, collect virtual objects, and manage resources like fuel and power.” Then MIT will “Test strategies in a simulation environment that mimics real satellites,” as successful teams “advance through virtual rounds to earn a spot in the finals.” Finally, the code of the finalist alliances is run head-to-head using drones to determine which solutions are most effective, and declare a winner.


Click here to subscribe to our weekly newsletter.

The purpose of this year’s competition was to simulate greenhouse farming in space using the Astrobees. It is an initiative NASA is exploring to enable astronauts to have access to fresh produce in the harsh conditions of space.

Using carefully crafted strategy and programming, Team Kühlschrank planted, watered, and harvested crops within a 4-minute window, optimizing resource use and meeting time constraints for the best possible outcome. It successfully harvested more produce and earned more points than most of the competing teams, earning its place in the semi-finals. They were then defeated by the second-place alliance, finishing fourth.

“I am extremely proud of the team’s hard work and dedication that they showed throughout the competition,” said Joseph Giovannone, coach of Pope John Zero Robotics and head of the Pope John math department. “Many of the students were new to Zero Robotics this year, but their ability and willingness to work together to strategize and solve a challenging problem contributed greatly to their success. I am very excited to see what the team is capable of next year now that they have had this valuable experience.”

Team Kühlschrank was established in 2011, in the early years of Pope John’s Zero Robotics program, and has had success in competition finals many times since.

The 2026 team is comprised of 8th-12th-grade students. Assisting Giovannone are alum team members Suraj Bose, Evan Rizzo, and Michael Pacholarz.

Team Kühlschrank members are Mia Rizzo, Ak Burke, John Lubchansky, Maci Gnecco, Artem Taylor, Rylan Chintada, Diana Renninger, Chance Cosenza-Schaming, Adrian Oozeerally, William Franco, and Matthew Gazzillo.

The Zero Robotics Team Kühlschrank of Pope John XXIII Regional High School from Sparta, N.J., placed fourth in the world finals competition at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in Cambridge, Mass., on Feb. 21. Ninety-one teams from 17 countries applied to participate in the zero-gravity programming competition sponsored by MIT and NASA. The program centers on small robotic satellites called Astrobees aboard the International Space Station, which can be programmed to perform tasks in microgravity. According to the official Zero Robotics website, the competing teams of high school students must “Write code to control satellite speed, rotation, and direction”

Read More

Gospel and Word of the Day – 26 February 2026 – A reading from the Book of Esther C:12, 14-16, 23-25 Queen Esther, seized with mortal anguish, had recourse to the LORD. She lay prostrate upon the ground, together with her handmaids, from morning until evening, and said: “God of Abraham, God of Isaac, and God of Jacob, blessed are you. Help me, who am alone and have no help but you, for I am taking my life in my hand. As a child I used to hear from the books of my forefathers that you, O LORD, always free those who are pleasing to you. Now help me, who am alone and have no one but you, O LORD, my God. “And now, come to help me, an orphan. Put in my mouth persuasive words in the presence of the lion and turn his heart to hatred for our enemy, so that he and those who are in league with him may perish. Save us from the hand of our enemies; turn our mourning into gladness and our sorrows into wholeness.”From the Gospel according to Matthew 7:7-12 Jesus said to his disciples: “Ask and it will be given to you; seek and you will find; knock and the door will be opened to you. For everyone who asks, receives; and the one who seeks, finds; and to the one who knocks, the door will be opened. Which one of you would hand his son a stone when he asked for a loaf of bread, or a snake when he asked for a fish? If you then, who are wicked, know how to give good gifts to your children, how much more will your heavenly Father give good things to those who ask him. “Do to others whatever you would have them do to you. This is the law and the prophets.”With these words Jesus makes it understood that God always responds, that no prayer will remain unheard; why? Because He is Father, and does not forget his suffering children. Of course, these affirmations disconcert us, because many of our prayers seem not to obtain any results. How often have we asked and not received — we have all experienced this — how many times have we knocked and found a closed door? Jesus advises us, in those moments, to persist and to not give up. Prayer always transforms reality, always. If things around us do not change, at least we change; our heart changes. Jesus promised the gift of the Holy Spirit to each man and to each woman who prays. We can be certain that God will respond. The only uncertainty is due to time, but let us not doubt that he will respond. Perhaps we will have to persist for our whole life, but he will respond. (…) Henceforth, praying is victory over solitude and desperation. It is like seeing every fragment of creation teeming amid the listlessness of a history whose meaning we sometimes fail to grasp. But it is in motion, it is on a journey, and at the end of every road, what is there at the end of our road? At the end of prayer, at the end of the time in which we are praying, at life’s end: what is there? There is a Father who awaits everything and everyone with arms wide open. Let us look to this Father. (Pope Francis, General Audience, 9 January 2019)

A reading from the Book of Esther
C:12, 14-16, 23-25

Queen Esther, seized with mortal anguish,
had recourse to the LORD.
She lay prostrate upon the ground, together with her handmaids,
from morning until evening, and said:
“God of Abraham, God of Isaac, and God of Jacob, blessed are you.
Help me, who am alone and have no help but you,
for I am taking my life in my hand.
As a child I used to hear from the books of my forefathers
that you, O LORD, always free those who are pleasing to you.
Now help me, who am alone and have no one but you,
O LORD, my God.

“And now, come to help me, an orphan.
Put in my mouth persuasive words in the presence of the lion
and turn his heart to hatred for our enemy,
so that he and those who are in league with him may perish.
Save us from the hand of our enemies;
turn our mourning into gladness
and our sorrows into wholeness.”

From the Gospel according to Matthew
7:7-12

Jesus said to his disciples:
“Ask and it will be given to you;
seek and you will find;
knock and the door will be opened to you.
For everyone who asks, receives; and the one who seeks, finds;
and to the one who knocks, the door will be opened.
Which one of you would hand his son a stone
when he asked for a loaf of bread,
or a snake when he asked for a fish?
If you then, who are wicked,
know how to give good gifts to your children,
how much more will your heavenly Father give good things
to those who ask him.

“Do to others whatever you would have them do to you.
This is the law and the prophets.”

With these words Jesus makes it understood that God always responds, that no prayer will remain unheard; why? Because He is Father, and does not forget his suffering children.

Of course, these affirmations disconcert us, because many of our prayers seem not to obtain any results. How often have we asked and not received — we have all experienced this — how many times have we knocked and found a closed door? Jesus advises us, in those moments, to persist and to not give up. Prayer always transforms reality, always. If things around us do not change, at least we change; our heart changes. Jesus promised the gift of the Holy Spirit to each man and to each woman who prays.

We can be certain that God will respond. The only uncertainty is due to time, but let us not doubt that he will respond. Perhaps we will have to persist for our whole life, but he will respond. (…) Henceforth, praying is victory over solitude and desperation. It is like seeing every fragment of creation teeming amid the listlessness of a history whose meaning we sometimes fail to grasp. But it is in motion, it is on a journey, and at the end of every road, what is there at the end of our road? At the end of prayer, at the end of the time in which we are praying, at life’s end: what is there? There is a Father who awaits everything and everyone with arms wide open. Let us look to this Father. (Pope Francis, General Audience, 9 January 2019)

Read More

The center of the Milky Way is an extreme place. In addition to housing our galaxy’s supermassive black hole, it also contains a 700-light-year-wide region of dense gas called the Central Molecular Zone (CMZ). This CMZ holds nearly 80 percent of all the cold, dense gas in the galaxy — the key ingredient for formingContinue reading “Largest ALMA image ever shows cold gas in our galactic center”

The post Largest ALMA image ever shows cold gas in our galactic center appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

Read More