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Pennsylvania priest placed on administrative leave after confessing cheating

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CNA Staff, Aug 15, 2025 / 13:11 pm (CNA).

A Pennsylvania priest has been placed on administrative leave after he confessed to local prosecutors last month to falsifying the results of a high-level fundraising raffle at his parish.

Father Ross Miceli allegedly “admitted to publicly falsifying the results of the grand prize winner” of a raffle for either a Corvette or a $50,000 cash prize at St. Jude the Apostle Parish in Erie.

In an Aug. 14 statement, the Diocese of Erie told CNA that Miceli will be placed on administrative leave as part of the ongoing investigation into the priest’s actions. Erie Bishop Lawrence Persico has also recommended that St. Jude Parish hire “an independent forensic auditor to review all finances.”

The priest announced his resignation from the parish on the weekend of July 20, though he did not give a reason at the time. The Erie Diocese said last month that Miceli would be heading to St. Timothy Parish in Curwensville starting on Aug. 12, where he would be a “sacramental assistant.”

The diocese also said in its Aug. 14 statement St. Jude’s will “sell the car from the fundraiser back to the dealer, and the parish will attempt to refund all raffle ticket purchases.” 

The Catholic parish hosted the “Winavette” raffle in 2024, allowing buyers to purchase $50 tickets for the chance to win a Stingray 1LT Corvette. The grand-prize winner of the event could take either the car or $50,000 in cash. The raffle was open to players nationwide.

On Dec. 25, 2024, the church announced that “Martin Anderson” of Detroit had won the grand prize. The reported winner “chose the cash option,” the church said.

Yet an employee of the parish allegedly “raised concerns” about the raffle to Persico, according to the warrants, leading the diocese to investigate the contest and eventually contact the county prosecutor’s office.

The priest reportedly “admitted [to the employee] that he fabricated the grand-prize winner’s name,” the Times-News reported, citing the documents. The priest allegedly committed the falsification after “a problem with the raffle system” left the grand prize without a winner.

The priest said the prize money was “still in an account” after the fabrication. Miceli allegedly told the employee that he “needed to keep this secret,” according to prosecutors. Miceli also allegedly fabricated several other winners in the raffle.

Miceli’s confession was reportedly detailed in warrants from the Erie County District Attorney’s Office, according to an Aug. 7 report in the Erie Times-News.

Detectives seized Miceli’s iPad and iPhone as well as financial records for both the parish and the raffle, the Erie paper reported.

Law enforcement handling the case did not respond to a query from CNA on Aug. 7. 

But the diocese told the Times-News that it was aware of the investigation and was “cooperating fully with the appropriate authorities.”

On Facebook the church posted that 2024 was the “last year” the raffle would be held, though they noted that Father John Detisch was operatinga similar raffle at Dubois Central Catholic School in Dubois.

Economics paper suggests Mass decline tied to Vatican II implementation

General view of the Council Fathers in St. Peter’s Basilica on Dec. 8, 1962, at the Vatican, at the end of the first session of the Second Ecumenical Council of the Vatican, or Vatican II. / Credit: AFP via Getty Images

Washington, D.C. Newsroom, Aug 15, 2025 / 12:41 pm (CNA).

An economics paper published last month on religious service attendance trends in 66 countries concluded that the implementation of reforms associated with the Second Vatican Council likely contributed to subsequent Mass attendance declines.

The working paper, “Looking Backward: Long-term Religious Service Attendance in 66 Countries,” was published by the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) on July 21.

NBER economists delved into historical trends for religious service attendance in historically Catholic and historically Protestant countries based on 1,900 religious affiliation statistics.

According to the researchers, attendance rates declined significantly faster in historically Catholic countries than in Protestant ones in the years after Vatican II. The trend began immediately after Vatican II and was not ongoing when the council began in the early 1960s.

Beginning in 1965 and through the 2010s, monthly attendance in Catholic nations decreased by an average of 4 percentage points more than Protestant countries in every decade.

Dismissing the claim that attendance rates only went down due to broader secularizing trends globally, the report asserted: “The decline in attendance is specific to Catholicism, to which Vatican II would directly apply.”

NBER researchers claim that Vatican II and subsequent reforms “profoundly affected Catholic faith and practice” and concluded the council’s implementation “triggered a decline in worldwide Catholic attendance relative to that in other denominations.”

“Compared to other countries, Catholic countries experienced a steady decline in the monthly adult religious service attendance rate starting immediately after Vatican II,” the report found. “The effect is statistically significant.”

Harvard economics professor Robert Barro, one author of the study, told CNA the findings show “a substantial reduction in attendance” in Catholic countries relative to Protestant countries. 

He noted the Catholic decline culminates to “as much as 20 percentage points” worse than the Protestant decline over about four decades.

Barro said “before Vatican II, the Catholic and non-Catholic places behaved in a similar manner.”

He said “there’s nothing before the event” but also noted the study “cannot exclude the possibility that something else that you’re not looking at happened at the same time.”

The NBER report incorporates retrospective questions from the International Social Survey Program (ISSP). These surveys from 1991, 1998, 2008, and 2018 gather data about the past by asking respondents about religious service attendance from their childhoods. These surveys, according to the report, fill in data for years in which there was not polling.

“Nobody before had the long-term data,” Barro said.

What might have impacted the decline in Mass attendance?

Although the report is primarily an economics paper, the researchers cite sociologists who have analyzed the implementation of Vatican II. It contends the findings are consistent with the view that the implementation “shattered the perception of an immovable, truth-holding Church.”

The report cites the late sociologist Father Andrew Greeley’s book “The Catholic Revolution,” which attributed five major changes to the post-Vatican II Church: Mass in the local language, broader ecumenism, looser rules, internal debates on birth control, and more priests seeking laicization.

Harvard economist Rachel McCleary, who is Barro’s wife and has also conducted research on the Church, told CNA she believes the implementation of the council had “a secularizing effect on the Catholic Church, which means that you’re losing your brand.”

“They want something that’s different, that addresses their spiritual needs,” she said, arguing that the implementation of the council “did the reverse; it secularized the religion.”

McCleary argued that the implementation led to some internal strife with some Catholics believing the effects “went too far” and others thinking they “didn’t go far enough.”

Father Paul Sullins, a senior research associate at the Ruth Institute, told CNA there is a distinction between Vatican II itself and the subsequent “social effects of its implementation and reception” of the council.

He warned not to confuse the implementation with “the content or documents of the council proper.”

Sullins said some Church leaders “acted in what they perceived to be ‘the spirit of Vatican II,’ which was often not envisioned or even justified by the council itself.”

Yet disproportionate attendance decline, he noted, is “undeniable and widely documented.” He added: “The Catholic decline is pretty secular (gradual, long-term), so it’s probably responsive to many other cultural factors [as well],” such as disputes about the Church’s ban on contraception. 

“But [the implementation of] Vatican II clearly worked to accommodate the Church to the world, and so contributed to the decline — the differential decline — among Catholics,” Sullins said.

For example, the council itself allowed greater use of the vernacular language but also called for preserving the use of Latin and Gregorian chant in the Mass. The council did not require priests to face the people during Mass as opposed to the traditional “ad orientem” posturing in which the priest faces away from the people. It also did not discourage kneeling while receiving Communion.

Tom Nash, a staff apologist for Catholic Answers, contended the report failed to make a clear distinction between the council itself and “the infamous ‘spirit of Vatican II’” when it comes to certain subjects, such as ecumenism.

“The issue is whether the actual teachings of the council triggered this decline or whether there are other factors involved,” he told CNA.

Although Vatican II avoids using the word “heretic” for Protestants and opts to use “separated brethren,” Nash said “the Church didn’t, in fact, promote religious indifference at the council in its teachings.” He said the term “is painfully but accurately used multiple times … regarding fellow Christians … who are validly baptized.”

Non-Christians, Nash said, “are our brothers and sisters in the sense that we are all made in the image and likeness of God, but we painfully are not yet one Christ.”

Nash cited the council’s dogmatic constitution Lumen Gentium to note Vatican II “reaffirmed the Church’s definitive teaching on papal primacy in governing and teaching, which Our Lord Jesus Christ instituted in founding the Church on the rock of St. Peter.” 

“Vatican II also reaffirmed and elaborated further on the Church’s divinely given power to teach infallibly on faith and morals,” he added.

Nash noted several ways the Church could improve Mass attendance, including an increase in Eucharistic reverence, such as more options for adoration, “promoting kneeling for the reception of holy Communion,” and using patens to “heighten Eucharistic awareness and reverence.” 

He also encouraged parishes to offer confession for five to 10 hours every week.

“When we make sacramental encounters more available with Our Lord Jesus Christ, an increase in Sunday Mass participation will follow accordingly,” Nash said.

San Diego Diocese offers prayerful accompaniment at immigration hearings

Clergy accompany migrants at a courthouse in San Diego. / Credit: Photo courtesy of Father Scott Santarosa

Washington, D.C. Newsroom, Aug 15, 2025 / 11:13 am (CNA).

A new initiative launched by the Catholic Diocese of San Diego and its interfaith partners is offering accompaniment and a spiritual presence for migrants and asylum seekers at their immigration hearings in Southern California.

The program — Faithful Accompaniment in Trust & Hope (FAITH) — was launched on Aug. 4 amid the increasing number of deportations within California and nationwide amid President Donald Trump’s immigration crackdown.

“They’re walking into a whole building and system that’s against them,” Jesuit Father Scott Santarosa, who is leading the FAITH program, told CNA.

FAITH is primarily led by three partners: the diocese, which sits right along the southern border; Our Lady of Guadalupe Catholic Parish in Barrio Logan, which is 15 miles from the border and of which Santarosa is the pastor; and the multifaith San Diego Organizing Project (SDOP).

The program enlists volunteers of several faiths to accompany people before, during, and after immigration court appearances. As of Aug. 14, about 100 people have signed up to volunteer from seven faith groups: Catholics, Episcopalians, Lutherans, Unitarian Universalists, Muslims, members of the United Church of Christ, and members of the Church of the Nazarene.

Santarosa said the main priority is to “be present accompanying migrants to court” and to “be a prayerful presence with them and for them.”

A person who is scheduled to appear at an immigration hearing can sign up to have a volunteer accompany him or her within the courtroom and, if he or she chooses, meet with a volunteer before or after the hearing to pray with or simply speak with the volunteer.

Santarosa said only 10-20 people awaiting hearings have signed up to meet up with volunteers over the last two weeks but added: “I think that number will go up — I hope it does.” He noted that if the volunteer is requested ahead of time, that volunteer will “have a little more standing in the eyes of the court … [and the judge] may allow us to sit in on a migrant’s case.”

At this stage of the program, most of the volunteers are attending in groups and then breaking apart to offer a presence at hearings that are open to the public. Some remain in the hallways, Santarosa noted, because Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) is sometimes “waiting to arrest people whose cases have been dismissed.”

“Even when we don’t know the person … we’ve had people really express a lot of gratitude that we’ve been there,” Santarosa said.

Bishop Michael Pham and the diocesan auxiliary bishops are among the volunteers who have provided accompaniment at the courthouse.

Santarosa said a lot of volunteers speak Spanish and the program also has one volunteer who speaks Vietnamese and another, an imam, who speaks Arabic. He said he also hopes to find volunteers who speak Haitian Creole and others who speak Mandarin Chinese.

He noted that many people appreciate the ability to converse in their native language, noting that on the first day one person awaiting a hearing “didn’t have a lawyer and the imam stood up to talk with him … in one of his native languages and that was a comfort to him.”

Initiative inspired by the Gospel, diocesan incidents

Prior to launching the program, the diocese celebrated a Mass on June 20 for International Refugee Day, after which the bishop, some priests, and others went to the courthouse to offer accompaniment to people awaiting immigration hearings.

The diocese had a sign-up sheet for anyone who would like to volunteer to accompany migrants at the courthouse, which yielded about 100 signatures and ultimately led to the FAITH program.

When asked about the motivation for the initiative, Santarosa said it’s “not enough to just have thoughts and prayers” and that “Jesus expects us to actually take care of [people’s] physical needs.”

“I think there’s a … mandate in that Gospel that we need to put our faith into action,” he added.

Santarosa referenced Matthew 25: “For I was hungry and you gave me food, I was thirsty and you gave me drink, a stranger and you welcomed me,” which Jesus says to his disciples when speaking about those who will inherit the kingdom of heaven.

“Amen, I say to you, whatever you did for one of these least brothers of mine, you did for me,” Jesus Christ says in the Gospel passage.

Santarosa also spoke about specific diocesan needs, noting that two parishioners have been deported within the past six months. He also personally accompanied one of his parishioners to two immigration hearings at her request and helped her get a lawyer to assist with filling out her asylum request paperwork.

Since the San Diego Diocese launched the program, Santarosa said other dioceses have reached out to ask for details about how to implement the program. He encouraged other dioceses to start similar programs, saying: “It’s really not that complicated” and “people of goodwill and the faithful” will volunteer.

“I think it’s a great thing for clerics, for [Church] leaders, and for laypeople to do,” Santarosa said.

At Assumption Mass, Pope Leo XIV urges Catholics to say ‘yes’ to God

Pope Leo XIV celebrates the Mass of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary at the Church of St. Thomas of Villanova in Castel Gandolfo, Friday, Aug. 15, 2025. / Credit: Vatican Media

Rome Newsroom, Aug 15, 2025 / 10:43 am (CNA).

Pope Leo XIV on Thursday presided over the Mass of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary at the Church of St. Thomas of Villanova in Castel Gandolfo, encouraging Catholics to renew the Mother of God’s song of praise — known as the Magnificat — in their own lives.

Approximately 200 people, including Castel Gandolfo Mayor Alberto de Angelis, attended the pope’s solemn Mass held at the pontifical parish to commemorate the Church’s dogma of faith that Mary was assumed, body and soul, into heaven.

Pope Leo XIV celebrates the Mass of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary at the Church of St. Thomas of Villanova in Castel Gandolfo, Friday, Aug. 15, 2025. Credit: Vatican Media
Pope Leo XIV celebrates the Mass of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary at the Church of St. Thomas of Villanova in Castel Gandolfo, Friday, Aug. 15, 2025. Credit: Vatican Media

In his Aug. 15 homily, the Holy Father described Mary’s encounter with her cousin Elizabeth as a “crowning moment of her life” on earth.  

“The Magnificat, which the Gospel places on the lips of the young Mary, now radiates the light of all her days,” he said in his homily.

“One single day,” he continued, “contains the seed of every other day, of every other season.”

Highlighting the enduring significance of Mary in the life of the Church, the pope said her Magnificat, recorded in St. Luke’s Gospel, “continues to be sung in the Church ‘from generation to generation,’ at the close of every day” in the Liturgy of the Hours.

Encouraging Catholic faithful to reflect deeper on Mary’s song of praise expressed at a “decisive moment” in her vocation, the Holy Father encouraged Catholic faithful today to also give their “yes” to God.

Pope Leo XIV greets attendees at the Mass of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary at the Church of St. Thomas of Villanova in Castel Gandolfo, Friday, Aug. 15, 2025. Credit: Vatican Media
Pope Leo XIV greets attendees at the Mass of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary at the Church of St. Thomas of Villanova in Castel Gandolfo, Friday, Aug. 15, 2025. Credit: Vatican Media

“The surprising fruitfulness of barren Elizabeth confirmed Mary in her trust,” he said in his homily. “It anticipated the fruitfulness of her ‘yes,’ which extends to the fruitfulness of the Church and of all humanity whenever God’s renewing Word is welcomed.”

According to Pope Leo, Mary’s Magnificat “strengthens the hope of the humble, the hungry, the faithful servants of God” and is renewed in the Church through the witness of its members.

“Even in our own day, the poor and persecuted Christian communities, the witnesses of tenderness and forgiveness in places of conflict, and the peacemakers and bridge-builders in a broken world, are the joy of the Church,” he said.

“They are her enduring fruitfulness, the firstfruits of the kingdom to come,” he added. “Let us be converted by their witness!”

Pope Leo’s Angelus address in Piazza della Libertà

After praying the midday Angelus prayer with crowds of people gathered in Piazza della Libertà, Pope Leo spoke of the importance to believe, with Mary, that God continues to come to the aid of people in the world.

“Mary, whom the risen Christ carried body and soul into the glory, shines as an icon of hope for her pilgrim children throughout history,” he said.

Pope Leo XIV greets visitors during the Angelus outside the Church of St. Thomas of Villanova in Castel Gandolfo, Friday, Aug. 15, 2025. Credit: Vatican Media
Pope Leo XIV greets visitors during the Angelus outside the Church of St. Thomas of Villanova in Castel Gandolfo, Friday, Aug. 15, 2025. Credit: Vatican Media

Calling people to be pilgrims of hope in the 2025 Jubilee Year, the Holy Father spoke of the need for Christians to realize that life on earth is oriented toward God.

“On the path of life, our goal is God, infinite and eternal love, fullness of life, peace, joy, and every good thing,” he said. “The human heart is drawn to such beauty and it is not happy until it finds it.”

Entrusting the Church’s prayer for peace to the intercession of Mary, Leo told the crowds that Pope Pius XII declared the Marian dogma of the Assumption in 1950, five years after World War II ended.

Pope Leo XIV waves with a young visitor during the Angelus outside the Church of St. Thomas of Villanova in Castel Gandolfo, Friday, Aug. 15, 2025. Credit: Vatican Media
Pope Leo XIV waves with a young visitor during the Angelus outside the Church of St. Thomas of Villanova in Castel Gandolfo, Friday, Aug. 15, 2025. Credit: Vatican Media

“Even today, sadly, we feel powerless before the spread of violence in the world — a violence increasingly deaf and insensitive to any stirring of humanity,” he said. “Yet we must not cease to hope: God is greater than the sin of human beings.”

EWTN to carry Pope Leo XIV’s first-ever digital visit with America’s Catholic youth

The encounter in Indianapolis will feature opening remarks by Pope Leo XIV, youth representatives, and a live Q&A. / Credit: EWTN News

Washington, D.C. Newsroom, Aug 15, 2025 / 06:35 am (CNA).

EWTN Global Catholic Network announced it will serve as the exclusive media partner providing news coverage, broadcast, and digital streaming of Pope Leo XIV’s first-ever digital visit with American Catholic youth during the 2025 National Catholic Youth Conference (NCYC) hosted by the National Federation for Catholic Youth Ministry (NFCYM) on Nov. 21. 

The historic encounter will connect the Holy Father live from the Vatican with thousands of young people gathered in Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis and many more watching online around the world. 

According to the NCYC, the Holy Father is expected to address as many as 15,000 registered young people ages 14-18 from Catholic youth movements across the United States and engage directly with them during a 45-minute live dialogue beginning at 10:15 a.m. ET on Nov. 21.

A select number of young people will be chosen to directly converse with Pope Leo during the session. The NFCYM indicated that details about the selection process will be shared in the coming weeks.

The encounter will take place on the second day of the Nov. 20–22 NCYC, which in addition to the young people will gather Catholic youth ministry leaders, clergy, and volunteers from across the country for three days of prayer, formation, community, and celebration.

Reacting to the announcement, Archbishop Charles Thompson of Indianapolis said: “It’s wonderful to welcome the youth of the United States back to Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis just a year after we had 60,000 Catholics there for the National Eucharistic Congress.” He added that “revival in the United States isn’t something to hope for, it is something that is happening. I am pleased to partner with NFCYM, my brother bishops, and EWTN to facilitate this important digital encounter.”

“From the very beginning, EWTN has been the place where the faithful can gather — across distances and time zones — for the great moments in the life of the Church,” said Michael P. Warsaw, chairman of the board and chief executive officer of EWTN. “As we continue to grow and adapt our media platforms, serving younger audiences has become an essential part of our mission. This historic encounter will not only inspire young people but also invite them more deeply into the heart of the Church,” he noted.

Montse Alvarado, president and COO of EWTN News, added: “At EWTN News, we are committed to covering and supporting events of significance in the global Church. We are especially excited to partner with NCYC, NFCYM, and honored to work with the Holy Father on this unprecedented moment for the young people of the American Church with the first American pope.” 

Today’s announcement, on the solemnity of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary, also coincides with the 44th anniversary of EWTN’s first broadcast.  

“This providential selection reflects EWTN’s long-standing mission to bring the Church’s message to every home and to support young people in encountering Jesus Christ and growing in their faith,” Alvarado said. 

The encounter will feature opening remarks by Pope Leo XIV, youth representatives, a live Q&A, and closing remarks including a blessing. EWTN’s coverage will also include broadcasting additional NCYC programming from Nov. 20–22, providing global audiences with access to prayer, catechesis, formation, and celebration taking place in Indianapolis. 

Philadelphia Archbishop Nelson Pérez, who serves as episcopal adviser to the NFCYM, noted that “the Holy Father’s choice to encounter the American youth in this way is an expression of his closeness to Catholic youth, following in the footsteps of his predecessor Pope Francis who called the youth the ‘now of God.’” 

Echoing Pérez, Warsaw pointed out that “this encounter with Pope Leo XIV will mark an important moment for the youth of America,” adding that “I am thrilled that we can offer EWTN’s services for the 2025 conference and encounter by providing the means by which NCYC, NFCYM, and the Holy Father will have a global vehicle of expression. We look forward to sharing this moment with the world.” 

Visit ncyc.us for more information about the program and how to participate.  

The largest Catholic media organization in the world, EWTN’s 11 global TV channels and numerous regional channels are broadcast in multiple languages 24 hours a day, seven days a week to over 435 million television households in more than 160 countries and territories. EWTN platforms also include radio services transmitted through SIRIUS/XM, iHeart Radio, and over 600 U.S. and international AM & FM radio affiliates; a worldwide shortwave radio service; one of the most visited Catholic websites in the U.S.; as well as EWTN Publishing, its book publishing division.  

Headquartered in Washington, D.C., EWTN News operates multiple global news services, including Catholic News Agency; The National Catholic Register newspaper and digital platform; ACI Prensa in Spanish; ACI Digital in Portuguese; ACI Stampa in Italian; ACI Africa in English, French, and Portuguese; ACI MENA in Arabic; CNA Deutsch in German; and ChurchPop, a digital platform that creates content in several languages. It also produces numerous television news programs including “EWTN News Nightly,” “EWTN Noticias,” “EWTN News In Depth,” “EWTN Pro-Life Weekly,” “The World Over with Raymond Arroyo,” and “Vaticano.”

Israel denies entry to Italian priest over criticism of war in Gaza 

Palestine and Israel border. / Credit: AntonMislawsky/Shutterstock

Washington, D.C. Newsroom, Aug 15, 2025 / 06:00 am (CNA).

Here is a roundup of Catholic world news from the past week that you might have missed:

Israel denies entry to Italian priest over criticism of war in Gaza 

An Italian Catholic priest who has accused Israel of genocide and criticized its ongoing war in Gaza was recently denied entry into the country and sent on a return flight to Greece, according to reports.

Father Nandino Capovilla, founder of the “Bridges, Not Walls” Campaign for Palestine of Pax Christi Italy, was planning to take part in a “pilgrimage of justice” organized by the group but was stopped at Ben Gurion Airport on Aug. 11 and told he would not be permitted to enter the country.

Capovilla, who regularly posts on Facebook about Gaza, wrote a post after his release instructing journalists who cover his situation to demand sanctions on Israel.

Iran admits to arrest of over 50 Christians since end of ‘12-day war’ 

The Iranian Ministry of Intelligence (MOIS) revealed it has arrested over 50 Christians since the end of its short-lived “12-day war” with Israel, according to the watchdog group Article18. The admission was made in a wider announcement detailing the intelligence agency’s crackdown on groups it said participated in anti-regime demonstrations amid the conflict.

The MOIS said in the announcement that it had “neutralized” 53 “Mossad mercenaries” who it claimed had been “trained abroad” by churches in the U.S. and Israel to rebel against the Iranian regime. At least 11 of the detained have been released on bail.

“Prior to the conflict, over 60 other Christians were either detained or in the process of being tried on charges related to their faith in Iran, and this number has now nearly doubled,” Article18 stated.

Lebanon’s Maronite patriarch calls for peace during visit to Christian villages

Maronite patriarch Cardinal Bechara Boutros Al-Rahi toured Christian border villages in southern Lebanon, delivering a clear message: “No to war, yes to peace,” ACI MENA, CNA’s Arabic-language news partner, reported Sunday. His visit comes after the latest round of conflict between Hezbollah and Israel, which caused significant displacement and damage to the region’s Christian communities.

Accompanied by the apostolic nuncio, Archbishop Paolo Borgia, and local bishops, the patriarch visited towns including Dibl, Al-Qouzah, Ain Ebel, and Rmeish. In Al-Qouzah, where only 72 residents remain, he pledged support for reconstruction efforts, affirming that “war is temporary, peace endures.”

At each stop, he was welcomed with showers of rice and flowers, emphasizing the resilience of the people who chose to stay despite the hardships. Al-Rahi reiterated that Lebanon’s identity is rooted in peace, urging both leaders and citizens to reject the cycle of violence.

Sri Lanka Catholics continue protests against sand mining, wind power mill 

The Catholic-majority Mannar district in northern Sri Lanka has continued its protest against sand mining and wind power farms, according to UCA News, contesting that the practices “threaten their survival and livelihoods.”

Protestors claim the projects threaten the ecology and cultural heritage of the island and have been protesting in the streets since Aug. 11, when they began blocking the entrance of vehicles transporting equipment, including turbine blades for the windmill farm, into the island.

Father S. Marcus Adigalar, president of the Mannar Citizens Committee, told UCA: “Following the implementation of a windmill project carried out by Ceylon Electricity Board (CEB) in the past, we are already witnessing the environmental impact of it.”

The priest further claimed that there has been an increase in deaths of birds and a negative impact on the fishing community due to the noise and vibrations caused by the wind farm. “This cannot be allowed,” he added.

African religious orders challenged to meet local needs before sending priests abroad

The Vatican secretary for the Dicastery for Evangelization has issued a call for African religious orders to make sure the needs of their local communities are being met before priests are sent abroad. 

During a speech at the third Pan-African Catholic Congress on Theology, Society, and Pastoral Life, Archbishop Fortunatus Nwachukwu told attendees: “A Church that fails to care for its own cannot credibly claim to care for others,” according to an Aug. 13 report from ACI Africa, CNA’s news partner in Africa.

He further emphasized the importance of safeguarding the missionary presence of Africans abroad so it may be viewed “not as a request for aid but as a witness to Christ’s self-giving love and the fruitfulness of the Gospel sown in African soil.”

Vatican secretary of state travels to Burundi for pastoral visit

Vatican Secretary of State Cardinal Pietro Parolin arrived on Tuesday in Burundi for a weeklong pastoral visit. According to a report from ACI Africa, he expressed joy upon his arrival to the East African nation, telling those who received him at the apostolic nunciature: “I am very happy to be among you.”

Parolin’s visit included meetings with various communities, Church leaders, and government authorities, including President Évariste Ndayishimiye. He is also scheduled to preside over the inauguration of a monument and lay the foundation stone for a new health center dedicated to the memory of Archbishop Michael Aiden Courtney, the former apostolic nuncio to Burundi who was assassinated in 2003.

Mozambique priest condemns rise in child abductions as war rages in northern province

A Catholic priest in the Cabo Delgado Province of Mozambique is condemning the increase in cases of child abduction, as Human Rights Watch estimated at least 120 children kidnapped by jihadist insurgents linked to the Islamic State in recent months, ACI Africa reported.  

“This senseless war brings only death and takes what little hope the people, and especially the children, have,” said Father Kwiriwi Fonsesca in an Aug. 8 report from Aid to the Church in Need International.

“These children must be returned to their parents; they must be searched for wherever they are, so that they can be returned to their parents, because they deserve a better future,” he added.

Church in Germany invested nearly 600 million euros in international projects in 2024

The Catholic Church in Germany invested almost 600 million euros (about $700 million) in international projects in 2024, according to the German Bishops’ Conference. 

The roughly 595 million euros distributed across the globe includes 200 million to Africa, almost 144 million to Latin America, over 137 million to Asia and around 76 million to various regions across Europe. Forty-nine million euros were listed as invested in international projects, according to CNA Deutsch, CNA’s German-language news partner. 

Bishop Bertram Meier of Augsburg wrote in a preface to the bishops’ conference financial report: “595 million euros for project funding — that’s an impressive figure.” However, he noted, the actual extent of the Church’s reach in the foreign aid sphere is “far greater,” given the number of additional independent church associations.

Remembering Mother Angelica’s reflections on the Assumption of Mary: ‘It just makes sense’

Assumption of the Virgin Mary, fresco painting in San Petronio Basilica in Bologna, Italy. / Credit: Zvonimir Atletic/Shutterstock

Washington, D.C. Newsroom, Aug 15, 2025 / 04:00 am (CNA).

Today, Aug. 15, is the feast of the Assumption, a solemnity commemorating the end of the Virgin Mary’s earthly life and the assumption of her body and soul into heaven. The day also marks the anniversary of the Eternal Word Television Network (EWTN). 

On this day in 1981, EWTN’s foundress, Mother Mary Angelica of the Annunciation, started her television show out of a garage studio in Alabama. The broadcast launched what is now the largest global Catholic media network in the world. (Note: CNA is a service of EWTN News, an affiliate of EWTN.)

As Catholics celebrate the Assumption and EWTN commemorates 44 years of spreading the Eternal Word, we look back at what Mother Angelica said about Jesus’ mother and her assumption into heaven.

Assumption of Mary 

“This is the feast of Our Lady’s assumption, and a lot of people don’t understand that,” Mother Angelica, a Poor Clare of Perpetual Adoration, said during an Aug. 15, 2000, EWTN broadcast. “They get it all mixed up with Our Lady’s immaculate conception. And it’s different.”

The Assumption is a fairly new feast day in the Church, but the holiday has roots in the earliest centuries of Christian belief. Mother Angelica explained to her audience that “when all the apostles heard Our Lady had died, they all went where she was, except Thomas.” 

“St. Thomas, according to tradition, was always late, always late,” Mother Angelica joked. “We all have somebody like that in our family. They’re always late.” 

“So when he came, they opened up the [tomb] and she was gone… And from the very beginning of Christianity, it was always believed that she was assumed into heaven. It just makes sense.”

It makes sense, Mother Angelica said, “because she was so pure and so holy. There was no reason for her to rot away like we’re going to.”

“Our Lady could never even commit one little sin. So what does she do? She benefits by all the graces, we will benefit by the blood of Jesus — by redemption,” she said. “You say, ‘Well, why should she be so different?’ Well, because she was created by God and before time began, he had her in his mind to be the mother of his Son — the Eternal Word.”

“You can’t even think for a half a second that the mother of God could be in the hands of Satan. That would defile the temple,” she said, adding: “I mean, that’s common sense. You don’t need anything else to really realize that God’s temple had to be absolutely perfect for his sake.”

While Mary was born perfect, Mother Angelica said, “we were all born with original sin, and we have consequences for original sin, even after baptism.” We experience “jealousy, anger, and oversensitivity. We’re born with a lot of things that are not like Jesus. And so we have to overcome these things.”

But eventually, “Our Lady’s assumption is something we’re all going to have,” because “we’re all going to rise… the day will come at the end of the world when God will breathe and say: ‘Rise.’”

‘Secret of holiness’

“Our Lady had to be awesome, because she always said yes to God. That’s the secret of holiness,” Mother Angelica said. “Oh, you don’t have to be bright, you don’t have to be a genius, you don’t have to build buildings, you don’t have to do any of those things. You have to do God’s will with love and sacrifice.”

Ultimately, it “all comes down to love,” she said. “And you only do God’s will because you love. Our Lady always loved God and always did his will with perfect union.”

On the solemnity of Mary’s assumption, “we should thank God that he created such a woman,” Mother Angelica said. “There had to be somebody like her. And only from her, only from this holy, perfect woman, could the Eternal Word come.”

EWTN’s ‘Crushed by the Woman’ tackles Protestant questions about Our Lady

The mosaics decorating the interior dome of St. Peter’s Basilica depict the Blessed Virgin Mary next to Christ the Redeemer and the Apostles. / Credit: Daniel Ibañez/CNA

CNA Staff, Aug 14, 2025 / 18:27 pm (CNA).

EWTN’s “Crushed by the Woman” — set to air on the Aug. 15 solemnity of the Assumption at 5:30 p.m. ET — aims to answer common questions Protestants ask regarding the Blessed Virgin Mary.

The 30-minute program features a lineup of notable Church figures who explore the beliefs Catholics hold regarding the Blessed Mother and the many misconceptions non-Catholics have about her.

The program addresses questions such as: Does devotion to Mary take away from Jesus or offend Our Lord? What does the angel Gabriel’s “Hail, full of grace” greeting mean? Is the assumption of the Blessed Virgin contrary to the Bible? Why do Catholics pray to Mary? Why do Catholics say Mary did not have other children? How is Mary our perfect mother? 

Father Dwight Longenecker, who was raised a fundamentalist and ordained an Anglican priest before converting to Catholicism, and Mark Miravalle, a professor of theology at Franciscan University of Steubenville and president of the International Marian Association, are joined by several other Church leaders to provide answers to these questions. 

“Quite often, our Protestant brothers and sisters will say: You believe in something called the assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary, that she was taken up into heaven and that she was crowned as the queen of heaven,” Longenecker says in the program. “That’s nowhere in the Bible. Why do you believe these things?”

“Catholics are not Bible-only Christians. You are,” Longenecker continues. “We believe in the inspiration of the Bible, but we also believe that the Holy Spirit speaks through the Church… speaks through the lives of the saints… speaks through the teaching of the Church. Therefore, we’re not Bible-only Christians. We’re not obliged to prove our religion according to your terms.”

Miravalle points out that nowhere in Scripture does it say that Scripture is the only source of revelation. “[T]o hold that is an unscriptural position,” he says. 

Ann-Marie Altomare, director at Our Lady of Guadalupe Family Life Center in Ave Maria, Florida, provides further examples: “[W]e also know there are a lot of things about the apostles, how they were beheaded or how they died as martyrs, that are not written in Scripture.”

Addressing the question of why Catholics pray for Mary’s intercession, Longnecker says: “We need a mother to intercede, to protect us from external dangers. We need a mother to remind us of our personal dignity, that we’re all made in the image and likeness of God. One mother united Jesus and her other children, you and me, together.”

“[W]ithin the Catholic understanding, she stands for motherhood,” he adds. “She stands for fertility. She stands for children. She stands for family, and this is exactly where, in our society today, Catholics are being attacked, because we still stand up for virginity, for chastity, for family, for marriage, for children. We stand up against abortion, we stand up against the sexual immorality in society, and so, we will be attacked for that.”

“Crushed by the Woman” can also be watched online here.

From Rome to Alexandria: Catholic Youth Jubilee continues its mission in Egypt

The August 2025 Youth Jubilee in Egypt is taking place in two phases this month. The jubilee is under the patronage and presence of apostolic vicar of the Latins in Egypt, Bishop Claudio Lurati, organized by his deputy Monsignor Antoine Tawfiq and Sister Chiara Latif of the Franciscan Elizabethan Sisters. / Credit: Photo courtesy of Apostolic Vicariate of the Latins in Egypt

ACI MENA, Aug 14, 2025 / 18:07 pm (CNA).

After the conclusion of the Catholic Jubilee of Youth in Rome, which saw a strong presence of Middle Eastern Christians including a delegation from Egypt, the city of Alexandria has launched its own Catholic Youth Jubilee, organized by the Latin Church there.

The initiative aims to include young people who were unable to travel to Rome and is being held in two phases: The first took place from Aug. 9–12 and the second from Aug. 12–15, which primarily involved the Sudanese and Eritrean communities at St. Mark House in Borg El Arab.

The jubilee days in Egypt opened with a celebratory Mass at St. Catherine’s Cathedral in Alexandria, presided over by apostolic vicar of the Latins in Egypt, Bishop Claudio Lurati, and marked by the reception of the relics of Blessed Carlo Acutis. Credit: Photo courtesy of the Apostolic Vicariate of the Latins in Egypt
The jubilee days in Egypt opened with a celebratory Mass at St. Catherine’s Cathedral in Alexandria, presided over by apostolic vicar of the Latins in Egypt, Bishop Claudio Lurati, and marked by the reception of the relics of Blessed Carlo Acutis. Credit: Photo courtesy of the Apostolic Vicariate of the Latins in Egypt

The jubilee is under the patronage and presence of apostolic vicar of the Latins in Egypt, Bishop Claudio Lurati, organized by his deputy Monsignor Antoine Tawfiq and Sister Chiara Latif of the Franciscan Elizabethan Sisters. It has been carried out in collaboration with the Egyptian and Sudanese-Eritrean youth committees alongside Comboni Father Deus Gratias.

Participants in the events include youth from various Egyptian governorates as well as others from African and European countries, including a delegation from Como, Italy, who came to assist in organizing the event.

The August 2025 jubilee days opened with a celebratory Mass at St. Catherine’s Cathedral in Alexandria, presided over by Bishop Claudio Lurati, the apostolic vicar of the Latins in Egypt, and marked by the reception of the relics of Blessed Carlo Acutis. Credit: Photo courtesy of the Apostolic Vicariate of the Latins in Egypt
The August 2025 jubilee days opened with a celebratory Mass at St. Catherine’s Cathedral in Alexandria, presided over by Bishop Claudio Lurati, the apostolic vicar of the Latins in Egypt, and marked by the reception of the relics of Blessed Carlo Acutis. Credit: Photo courtesy of the Apostolic Vicariate of the Latins in Egypt

The jubilee days opened with a celebratory Mass at St. Catherine’s Cathedral in Alexandria, presided over by Lurati and marked by the reception of the relics of Blessed Carlo Acutis.

Before the Mass, attendees were given a brief presentation on the life of Acutis to encourage them to follow his example of holiness and prayer, especially as he is close in age to many of them. After the Mass, participants were blessed with the relics.

In a symbolic gesture, youth returning from Rome handed over the “Great Cross” to their peers who could not travel, who then presented it to Lurati.

On the feast of St. Clare of Assisi on Aug. 11, participants visited the King Mariout area, home to one of the monasteries of the Poor Clares, the order founded and led by St. Clare in the 13th century. They met with seven sisters, prayed with them, and listened to story of St. Clare. There, Lurati explained the meaning of the jubilee and the plenary indulgence that can be obtained, and spoke about the importance of walking with God and others in joy, peace, and hope.

The jubilee program also included a penitential service, talks on the meaning of the jubilee, youth life, and the Bible as well as a presentation of the Latin Church’s achievements in Egypt and its future plans. Organizers place a special emphasis on prayer, introducing new devotions such as the “Rosary of Hope” and the “Way of Light.”

Participants in the August 2025 Catholic Youth Jubilee events in Alexandria, Egypt, organized by the Latin Church there, include youth from various Egyptian governorates as well as others from African and European countries, including a delegation from Como, Italy, who came to assist in organizing the event. Credit: Photo courtesy of the Apostolic Vicariate of the Latins in Egypt
Participants in the August 2025 Catholic Youth Jubilee events in Alexandria, Egypt, organized by the Latin Church there, include youth from various Egyptian governorates as well as others from African and European countries, including a delegation from Como, Italy, who came to assist in organizing the event. Credit: Photo courtesy of the Apostolic Vicariate of the Latins in Egypt

Participants from both phases of the event also gathered for a shared day, during which Tawfiq and Sister Latif shared their experiences from the Jubilee of Youth in Rome. 

The second phase concludes on Aug. 15 with a Mass at the Sacred Heart Cathedral in Alexandria, where several young people will receive the sacrament of confirmation.

This story was first published by ACI MENA, CNA’s Arabic-language news partner, and has been translated for and adapted by CNA.

Longtime anti-euthanasia activists awarded USCCB’s ‘People of Life’ award posthumously

From left to right: Daniel Marker, Susan Young, Bishop Chad W. Zielinski of New Ulm, Bishop Daniel Thomas of Toledo, Bishop Michael Burbidge of Arlington, Judy Haag, and Valerie Washington. / Credit: United States Catholic Conference of Bishops

CNA Staff, Aug 14, 2025 / 17:47 pm (CNA).

Longtime anti-euthanasia activists Rita and Mike Marker were honored Aug. 11 at the 2025 “People of Life” awards by the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops’ (USCCB) Secretariat of Pro-Life Activities during the Diocesan Pro-Life Leadership Conference in Arlington, Virginia. 

The awards recognize Catholics who have answered St. John Paul II’s call in Evangelium Vitae (“The Gospel of Life”) by dedicating themselves to promoting the dignity of the human person and taking part in pro-life activities.

The Markers established the International Anti-Euthanasia Task Force — later renamed the Patients Rights Council — in the early 1980s. Rita served as the executive director of the organization and in her role wrote the 1995 book “Deadly Compassion: The Death of Ann Humphry and the Truth About Euthanasia” about the high-profile suicide of an euthanasia advocate whom Rita came to embrace as a friend. 

Mike largely took charge of the organization’s operations. Rita traveled internationally and domestically to speak out against euthanasia and assisted suicide and frequently appeared on radio and news programs. Realizing the importance of legal expertise in advocating against assisted suicide, she also obtained a law degree while raising a family and used it to analyze legislation and develop strategies to oppose assisted-suicide laws.

The Catholic couple were married for six decades and were appointed to the Vatican’s Pontifical Council on the Family by St. John Paul II. Mike died in 2021 and Rita died in 2023. 

About 100 diocesan Catholic figures and guests attended this year’s awards dinner, including Bishop Daniel Thomas of Toledo, Ohio, chairman of the USCCB’s Committee on Pro-Life Activities, and Bishop Michael Burbidge of Arlington, Virginia. Two other pro-life advocates were also honored at the event: Valerie Washington and Judy Haag. 

Washington has led the National Black Catholic Congress organization as its executive director for the past 25 years. During her time with the organization, she has shaped its programs, has nurtured partnerships that have strengthened the Church’s commitment to justice and evangelization, and has taken a prominent role in fostering a culture of life within the Black Catholic community. 

For the past 30 years, Haag has been a long-term care nurse and pro-life advocate — serving as co-chair to her local 40 Days for Life campaign, leading her parish in commemorating the anniversary of Roe v. Wade, and facilitating participation in the Minnesota Citizens Concerned for Life March for Life. She also served as chairperson of the New Ulm Diocesan Council of Catholic Women (NUDCCW) Reverence for Life Committee for several years. Here she assisted in public education and advocacy on abortion and was named the NUDCCW “Woman of the Year” in 2017.

This year’s recipients join 43 other pro-life advocates who have received this award since it was established in 2007 by the USCCB Secretariat of Pro-Life Activities.