Loading...
Loading...
Click here if you don’t see subscription options
Latin Patriarch Faoud Twal of Jerusalem leads an annual pilgrimage at a baptism site on the Jordan River on Jan. 10..
News
Catholic News Service
A Catholic convent near Jerusalem and a largely Maronite village in Galilee were damaged in recent weeks as a two-year wave of vandalism directed at Christians and Muslims in Israel and the West Bank continued.In late March, anti-Christian and anti-American graffiti was scrawled on the walls of the
The aftermath of a raid on human traffickers in Barcelona, Spain.
News
Catholic News Service
Meeting four victims of human trafficking, dozens of religious sisters and senior police chiefs from 20 countries, Pope Francis praised their coordinated efforts to fight against a "crime against humanity.""Human trafficking is an open wound on the body of contemporary society, a scou
News
David Gibson - Religion News Service
A new translation of the Mass has been used in the nation’s Catholic parishes for less than three years, but there are signs that the language—often criticized as stilted and awkward—could be in for another edit.“We’ve tried it, we’ve lived with it, we think it ne
News
Cathy Lynn Grossman - Religion News Service
Bible films may be raking it in at the box office, but fewer people are reading the original and taking it seriously.The American Bible Society’s latest State of the Bible survey documents steep skepticism that the Good Book is a God book.“We are seeing an incredible change in just
Dutch Jesuit Father Frans van der Lugt, visiting a family in the besieged area of Homs, Syria, on Jan. 30.
News
Catholic News Service
Pope Francis said the assassination of "my confrere," a 75-year-old Dutch Jesuit in Syria, "filled me with deep sadness and made me think again of all the people who suffer and are dying in that martyred country."Jesuit Father Frans van der Lugt "arrived in Syria about 50 ye
The skulls and bones of Rwandan victims rest on shelves at a genocide memorial inside a church at Ntarama, just outside the capital Kigali,
News
Dennis Sadowski - Catholic News Service
Every time Nathalie Piraino returns home to Rwanda, she sees a country advancing economically and politically and where the development of people, especially women, is foremost.She also has found that memories from her homeland's genocide 20 years ago remain vivid, not forgotten.Searing memories