California Bishops File Suit Against Abortion Mandate

The California Catholic Conference has taken the state government to court over the state’s order that all Catholic institutions pay for voluntary direct abortions.

The abortions that must be covered include abortions for gender selection and for late-term abortions.

“Catholic beliefs about life and human dignity animate and shape our Catholic ministries,” Bishop Robert McElroy, auxiliary bishop of the Archdiocese of San Francisco told the Christian Post.  “It’s why we oppose abortion, but it is also why Catholic schools provide education, Catholic hospitals care for the poor and vulnerable and why Catholic social services provide assistance to people and families in need. It goes to the core of our moral beliefs.”

The group claims that the state’s orders violate federal human rights laws.

“This is a coercive and discriminatory action by the state of California,” McElroy added. “This demand by the state was directly targeted at Catholic institutions like Santa Clara University, Loyola Marymount University, along with other California employers and citizens. It is a flagrant violation of their civil rights and deepest moral convictions, and is government coercion of the worst kind.”

Oklahoma Christians Make Final Push Against Satanic Mass

Even though over 200,000 residents of the Oklahoma City area have signed petitions asking the government to not allow a “Satanic Mass” aimed to mock the Catholic church and Christianity from taking place in the public Civic Center Music Hall, the city is not relenting in allowing the Satanists to mock Christians.

The Archbishop of Oklahoma City has released a scathing indictment of city leaders for allowing the event to continue, saying that they do not understand the spiritual forces at work when events like the black mass take place.

“Even though our city leaders apparently do not take this threat seriously, I do. As a Catholic priest and bishop I have witnessed in my ministry the battle between forces of good and evil in both ordinary and extraordinary ways,” Archibishop Paul S. Coakley wrote.

“It is not merely a struggle rooted in human weakness and ignorance, though these are certainly the source of much suffering and mayhem in our lives and in our world. Demonic activity and the chaotic forces of evil are very real. The madness of war accompanied by increasingly brutal acts of terror, the violence in our schools and communities are all evidence that something is terribly wrong.”

The group is planning a series of events including a “satanic exorcism” where they have agreed to modify the procedure to use vinegar instead of urine to stay in compliance with health codes.  The action is to “pull the Holy Spirit” from the body of the subject.

Pope Gives “Top 10 Secrets to Happiness”

The Pope has given an interview with an Argentinean newspaper where he was advising people to slow down and enjoy their lives.  The Pope provided a list of ten items that he said were key for living a healthy life physically and spiritually.

The list, as published by the Catholic News Service:

1. “Live and let live.” Everyone should be guided by this principle, he said, which has a similar expression in Rome with the saying, “Move forward and let others do the same.”

2. “Be giving of yourself to others.” People need to be open and generous toward others, he said, because “if you withdraw into yourself, you run the risk of becoming egocentric. And stagnant water becomes putrid.”

3. “Proceed calmly” in life. The pope, who used to teach high school literature, used an image from an Argentine novel by Ricardo Guiraldes, in which the protagonist – gaucho Don Segundo Sombra – looks back on how he lived his life.

“He says that in his youth he was a stream full of rocks that he carried with him; as an adult, a rushing river; and in old age, he was still moving, but slowly, like a pool” of water, the pope said. He said he likes this latter image of a pool of water – to have “the ability to move with kindness and humility, a calmness in life.”

4. “A healthy sense of leisure.” The pleasures of art, literature and playing together with children have been lost, he said.

“Consumerism has brought us anxiety” and stress, causing people to lose a “healthy culture of leisure.” Their time is “swallowed up” so people can’t share it with anyone.

Even though many parents work long hours, they must set aside time to play with their children; work schedules make it “complicated, but you must do it,” he said.

Families must also turn off the TV when they sit down to eat because, even though television is useful for keeping up with the news, having it on during mealtime “doesn’t let you communicate” with each other, the pope said.

5. Sundays should be holidays. Workers should have Sundays off because “Sunday is for family,” he said.

6. Find innovative ways to create dignified jobs for young people. “We need to be creative with young people. If they have no opportunities they will get into drugs” and be more vulnerable to suicide, he said.

“It’s not enough to give them food,” he said. “Dignity is given to you when you can bring food home” from one’s own labor.

7. Respect and take care of nature. Environmental degradation “is one of the biggest challenges we have,” he said. “I think a question that we’re not asking ourselves is: ‘Isn’t humanity committing suicide with this indiscriminate and tyrannical use of nature?'”

8. Stop being negative. “Needing to talk badly about others indicates low self-esteem. That means, ‘I feel so low that instead of picking myself up I have to cut others down,'” the pope said. “Letting go of negative things quickly is healthy.”

9. Don’t proselytize; respect others’ beliefs. “We can inspire others through witness so that one grows together in communicating. But the worst thing of all is religious proselytism, which paralyzes: ‘I am talking with you in order to persuade you,’ No. Each person dialogues, starting with his and her own identity. The church grows by attraction, not proselytizing,” the pope said.

10. Work for peace. “We are living in a time of many wars,” he said, and “the call for peace must be shouted. Peace sometimes gives the impression of being quiet, but it is never quiet, peace is always proactive” and dynamic.

Vatican spokesmen said the list fell in line with the Pope’s previous teachings on giving up material possessions and finding joy in helping others.

Pope Francis First Pope In History To Visit Pentecostal Church

Before Monday, a Pope had never visited a Pentecostal church.

Pope Francis made an official visit to the Evangelical Church of Reconciliation in Caserta, Italy and delivered a talk apologizing for the persecution of Pentecostals in the past by members of the Roman Catholic Church.

“Among those who persecuted and denounced Pentecostals, almost as if they were crazy people trying to ruin the race, there were also Catholics,” Francis said, according to The Associated Press, referring to Italy’s fascist regime when the Pentecostal practice was forbidden.  “I am the pastor of Catholics, and I ask your forgiveness for those Catholic brothers and sisters who didn’t know and were tempted by the devil.”

The Pope himself recognized the historical significance of the moment and took the time to make sure it was clear how he viewed those who follow Christ but are not Catholics.

“Someone will be surprised: ‘The pope went to visit the evangelicals?’ But he went to see his brothers,” the Pope said.

Pastor Giovanni Traettino told the Pope that he felt his election was the work of the Holy Spirit.

Court Grants Health Care Injunction For Catholic Groups

A federal judge has granted a temporary health care mandate injunction to close to 200 Catholic employers.

The preliminary injunction says the employers do not have to provide coverage for contraceptives, especially those that cause abortions, and will not be subject to all fines and penalties for not providing those items.

The Catholic Benefits Association filed the lawsuit against the Obama Administration’s “Affordable Care Act” in March claiming it violated their religious freedom.

“The harm posed to these plaintiffs absent relief is quite tangible-they will either face severe monetary penalties or be required to violate their religious beliefs,” U.S. District judge David Russell wrote in his ruling.

Lawyers for the plaintiffs were very pleased with the ruling.

“This ruling is especially gratifying because this lawsuit, alone among the HHS contraceptive mandate cases, includes three groups of Catholic employers-“houses of worship” that are, by regulation, exempt; non-exempt ministries like colleges, Catholic Charities, and healthcare institutions; and Catholic-owned for profit businesses,” Martin Nussbaum, CBA General Counsel, told CNS News.

Ultra-Orthodox Jews Protest Pope’s Mass in Jerusalem

A group of ultra-Orthodox Jews are protesting outside of the Last Supper near Jerusalem because of plans by Pope Francis to hold a mass at the site next week.

The Jews claim that allowing Christians to worship where Jesus held his last meal with his disciples is a violation of their beliefs.

“Under Jewish law it is a big problem,” Rabbi Avraham Goldstein told NBC News.  “Basically they are taking over the place.”

Protests are also taking place because the Pope is simply planning to visit the site.

“When ‘the crusaders’ come here making the sign of the cross and all kinds of rituals, this place will become idolatrous for us,” protester Yitzhak Batzon told AFP news agency.  “We will not have the right to pray there anymore.”

The head of the Catholic Church in Israel said he is concerned about security, especially following a rash of vandalism with anti-Christian and racist statements at various Cathedrals.

Catholic Church Only Institution Still Operating in C.A.R.

The head of the Episcopal Conference of Cameroon said that the only entity still operating inside the Central African Republic is the Catholic Church.

“The State no longer exists,” Samuel Kleda, the archbishop of Douala, said.  “The only institution that is functioning is the Catholic Church.  The displaced are living in Catholic parishes.”

Violence in the Central African Republic has skyrocketed since interim President Michel Djotodia resigned from that post earlier this year.  The United Nations says the conflict has led to the deaths of tens of thousands and a peacekeeping force is being formed to try and help restore the peace.

Kleda and other leaders in the region are calling on Christians around the world to provide supplies and funds to the Catholic Church’s relief efforts within the country to provide food, medicine and shelter.

The Central African Republic is a mostly Christian nation that is 25 percent Catholic.  Muslim rebels who have been attempting to take over the country have been in retreat from a Christian backed militia to the point they have fled the southern and western parts of the nation.

Historic Christian Church To Be Stripped Of Crosses; Turned Into Mosque

A church in upstate New York that once held designation as a historical landmark will now be stripped of that designation and have the crosses on the building ripped down so that a Muslim group can turn the building into a mosque.

The Syracuse History Preservation Board has given permission to the Muslim-driven North Side Learning Center to destroy six crosses that were placed at the top of the century-old building.

German immigrants seeking freedom of worship built the church.

The Catholic Church closed the church in 2010 because of decreasing attendance, merging the congregation with another parish.  The building still had been designated as a historic landmark by the city after the closure.

A spokesman for the city said that the city did not have an opinion on the loss of the historic status for the building, saying that they wouldn’t stop the destruction of the crosses because it would inhibit the worship of the Muslims.

Atlanta Archbishop Apologizes For Multi-Million Dollar Home

An Archibishop with the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Atlanta has apologized for moving into a $2.2 million residential mansion.

Archbishop Wilton Gregory called the decision an “oversight” in his apology.

“I failed to consider the impact on the families throughout the Archdiocese who, though struggling to pay their mortgages, utilities, tuition and other bills, faithfully respond year after year to my pleas to assist with funding our ministries and services,” Gregory wrote.

Gregory said the Cathedral of Christ the King approached him to buy his former home for use as a rectory for the growing cathedral.  He agreed and the church then received a large donation from the nephew of author Margaret Mitchell, the author of Gone With The Wind.

The donation included Joseph Mitchell’s home and that’s where the archdiocese decided to move the archbishop’s residence.  The archbishop said the mansion was worth a value of $2.2 million according to the donation to the church.  The church itself paid out none of its funds to purchase the property.

The archbishop said he is now looking to find a home that is more in line with the way Pope Francis has called for men to live.

Pope Francis Calls Out Italian Mafia

Pope Francis is taking a bold stand against Italy’s powerful mafia organizations, telling the leaders that if they don’t repent they will end up in hell.

The Pope made his comments at the end of a special mass for family members of those who have been killed by the mafia organizations.  The Pope sat in silent prayer as the names of 842 victims in the last year were read aloud.  He then issued a blessing to the family members before pausing and issuing his comments to the mafia members and leaders.

“I feel I cannot conclude without saying a word to the protagonists who are absent today, the men and women Mafiosi,” the Pope said.  “Please change your lives.  Convert yourselves.  Stop doing evil.”

“There is still time to avoid ending up in hell,” the Pope continued.  “That is what is waiting for you if you continue on this path.  You have had a father and a mother.  Think of them.  Cry a little and convert.”

The Pope then expanded his comments to a wider audience, saying the trappings of wealth, power and status would not give anyone true happiness.  He concluded by saying that no one will be able to take anything with them into the next life.