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Cabrini biography rediscovered; to be re-published by Ignatius Press

By CWR Staff on Feb 22, 2024 08:44 pm
Theodore Maynard’s landmark 1945 biography Too Small a World: The Life of Mother Frances Cabrini has been buried by the sands of time. It was, and remains, the only study to draw directly from letters, [...]
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Rupnik, rigidity, and the deepening sham in Rome

By Christopher R. Altieri on Feb 22, 2024 03:48 pm
Several years ago, when I was living in Rome, a confessor told me: “You are too rigid.” I don’t recall precisely what year it was, but it was toward the beginning of the Francis era [...]
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The power of Christ and the Feast of the Chair of Saint Peter

By Fr. Charles Fox on Feb 22, 2024 02:48 pm
On April 19, 2005, I was in the fifth of my six years of seminary formation,  serving as an intern at a rural parish in the northeastern part of the Archdiocese of Detroit. That morning, [...]
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Cardinal Dolan on St. Patrick’s funeral: ‘We don’t do FBI checks on people who want to be buried’

By Catholic News Agency on Feb 22, 2024 08:00 am
Cardinal Timothy Dolan of New York. / Credit: Jonah McKeown/CNA CNA Staff, Feb 21, 2024 / 18:05 pm (CNA). Priests at St. Patrick’s Cathedral in New York City were surprised by the “irreverence and disrespect” that occurred during a funeral for ... [...]
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Rupnik victims, advocates decry failures of Vatican justice

By Christopher R. Altieri on Feb 21, 2024 06:44 pm
Editor’s note: This story has been updated.* In some of the strongest remarks to date, a senior figure at a leading watchdog and advocacy group has cast strong doubt on Pope Francis’s commitment to reform [...]
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Lourdes, healing, and the witness of Cardinal George

By MIchael R. Heinlein on Feb 21, 2024 05:23 pm
In January, I was privileged to make my first pilgrimage to Lourdes. My time there was filled with many spiritual gifts, great and small graces for which I continue to offer thanks to God and [...]
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Extra, extra! News and views for Wednesday, February 21, 2024

By CWR Staff on Feb 21, 2024 03:00 am
The German Pope – “Pope Benedict XVI understood that Christ’s message is scandalous to the world.” “I do not recall ever having seen a pope so insulted by the media”: An Interview with José de Carvalho [...]
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Saint Peter Damian and the wounds of the Church

By Dawn Beutner on Feb 20, 2024 09:00 pm
In 1298, Pope Boniface VIII decided to name four saints as Doctors of the Church to recognize their excellence as teachers of the Catholic faith and to honor the enduring impact of their thought on [...]
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“The child is not the mere creature of the state” redux

By Charles J. Russo on Feb 20, 2024 03:49 pm
Almost a century ago, in 1925’s Pierce v. Society of Sisters, a dispute from Oregon, the Supreme Court upheld the rights of non-public schools to operate and of parents to have them educated where they [...]
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Francisco and Jacinta: brother and sister saints who were seers at Fatima

By Catholic News Agency on Feb 20, 2024 03:00 am
Official portrait of Francisco and Jacinta Marto, designed by Silvia Patricio. Courtesy of the Fatima Shrine. / null ACI Prensa Staff, Feb 20, 2024 / 04:00 am (CNA). Every Feb. 20, the Catholic Church celebrates Sts. Francisco and Jacinta Marto... [...]
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Embracing Creation with Incarnational Nerve

By Matthew J. Ramage, Ph.D. on Feb 19, 2024 08:06 pm
Dealing with pests in our homes is an inevitable task that we all must face at some point. Back when I lived in Florida, snakes and mosquitos were the usual culprits. Fire ants were a [...]
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Book clarifies the nature and purpose of Church councils

By Casey Chalk on Feb 19, 2024 07:36 pm
Some Protestants know they have an authority problem. They know that exclusive reliance on a book (the Bible) as the sole manifestation of infallible teaching fosters a scenario in which there is no authoritative means [...]
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The Missionary’s Alphabet

By Dawn Beutner on Feb 19, 2024 04:00 am
“But how are men to call upon him in whom they have not believed? And how are they to believe in him of whom they have never heard?” Saint Paul was speaking of the salvation [...]
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The NAACP couldn’t care less about you and your children

By Susan Ciancio on Feb 18, 2024 08:42 pm
Dear Women of the African American Community, I write this open letter in response to a recent resolution promulgated by the National Association of Colored People to show the harm in its words and in [...]
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An avoidable debacle: On the scandalous funeral service at St. Patrick’s

By Peter M.J. Stravinskas on Feb 18, 2024 07:30 pm
By now, unless you live under a rock or gave up all media for Lent, you have heard of the debacle that played out at St. Patrick’s Cathedral in New York (“America’s parish church”) on [...]
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Seven lessons from the Seven Holy Founders of the Servite Order

By Donald Jacob Uitvlugt on Feb 17, 2024 06:26 pm
Today (February 17) the Church celebrates an unusual feast on her calendar. Usually when several people are celebrated on the same day on the calendar, they are a group of martyrs, like St Paul Miki [...]
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Two pilgrimages, one Way: On Assisi and Santiago de Compostela

By James Jeffrey on Feb 17, 2024 02:34 pm
Can one commit pilgrimage “adultery”? In the months of planning leading up to my taking a group of pilgrims along a portion of La Via di Francesco—the Way of Saint Francis—to Assisi in Italy, I [...]
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The First Sunday of Lent: Deluges and Deserts, Sin and Salvation

By Carl E. Olson on Feb 17, 2024 03:00 am
On the Readings for Sunday, February 18, 2018, the First Sunday of Lent [...]
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Raucous funeral service at St. Patrick’s Cathedral for trans activist sparks outcry

By Catholic News Agency on Feb 16, 2024 09:15 pm
St. Patrick's Cathedral, New York / John Bilous/Shutterstock

CNA Newsroom, Feb 16, 2024 / 22:15 pm (CNA).

A raucous funeral liturgy for a high-profile trans-activist and sex-worker advocate was held Thursday in New York City’s St. Patrick’s Cathedral, sparking an outcry on social media that the iconic church was misused to advance an ideological agenda at odds with Catholic teaching.

The Manhattan cathedral hosted the Feb. 15 funeral service for Cecilia Gentili, an activist who helped to decriminalize sex work in New York, lobbied for “gender identity” to be added as a protected class to the state’s human rights laws, and was a major fundraiser for transgender causes.

Organizers reportedly did not disclose to the cathedral that Gentili, who died Feb. 6 at age 52, was a biological man who identified as a woman.

“I kept it under wraps,” Ceyeye Doroshow, the service’s organizer, told The New York Times.

Doroshow said that Gentili’s friends requested that the funeral service be held at St. Patrick’s because “it is an icon,” which is how they thought of Gentili.

Throughout the liturgy, the presider, Father Edward Dougherty, referred to Gentili with feminine pronouns and described the trans-identifying man as “our sister.” Additionally, during the prayers of the faithful, the reader prayed for so-called gender-affirming health care, while attendees frequently and approvingly referred to Gentili as the “mother of whores.”

It was not clear if cathedral staff were aware that Gentili was a man who identified as a woman. St. Patrick’s Cathedral referred all media requests to the Archdiocese of New York, which did not respond to requests for comment before publication.

In remarks previously made to The New York Times, archdiocesan spokesman Joseph Zwilling said that “a funeral is one of the corporal works of mercy,” which are “a model for how we should treat all others, as if they were Christ in disguise.” Other than its spokesman’s comments, the New York Archdiocese had issued no official statement on the funeral service at St. Patrick’s as of Friday night.

Several mainstream media outlets have framed the event as a breakthrough occasion, and a sign of the Catholic Church shifting its teaching — or at least its tone —on sexuality and human anthropology.

Time magazine described the fact that a funeral service for a trans-activist was held in a Catholic cathedral as “no small feat,” while The New York Times described the service as “an exuberant piece of political theater.”

Jesuit Father James Martin, an LGBTQ advocate whose approach to pastoral inclusion has courted controversy in the Church, offered his approval for the service.

“To celebrate the funeral Mass [sic] of a transgender woman at St. Patrick’s is a powerful reminder, during Lent, that LGBTQ people are as much a part of the church as anyone else,” he told The New York Times. “I wonder if it would have happened a generation ago.”

Other Catholics, however, did not share the Jesuit priest’s position.

On X (formerly Twitter), Catholic Vote described the service as a staged “mockery of the Christian faith INSIDE St. Patrick’s Cathedral” by trans activists.

Others called for Cardinal Timothy Dolan and the Archdiocese of New York to respond to what they considered to be sacrilege.

“Is Cardinal Dolan planning to make reparations and exorcise and consecrate the altar and nave?” said one X user, apparently in reference to steps the Diocese of Brooklyn took when a pop star performed an inappropriate music video in the sanctuary of a parish church.

Many of the 1,000 in attendance wore drag and scanty outfits. At the foot of the altar stood an image of the Argentinian-born Gentili with a halo, surrounded by the Spanish words for “whore,” “transvestite,” “blessed,” and “mother.”

Trans-activist Oscar Diaz told Time it “felt appropriate” to say farewell to Gentili with a funeral service at St. Patrick’s, describing the event as an act of bestowing “sainthood” on the transgender advocate.

The service for Gentili was marked by several moments that were out of the ordinary for a Catholic funeral and have raised questions of irreverence and sacrilege.

For instance, during the liturgy, attendees cheered, applauded, and chanted “Cecilia!” and “madre de putas”— Spanish for “mother of whores.”

A rendition of the “Ave Maria” by the cathedral cantor was interrupted when an attendee shouted “Ave Cecilia!” and danced down the center aisle.

A mid-liturgy lay reflection given from the sanctuary compared Gentili’s advocacy for normalizing sex work and lobbying for gender-related healthcare to Christ’s ministry to prostitutes and outcasts.

In another reflection, Diaz described the deceased as “this whore, this great whore, St. Cecilia, mother of all whores.” Those assembled stood and applauded as Father Dougherty remained seated in the presider’s chair, his chin in his hand.

After attending Baptist and Catholic churches, Gentili had identified as an atheist though suggested a recent interest in God in a November 2023 interview.

"Religion has been such a foundational aspect of my life that I’ll always have some kind of connection to it. I still crave a sense of community and belonging that I know a lot of people find in faith," Gentili said.

[...]
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Animated masterpiece depicts journey from fear to light

By Nick Olszyk on Feb 16, 2024 08:35 pm
Reel Rating: 5 out of 5 reels Disclaimer: The following review contains spoilers. At this point, it’s a tired–though true–stereotype that Hollywood only makes sequels, reboots, and superhero adaptations, completely negating original work in favor [...]
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Cardinal Zen publishes new critique of Synod on Synodality

By Catholic News Agency on Feb 16, 2024 03:30 pm
Cardinal Joseph Zen is bishop emeritus of Hong Kong. / Credit: The World Over with Raymond Arroyo Rome Newsroom, Feb 16, 2024 / 16:30 pm (CNA). Cardinal Joseph Zen Ze-kiun, the bishop emeritus of Hong Kong, has released another critique of the ... [...]
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