Vance Klein Vance Klein

UK Health Secretary breaks ranks to vote against assisted suicide

Wes Streeting will vote against the new Bill being considered by the British Parliament that aims to legalise assisted suicide in the United Kingdom. The decision marks an important declaration given Streeting’s senior position in the Cabinet and which makes him responsible for the health of the UK’s population.

Read More
Vance Klein Vance Klein

Father of liberation theology and former nemesis of Vatican dies at 96

In February 2014, a scene unfolded in Rome that struck many observers as akin to the end of history. A conservative German prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith sat on a Vatican stage, sporting a Peruvian poncho and showering praise upon the father of liberation theology in Latin America – a man who once was virtually the Vatican’s Public Enemy Number One.

Read More
Vance Klein Vance Klein

Home schooling is worth the effort: it protects children’s bodies and souls – it can make them smart too

The only people involved in a child’s education who have an overview of the whole process, from babyhood to adulthood, and who truly know the child, and his or her needs and ambitions, are parents.

They are their children’s primary educators, in a sense that encompasses the moral relationship between parent and child, and the practical and biological relationship.

Read More
Vance Klein Vance Klein

Body of famous American nun appears to be ‘incorrupt’, investigation finds

A months-long investigation has concluded that the body of Sister Wilhelmina Lancaster, OSB, who died in 2019 appears to be incorrupt.

The study, conducted by medical experts and commissioned by the Bishop of Kansas City-St. Joseph, has confirmed that there were no signs of decomposition when the body of the foundress of the traditionalist Benedictines of Mary, Queen of Apostles was exhumed in 2023.

Read More
Vance Klein Vance Klein

The remarkable day that showed why every pope is a star

ROME – Friday was among the most remarkable single days in the entire Pope Francis era, and given the way this papacy has generated non-stop thrills, chills and spills for more than 11 years now, that’s truly saying something.

It was a long day’s journey into night, beginning at 8.30am with a still-unexplained, but nonetheless deeply amusing, encounter with more than 100 comedians from around the world – virtually every one of whom, for the record, told reporters they had no idea what they were doing in the Vatican – and ended 14 hours later when Francis’s helicopter landed back in Rome, after the Pontiff spent several hours at a G7 summit in the southern Italian region of Puglia.

Read More
Vance Klein Vance Klein

More than a hundred comedians meet the Pope

ROME – In Umberto Eco’s immortal novel The Name of the Rose, the stern Benedictine abbot Jorge de Burgo insists that laughter is evil: “Laughter kills fear,” he declares, “and without fear there can be no faith, because without fear of the Devil there is no more need of God.”

Read More
Vance Klein Vance Klein

Scenes of heroic piety impress priest during Eucharistic exposition in New York

NEW YORK – When the National Eucharistic Pilgrimage passed through the Bronx borough of New York City last week, Fr Roger Landry witnessed what he describes as the heroic efforts of an older woman, who insisted on getting out of her wheelchair to kneel before Jesus.

“It was already an effort just to come out and greet him, but that type of heroism, it was a part of the conversation I had with Jesus for the next 10 minutes as I was holding him in my hand,” Landry said.

Read More
Vance Klein Vance Klein

Pakistan’s religious minorities enduring modern-day slavery in brick kiln industry

Religious minorities in Muslim-majority Pakistan are disproportionately ensnared in modern-day slavery, according to a new report issued by a group of UK parliamentarians.

The All-Party Parliamentary Group (APPG) for Pakistani Minorities issued its report “Exploitation of Bonded Brick Kiln Labourers in Pakistan: The Unseen Modern-Day Slavery” on 29 May. The study showed how religious minorities in particular are victims of the local bonded labourer system – bonded labour amounts to slavery – and as a result are being turned into modern-day slaves.

Read More
Vance Klein Vance Klein

Nigerian priest released a week after kidnap

A priest kidnapped in Nigeria a week ago has been released by his captors.

Father Oliver Buba of Yola Diocese was taken on May 21 from his residence at the St Rita Catholic Church in the Numan Local Government Area.

Bishop Stephen Dami Mamza of Yola has now announced his release with “our hearts full of joy and thanksgiving”.

Nigeria has around 230 million people, almost evenly divided by Christians and Muslims.

Read More
Vance Klein Vance Klein

‘The adventure of being born’: G.K. Chesterton’s 150th anniversary

The 29th of May 2024 marked the 150th anniversary of the birth of G.K. Chesterton (29 May 1874 – 14 June 1936), the indomitable English author, philosopher, Christian apologist and literary and art critic. To mark the auspicious occasion, Lord David Alton shared with the Catholic Herald his favourite Chesterton poem:

Read More