Posted on 08/1/2025 20:19 PM (CNA Daily News - US)
Washington, D.C. Newsroom, Aug 1, 2025 / 16:19 pm (CNA).
President Donald Trump’s administration is proposing a rule change that would prohibit medical centers operated by the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) from performing both surgical and chemical abortions in most cases and from providing counseling that encourages abortion.
The proposed regulatory change, submitted by the VA on Aug. 1, must undergo a 30-day public comment period before it can be adopted.
Under the proposal, abortion would only be allowed when the mother’s life is at risk. The text also clarifies that women can still receive all necessary treatments for ectopic pregnancies and miscarriages.
In an explanation provided with the rule change proposal, VA regulators note that Congress created the department to provide “only needed medical services to our nation’s heroes and their families.” It states that unless the mother’s life is at risk, “abortion is not a ‘needed’ VA service.”
From 1999 — when the VA established its first medical benefits package — through September 2022, the department did not offer abortion or pro-abortion counseling. It was not until after the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade and allowed states to restrict abortion that President Joe Biden’s administration changed the regulation to permit broad abortion coverage at the VA.
The Biden-era rule permits the VA to perform abortions if “the life or the health” of the woman is endangered by the pregnancy, which broadly extends to both physical and mental health. The new Trump administration proposed rule would create a more strict standard, only permitting abortion “when a physician certifies that the life of the mother would be endangered if the fetus were carried to term.”
Under the Biden-era rule, the VA can also perform abortions in cases of rape and incest, which are self-reported and not verified. The Trump administration’s proposed rule change would not permit the VA to perform abortions in these instances.
The VA’s explanation of the proposed rule change notes that prior to the Biden administration’s shift, the VA “had consistently interpreted abortion services as not ‘needed’ medical services and therefore not covered by the medical benefits package.” It states that the Biden-era rule is “legally questionable.”
“This proposed rule restores VA to its proper role as the United States’ provider of needed medical services to those who served, delivered on behalf of a grateful nation,” the explanation reads.
A spokesperson for the VA said in a statement provided to CNA that the prior administration’s shift was “politically motivated” and that “federal law and long-standing precedent across Democrat and Republican administrations prevented VA from providing abortions and abortion counseling.”
“[The] VA’s proposed rule will reinstate the pre-Biden bipartisan policy, bringing the department back in line with historical norms,” the spokesperson added.
When the Biden administration adopted the rule to expand abortions at the VA, the archbishop of the Archdiocese for the Military Services, USA, Timothy P. Broglio, condemned the rule as “morally repugnant and incongruent with the Gospel.”
“I implore the faithful of this archdiocese to continue to advocate for human life and to refuse any participation in the evil of abortion,” Broglio said at the time.
Posted on 08/1/2025 19:56 PM (CNA Daily News - US)
Washington, D.C. Newsroom, Aug 1, 2025 / 15:56 pm (CNA).
The new president of the Pontifical Academy for Life, Monsignor Renzo Pegoraro, says the Church has plans to address a number of pressing matters surrounding human dignity, including artificial intelligence (AI), health systems, and the environment.
When Pegoraro stepped into his new role, he said Pope Leo XIV recommended the academy continue a dialogue “with experts from various disciplines on the challenges facing humanity on the theme of life and the quality of life in different contexts.”
The academy will also continue its focus on “issues related to the beginning and end of life as well as environmental sustainability, equity in health care systems, the right to care, health, and essential services.”
In an interview with the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops’ (USCCB) Catholic News Service, Pegoraro said as “we live in a difficult landscape … and human life on the planet is truly challenged,” the Catholic Church “has a wealth of wisdom and a vision to serve everyone in order to make the world a better and more livable place.”
Pegoraro said that “all facets of society” must be involved in the “debate” regarding technology.
“Really, everything can be addressed if all of society — policymakers, governments, the Church, different organizations — put the issue of the use of technology at the forefront,“ Pegoraro said. “And the media also have a very important role in disseminating information and subject matter on this.”
As AI advances at fast rates, Pegoraro said, the Pontifical Academy for Life “can make an important contribution to the development of the papal magisterium, in line with all the dicasteries.”
The academy, with Catholic Physicians Throughout the World, will organize an international meeting in Rome in November on “AI and Medicine: The Challenge of Human Dignity.” The conference will “confront the changes introduced by AI” and “enhance the ‘Rome Call for AI Ethics,’” a 2020 document that lays the foundations for an ethical use of AI.
The progress of AI and robotics, especially in the health field, is “extraordinary,” but “we must never forget that the needs of the person who is sick and in need of help are the priority,” Pegoraro said.
Pegoraro shared that the Church “will address the sustainability of health systems in February 2026, with examples from five continents and detailed studies.”
Leaders will ensure that “ethical framework” will be a theme at the international congress.
“We want to end up with a strong call to understand that ‘health’ and health systems must provide answers centered on life in all contexts, in all social and political realms,” Pegoraro said.
“In addition to scientific knowledge, there is a need for an ethical point of view and an awareness of the questions that come from patients, from those who are sick.”
Pegoraro highlighted the importance of supporting the sick through end-of-life care. The academy “promotes palliative care, always and especially in the final and fragile phases of life, always asking that there be attention to and respect for the protection and dignity of people who are frail.”
When asked about “aggressive treatment and the requirement to provide food and hydration to individuals in a vegetative state,” Pegoraro said it is “very complex.” But, he said, “we need to understand how to interpret treatments so that they may support and care for sick people.”
“Every situation is to be evaluated on a case-by-case basis so that they support the sick person and are not a source of further suffering,” Pegoraro said. “There are no ready-made solutions; instead, an approach of constant dialogue between doctor, patient, and family members must be fostered.”
According to Pegoraro, the most urgent bioethical and AI-related issue to tackle is “data management, its use, and storage, the objectives of the so-called ‘Big Companies,’” including Google, Apple, Facebook, and others.
“The topic of human life must be posed by looking at all dimensions of its development, at different social and political contexts, at its connection with respect for the environment, and by scrutinizing how technologies either help us live more fully and better or [hurt us by] providing terrible tools for control and manipulation.”
The topic of data is key, because “today, the wealth of big industries is the data we ourselves put on the internet,” Pegoraro said.
“We need a public debate on a global scale,” he said, “a grand coalition aimed at the respect of data … The framework is clear and Pope Francis gave it to us with Fratelli Tutti, expanding on Vatican II: We are one human family, and the issues of development and life affect every one of us.”
Posted on 08/1/2025 18:15 PM (CNA Daily News - US)
Washington, D.C. Newsroom, Aug 1, 2025 / 14:15 pm (CNA).
Bishop Abdallah Elias Zaidan, chairman of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops’ Committee on International Justice and Peace, expressed approval of U.S. President Donald Trump’s recent comments recognizing starvation in Gaza.
“I commend President Trump for acknowledging that starvation is happening in Gaza, especially affecting children,” Zaidan wrote in a July 31 statement, adding: “And I urge him to demand the immediate expansion of humanitarian assistance through all channels in Gaza.”
Zaidan, who leads the Maronite Eparchy of Our Lady of Lebanon, has remained outspoken in his calls for “lasting peace” in the Holy Land.
The Lebanese bishop’s comments come after Trump told reporters during a meeting with U.K. Prime Minister Keir Starmer in Scotland: “We’ll be helping with the food ... We’re also going to make sure that they don’t have barriers stopping people ... We can save a lot of people. That’s real starvation. I see it, and you can’t fake that.”
.@POTUS on Gaza: "We'll be helping with the food ... We're also going to make sure that they don't have barriers stopping people ... We can save a lot of people. That's real starvation. I see it, and you can't fake that." pic.twitter.com/zcFiVYCxrE
— Rapid Response 47 (@RapidResponse47) July 28, 2025
Zaidan further cited remarks by the Holy Father during the Angelus last Sunday: “Reflecting Christ’s mandate in the Gospel to love one another, Pope Leo XIV’s challenge to us is clear: ‘We cannot pray to God as “Father” and then be harsh and insensitive towards others. Instead, it is important to let ourselves be transformed by his goodness, his patience, his mercy, so that his face may be reflected in ours as in a mirror.’”
Leo’s appeal came after an Israeli strike on Gaza’s only Catholic parish left three dead and 15 wounded, including the parish’s pastor, Father Gabriel Romanelli. Israel Defense Forces (IDF) have said the strike was incidental, with Israeli Foreign Ministry spokesperson Oren Marmorstein expressing the country’s “deep regret over the damage to the Holy Family Church in Gaza City and over any civilian casualties.”
Zaidan expressed solidarity on behalf of the bishops’ conference with Cardinal Pierbattista Pizzaballa, the Latin patriarch of Jerusalem; Gazan Christians; “and all men and women of goodwill in the Holy Land, especially those suffering from unprovoked violence.”
“Let us pray that the Holy Spirit, creator and vivifier, may infuse fraternal love into the hearts and minds of peoples of all faiths living in the lands of Our Lord’s life, death, and glorious resurrection,” Zaidan concluded.
Posted on 08/1/2025 17:45 PM (CNA Daily News - Vatican)
Vatican City, Aug 1, 2025 / 13:45 pm (CNA).
Thousands of Jubilee of Youth pilgrims headed to the Circus Maximus in Rome on Friday to receive the Church’s sacrament of reconciliation.
While patiently waiting in long and winding queues to have their confessions heard at the ancient site — where Christians were once martyred for their faith — pilgrims told CNA why seeking God’s forgiveness is important for them.
Touched by Pope Leo XIV’s reminder to young people that “hope does not disappoint,” Canadian Angie Alvarez Salinas from the Archdiocese of Toronto said she believes “the love of God triumphs” over any sin.
“Confession is that renewal,” she said. “Like how Jesus said, ‘I make all things new’ ... You’re made clean and you’re made a ‘new creation.’”
“It gives you hope knowing that no matter what you have done previously or whatever your path, your struggles, or your sufferings are,” she said, “God knows you at the deepest level and he just wants to shower you with his love.”
Braving the Roman heat to get to the Circus Maximus by midday, Australian Louis Shu, who joined a 70-person international delegation organized by the Pallottine Fathers and Brothers, said he was surprised and moved to see so many people lining up to talk one-on-one with a priest.
“Confession is something that young people might shy away from,” he told CNA. “I think especially in the last few years that there’s been a change or something in the air that’s really bringing young people back into the Church.”
“People are searching for meaning, people are searching for God, for Jesus,” he said. “And I think this Jubilee Year of Hope is definitely a way of bringing young people back in.”
“I think it shows that the Church is alive and that young people still go to Church,” he added.
Iraqi Nicholas Dastafkan told CNA he believes confession is the most important sacrament after baptism as it makes you feel like “a reborn baby without any sins.”
“There is no church in the city I’m living in Turkey,” he said. “But whenever I find a Catholic church or even a Catholic priest on the street I go to confession.”
Grateful for the spiritual advice he has received from priests, Dastafkan said their words are like a “charger” that reenergizes Christians to live their faith in their daily lives.
On Friday, the Circus Maximus was transformed into an open-air confessional for thousands of young pilgrims with 200 confessionals set up as part of the Jubilee of Youth celebration in Rome. pic.twitter.com/UTRRHFZQKs
— EWTN Vatican (@EWTNVatican) August 1, 2025
For Filipino seminarian Vinnize Rey Pilapil, who is accompanying a youth delegation from the Philippines, seeing the “enormous number of people” at the Friday jubilee event dedicated to prayer and penance was a surprise.
Emphasizing that it is Jesus Christ himself — not the priest — who absolves sins, Pilapil said the desire of wanting to go to confession is a sign of grace that someone is being “called by God.”
“You are telling your story and you’re confessing your sins to Jesus himself,” he told CNA. “As we know in the Gospel, he listens, he welcomes you, he embraces you, and, most especially, he pardons all your sins.”
Posted on 08/1/2025 17:15 PM (CNA Daily News - US)
CNA Staff, Aug 1, 2025 / 13:15 pm (CNA).
The Diocese of Salt Lake City on Thursday said it had deemed “credible” several allegations of sexual misconduct made against a Colombian-born priest, with the alleged misconduct dating to the 1990s.
A press release from the diocese said that in December it had received allegations against Father Heriberto Mejia, a priest from the Diocese of Villavicencio in Colombia who served in Utah in the early 1990s.
The diocese opened a formal investigation into the allegation, using an independent investigator who interviewed “numerous witnesses” connected to the case. The diocese received the report in July.
After reviewing the report and following a recommendation from the diocese’s review board, Bishop Oscar Solís “determined the victim’s allegation of abuse against Father Mejia is credible,” the press release said.
The diocese said it offered counseling to the victim and family members and would also share the allegations with law enforcement.
Mejia’s home diocese in Colombia “will be informed of the outcome of this investigation,” the diocese said; as well, the diocese said it would notify the two Utah parishes at which Mejia served during his time in the state.
The report would be submitted to the U.S. papal nuncio in Washington, D.C., the diocese said, as well as Las Vegas Archbishop George Thomas. The Salt Lake Diocese is a suffragan diocese of the Las Vegas Archdiocese.
Solís in the press release said he “apologize[d] to [the victim] for the sexual abuse” inflicted by the priest.
“No one should experience such trauma, especially from any member of the clergy,” the bishop said. “I personally pray and hope for your complete healing, peace, and that of your family.”
In its press release the diocese noted that Mejia “was permanently removed from ministry in the diocese” prior to leaving Utah in 1992.
The diocese did not immediately respond to a query on Friday seeking more information about the removal of Mejia’s ministry privileges in the diocese in the 1990s.
The Salt Lake Tribune, however, reported this week that Mejia had his faculties stripped in the diocese after an abuse allegation in August 1991.
The paper noted that Mejia had been included on a list of credibly accused priests in 2019.
The Tribune reported that Mejia’s victim, who had been considering the priesthood, said he felt “isolated [and] unsafe” for years after the abuse and that the traumatic event led him to turn away from the priesthood.
“I’m sure there are a lot of victims like me who are still devout Catholics with a complicated relationship to the Church because of this,” he told the paper, “who didn’t lose their faith over it and want to still stay connected.”
Posted on 08/1/2025 16:30 PM (CNA Daily News - US)
Washington, D.C. Newsroom, Aug 1, 2025 / 12:30 pm (CNA).
A Florida woman has secured the last of her Google data after the tech company disabled her account following emails pertaining to pro-life advocacy.
With the help of the Thomas More Society, Trudy Perez-Poveda sued Google in 2024 when the company allegedly blocked her from her account after she sent an email attempting to plan a Catholic Mass and prayer event outside of a local abortion clinic.
The lawsuit claimed that “approximately one hour” after she sent the email, Google suspended Perez-Poveda’s account with no explanation. After several days of trying to recover her account, Google informed her that it had “permanently disabled” it for violating the company’s “acceptable use policy.”
Since filing the lawsuit in July 2024, Perez-Poveda has been able to retrieve some of her messages and data in small quantities with the help of third-party tech experts. But with no assistance from Google, the majority of it remained inaccessible.
In a July 31 press release, the Thomas More Society reported that the last of Perez-Poveda’s data suddenly became “inexplicably accessible for the first time since this controversy began,” within just days of a court-imposed settlement deadline in the lawsuit.
An IT expert confirmed that action taken on Google’s end allowed the data to return. Perez-Poveda recovered the data one year and 10 months after Google first locked her out of her account.
“Google claimed that certain tools existed online to allow her to retrieve the remaining data despite tech experts proving those tools to be unworkable,” the Thomas More Society said. “At another point, Google even falsely claimed the data never had been withheld from her at all.”
“Google has dragged Trudy Perez-Poveda through a land of smoke and mirrors, apparently because she was a pro-lifer who had the fortitude to stand up to Google and demand what belonged to her,” attorney Matt Heffron said.
Trudy “was not going to let a big-tech behemoth shut down her lifesaving mission to protect the unborn,” Heffron said.
“I was able to regain access to more than a decade worth of personal data and continue my mission to save lives in our Jacksonville community,” Perez-Poveda said in the press release.
She added: “Big tech companies cannot be allowed to decide what speech is acceptable.”
Posted on 08/1/2025 15:45 PM (CNA Daily News - US)
CNA Staff, Aug 1, 2025 / 11:45 am (CNA).
Here is a roundup of recent pro-life and abortion-related news.
A Texas man filed a federal lawsuit against a California abortionist who shipped drugs across state lines, enabling his girlfriend to end the lives of two of their unborn children.
The lawsuit takes place amid ongoing legal and political debate over the soundness of abortion shield laws — laws that protect abortionists in their home state even if they break abortion laws in other states.
Legal experts have noted that this is the first lawsuit filed in a federal court to run up against the shield laws.
In the Texas lawsuit, California’s shield laws could protect the abortionist, Remy Coeytaux, who sent drugs to Jerry Rodriguez’s girlfriend, leading to the death of two of their unborn children.
While California law protects Coeytaux, Rodriquez alleged that the abortionist broke Texas law by aiding the abortions in 2024. Abortion is largely illegal in Texas with narrow exceptions.
Prominent pro-life lawyer Jonathan Mitchell, formerly the solicitor general of Texas from 2010 to 2015, is seeking an injunction in the suit on behalf of “fathers of unborn children.”
In a similar case, Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton is taking legal action after New York employed its abortion shield laws to protect an abortionist who shipped abortion drugs into Texas.
The legal dispute began in December 2024 when Paxton sued New York abortionist Margaret Carpenter for sending abortion drugs to Texas. The drugs led to the death of an unborn child and serious medical complications for the mother.
A Texas judge ordered Carpenter to stop prescribing abortion pills to Texas residents and gave her a $100,000 fine. Paxton this week, meanwhile, filed a legal petition against Acting County Clerk for Ulster County Taylor Bruck to enforce the judge’s ruling in New York.
The Ulster County Clerk’s office “plainly rejected any attempt by Texas to enforce the judgment and authorize collection of the penalty,” Paxton’s office said in a press release.
Paxton called Carpenter “a radical abortionist who must face justice.”
“No matter where they reside, pro-abortion extremists who send drugs designed to kill the unborn into Texas will face the full force of our state’s pro-life laws,” Paxton said.
Oklahoma Gov. Kevin Stitt on Thursday issued an executive order directing state agencies to “cease all public funding” for abortion providers and affiliated organizations.
“Oklahoma is a pro-life state, and our policies should reflect that at every level of our government,” Stitt said in the release. “We won’t allow tax dollars to indirectly subsidize and flow into the abortion industry under the guise of women’s health.”
The directive will require providers who want to access state Medicaid dollars to affirm whether or not they are involved with any “abortion-related activities.” Providers who take part in such activities will see their state contracts terminated, the order says.
The measure “also prohibits all state agencies from providing grants, contracts, or funding of any kind to abortion-affiliated providers directly or indirectly.”
Posted on 08/1/2025 15:00 PM (CNA Daily News - Vatican)
Washington, D.C. Newsroom, Aug 1, 2025 / 11:00 am (CNA).
Here is a roundup of Catholic world news from the past week that you might have missed.
During a vocation-themed evening in Rome, two young Syrian women, Olga Al-Maati and Christine Saad, moved hearts with their testimony about living faith amid war, CNA’s Arabic-language news partner, ACI MENA, reported on Thursday.
Representing the Marian youth of Damascus, they told fellow attendees that their presence wasn’t about recounting suffering but spreading hope. They spoke of growing up amid bombs and despair yet clinging to Christ and discovering deep meaning in faith.
Their testimony, rooted in the Vincentian spirit of charity and perseverance, received a heartfelt response. “Love is stronger than death,” Saad declared, highlighting the role of Syrian youth in helping others find light in darkness through acts of service.
The Diocese of Ubon Ratchathani in northeast Thailand activated its emergency shelters on Tuesday for those fleeing ongoing border clashes between Thailand and Cambodia, according to a report from Fides.
Despite a Trump administration-brokered ceasefire agreement on Monday, tensions between the two countries remain high, the report said, prompting the diocese to open its shelters, which took in roughly 200,000 displaced people. Bishop Stephen Boonlert Phromsena has opened donation sites across the diocese, while Caritas and other local Catholic agencies are providing food, water, clothing, and other basic necessities to refugees of the conflict.
In a moving letter to the South Sudan government shared this week with ACI Africa, CNA’s news partner in Africa, Bishop Eduardo Hiiboro Kussala of the Tombura-Yambio Diocese pleaded for bold action to end the protracted violence occurring within his episcopal see.
“Our people live under plastic sheeting, drink unsafe water, walk in fear, and bury their loved ones in silence,” he wrote, adding: “This is not a political inconvenience, this is a humanitarian tragedy and a moral failure.”
Ethnically-driven violence between the Azande and Balanda communities has plagued Tombura as conflicts over political representation, traditional authority roles, and land access continue to escalate.
Hundreds of Lebanese youth gathered at the Basilica of the Twelve Holy Apostles in Rome during the Jubilee of Youth to pray for peace in Lebanon, lifting their country in prayer, asking for strength, reconciliation, and a renewed spirit of responsibility among their fellow citizens.
According to ACI MENA, Bishop Jules Boutros, who heads the Syriac Catholic youth committee, urged participants to model their hearts after Christ’s and be beacons of unity and love. Also present, Armenian Catholic priest Father Bedros Haddad invoked prayers for Lebanon’s recovery from its many crises, remembering the victims of the Aug. 4, 2020, Beirut port explosion and the country’s ongoing political and economic turmoil.
Bishop Joseph Obanyi Sagwe of the Kakamega Diocese called out the Kenyan government’s reported plans to scrap free education in the country, warning that the move would trigger a crisis in the education sector by shifting the financial burden to already struggling parents.
Speaking to journalists on July 28, Obanyi said that should government capitation in schools in Kenya be removed, most learning institutions in the East African nation will not be able to operate, ACI Africa reported on Wednesday. “If capitation is removed from schools, there’s going to be a crisis. I’m aware that many of the institutions, even when they were not getting this capitation on time, some of them were taking overdrafts, awaiting the capitation,” he said.
Cardinal Reinhard Marx, the archbishop of Munich and Freising in Germany, has encouraged the people of Bavaria to vote in the next local election in the free state on March 8, 2026, and to run in the elections.
Marx published the appeal together with the state bishop of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Bavaria, Christian Kopp, on Friday, according to CNA Deutsch, CNA’s German-language news partner.
“The two Christian churches in Bavaria encourage all people to run for a local political mandate with a democratic party or association,” the appeal said. Even if federal and state politics often play a more prominent role in the media, Marx and Kopp emphasized the importance of local politics.
“It takes care of services of general interest, [including] water, energy, garbage disposal, or fire protection,” they continued. “It decides on the weighting of the areas of economic development, construction, social affairs, and education, sport, health, and care.”
Bon Secours Mercy Health, a U.S-based Catholic health care provider, has announced plans to invest up to $500 million to build a major hospital in the Philippines.
“If realized, it would mark one of the largest private-sector health care investments by a U.S.-based system in the Philippines,” the Philippine government task force that oversees foreign investments said in a statement, according to an Inquirer.net report.
According to its website, Bon Secours Mercy Health’s mission “is to extend the compassionate ministry of Jesus by improving the health and well-being of our communities.” Commitment to “uphold the sacredness of life,” integrity, compassion, stewardship, and service are also listed as its core values.
Posted on 08/1/2025 14:00 PM (U.S. Catholic)
Alan Sparhawk with Trampled by Turtles Alan Sparhawk & Trampled by Turtles (Sub Pop, 2025) On November 5, 2022, Mimi Parker died. Singer, songwriter, and drummer of the influential and long-running band Low, mother of two, and wife of fellow bandmate Alan Sparhawk, Parker succumbed to a battle with ovarian cancer at the age of […]
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Posted on 08/1/2025 14:00 PM (CNA Daily News - US)
Houston, Texas, Aug 1, 2025 / 10:00 am (CNA).
Members of the Ordinariate of the Chair of St. Peter celebrated with extra gusto the Vatican’s July 31 announcement that St. John Henry Newman will soon become the 38th doctor of the Church.
“St. John Henry Newman is part of our patrimony,” Bishop Steven J. Lopes, the first bishop of the ordinariate, wrote in a celebratory message email to its members. He called Newman “a treasure to be shared,” writing that his “doctrinal contribution to the life of the Church — his particular way of expressing the faith in English — does not belong to one specific time or culture or linguistic context.”
The Ordinariate of the Chair of St. Peter, which is the equivalent of a Roman Catholic diocese, has a special relationship with Newman. The ordinariate was established in 2012 after Pope Benedict XVI issued Anglicanorum Coetibus, which provided a pathway for Episcopalians and Anglicans to enter into full communion with the Catholic Church while preserving some elements of their Anglican patrimony in their liturgies and ministries.
Before his conversion to Catholicism in 1845, Newman was an Anglican priest and academic and one of the leaders of the Oxford Movement, a 19th-century religious revival within the Church of England that sought to renew Anglicanism by emphasizing its Catholic heritage.
His intellectual rigor and spiritual openness led to Newman’s conversion, which shocked the Anglican establishment. A prolific writer of more than 40 books and thousands of sermons and articles, his most well-known works include “Apologia Pro Vita Sua,” a spiritual autobiography, and “The Idea of a University,” in which he outlines his vision for higher education.
When Pope Leo XIII made Newman a cardinal in 1879, Newman chose the motto “Cor ad cor loquitur” (“Heart speaks to heart”) because he realized we are saved through the Lord speaking from his heart to ours.
Newman is the patron of Cathedral High School, located at the Cathedral of Our Lady of Walsingham, the principal church for the ordinariate located in Houston. The school shares his motto, which is inscribed throughout the school: on the entrance to the Gothic structure, in the gym, and on the school’s seal.
Dr. Alexis Kutarna, principal of Cathedral High School, upon learning of the honor being bestowed on Newman, told CNA that “we rejoice with the Church on this blessed occasion!”
Kutarna pointed out a portrait of a young Newman wearing an Oratorian collar (anachronistically stylized in that he would not yet have worn the collar at that age) that hangs on the wall near the school’s entrance. She said it was chosen because the school’s leadership wants the students to see that even as young people, great contributions like Newman’s are possible in their own lives and they too can do much for the Church.
She recalled with a smile that a student, J.P. England, asked her if they put the photo of a young Newman up “because we’re young too?”
After she said yes, he replied: “I like it.”
“St. John Henry Newman held a special love for students,” Kutarna said, adding that she hopes to inspire the students with “Newman’s commitment to the intellectual life and the pastoral love he had for his people.”
She told CNA that as the school was being formed, the curriculum committee studied Newman’s “The Idea of a University.”
“Our hearts must be open to the Lord, dialoguing with him in friendship, and with one another,” Kutarna told CNA. She described the mentoring that takes place between students and teachers at the school.
Newman was ordained a Catholic priest in 1847 and made a cardinal by Pope Leo XIII in 1879. He was a member of the Oratory of St. Philip Neri. He died on Aug. 11, 1890, and was beatified by Pope Benedict XVI in 2010 and canonized by Pope Francis in 2019. In his encyclical Dilexit Nos, Pope Francis spoke of Newman’s choice of his motto “Cor ad cor loquitur” — “Heart speaks to heart.”
Francis wrote: “This realization led him, the distinguished intellectual, to recognize that his deepest encounter with himself and with the Lord came not from his reading or reflection but from his prayerful dialogue, heart to heart, with Christ, alive and present. It was in the Eucharist that Newman encountered the living heart of Jesus, capable of setting us free, giving meaning to each moment of our lives, and bestowing true peace.”
Kutarna said Cathedral High School’s mission is to teach its students “to love God above all things.”
“This is the most important thing,” she said.