The Battle to Ban Mifepristone Rages On

The battle over abortion continues in the United States. 

The widely-used abortion drug, Mifepristone, remains available to women in the U.S., following a ruling by the U.S. Supreme Court on Friday.

The White House responded to the high court’s ruling with President Joe Biden praising justices for keeping Mifepristone available to women as the fight over the drug continues.

Not everyone was happy with the high court’s decision. 

“The interim order by the Supreme Court is a tremendous disappointment, both for the loss of innocent pre-born life from chemical abortion, and for the danger that chemical abortion poses to women. It is wrong to allow the FDA’s greatly diminished health and safety standards for mifepristone to remain in place,” the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops said in a statement. 

As the next chapter in Mifepristone begins many are hoping the high court will step up to remove the abortion drug once and for all. 

“I also hope the Supreme Court would make the FDA do its job, the job it did not do 20 years ago and actually seriously examine this medicine,” Former U.S. Vice President Mike Pence said. 

The drug could ultimately be taken away again. 

The case is expected to go back to the fifth circuit federal appeals court.

A three-judge-panel will hold a hearing on May 17th and then issue a decision sometime later.

An appeal to the Supreme Court would need to happen within three months of the ruling.

There’s no deadline for the justices to review the case.

Catholic News Headlines for Monday 04/24/2023

 

The widely used abortion drug, Mifepristone, remains available to women in the U.S. after a ruling by the Supreme Court on Friday.

U.S. government embassy employees are out of Sudan according to the Biden administration.

Some Students at St. Saviour Catholic High School just got back from Japan.

She is the oldest nun in America  and she lives on Long Island.

Pope Francis Meets with Mayor of Lisbon, Portugal Ahead of World Youth Day

Pope Francis welcomed the Mayor of Lisbon, Carlos Moedas.

The meeting took place three months before the start of World Youth Day in Portugal. It will be the Catholic Church’s first international, large-scale event since the pandemic, bringing together people from 120 countries.

The last World Youth Day was on January 27, 2019 in Panama. Since then, it has not been possible to organize the event due to pandemic restrictions.

World Youth Day will be held in Lisbon, the capital of Portugal, from August 1 to 6. The motto chosen for the occasion is “Mary arose and departed without delay,” a quote referring to Mary’s visit to her cousin St. Elizabeth.

Catholic News Headlines for Friday 04/21/2023

We are once again awaiting a Supreme Court decision related to abortion.

It’s been four years since the Sri Lanka Easter Church bombings took place and the Catholic Church there is fighting to uncover the truth.

Thousands of objects that couldn’t fit in a new museum at the Colosseum Archaeological Park in Rome are now on display elsewhere.

What Happened to Pope Francis’ Blue Checkmark on Twitter?

Pope Francis’ Twitter account—that holds over 18 million followers—no longer has a blue checkmark next to his name. Now, it is grey.

The grey checkmark means the account represents an official government organization or active government leader.

The new checkmark is one of many changes made to Twitter since it was purchased by Elon Musk in 2022.

Twitter CEO, billionaire and tech mogul Elon Musk met with Pope Francis at Casa Santa Marta in 2022 with four of his seven children.

“Sri Lanka Will be Free When the Truth About the Easter Sunday Bombing is Known”

On April 21, 2019, a terrorist attack in Sri Lanka destroyed two Catholic churches and killed 250 people. Four years later, the local community is still searching for the truth.

Fr. Julian Perera, from the Archdiocese of Colombo, Sri Lanka, has spoken with the United Nations Human Rights Council. He claims the investigation into the attacks stalled after details of the terrorist group began to emerge. The 23 people investigating were also transferred to another case.

“Because what happened was it happened in 2019 in April. But in the month of November of 2019, the entire set of investigators, as far as I remember 23 of them, who were leading the investigation, who were going into the details of who was behind that,” Fr. Perera said. “What was the reason, what was happening within this group… All of them were transferred and removed.”

The Sri Lankan priest claims that the government is trying to make the case too complicated to solve. They arrested 25 people, but charged them with 23,000 crimes. He says that with so many charges, it will be difficult for the case to be solved.

“Can you imagine having a case with 23,000 charges against 25 people?” Fr. Perera said. “So you can see that it’s just a eyewash because it will take more than a lifetime to read these charges against them. So you can see that there is an attempt, a deliberate attempt to somehow cover the truth being exposed.”

Fr. Perera suggests that there are links between political groups and the terrorist attack four years ago. A climate of instability could electorally benefit the political parties with a reputation for being tough on the country’s enemies. But this has not stopped him and many others from trying to uncover the truth.

“We will somehow fight for justice and somehow also ultimately reveal the truth because our faith tells us as Jesus said: truth shall set you free,'” Fr. Perera said. “This country will be set free of all this political gameplay only when the truth of the Easter Sunday attack is revealed.”

While there is religious freedom in Sri Lanka, Fr. Perera argues that not all religions have freedom of speech. The Catholic Church has developed a good reputation in the country by fighting against injustice.

For example, the Church helped defend Jeevantha Peiris, who protested against the corruption of the government and Cardinal Ranjith, Bishop of Colombo, who called for a more democratic society.

“We have gained some credibility because we have been standing up and saying what is wrong is wrong,” Fr. Perera said. “For example, recently, there was a postponement of elections in Sri Lanka. So the religious leaders were not vocal enough. But the cardinal was out there, saying it out right, saying it straight out, saying that this is unacceptable. If you have the time for elections, have it. Why do you want to delay elections? Because you are going to lose it.”

Fr. Perera says the Church in Sri Lanka will continue to fight for answers and support justice for all.

 

As Title 42 Expiration Approaches, Mayor Adams Pleads for More Federal Assistance

Cities across the U.S., including New York, have seen migrants pouring in for months. They are now bracing themselves for even more newcomers.

With the COVID-19 pandemic in the rearview mirror, Title 42, which allows border officials to quickly expel migrants who cross illegally, is expected to expire on May 11th.

Some local officials are already requesting federal assistance before the migrant crisis gets worse. 

New York Mayor Eric Adams is calling out Washington for failure to help New York City with the current migrant crisis.

“The national government has turned its back on New York City,” Adams said. 

Mayor Adams is warning things will get worse. 

“This is one of the largest humanitarian crises that this city has ever experienced,” Adams said. “It will impact every service in the city . Why isn’t every elected official in Washington DC asking the national government, ‘why are you doing this to New York?’”

Catholic News Headlines for Thursday 04/20/2023

New York City Mayor Eric Adams says the national government turned its back on NYC.        

We have an update on the investigation into the parking garage collapse in lower Manhattan this week. 

The abortion pill Mifepristone is still available as the Supreme Court considers a lower court ruling that would have imposed restrictions on the drug.

Father Grieves His 20-Year-Old Daughter Who Was Killed For Turning In Wrong Driveway

A father shares his pain and anguish after losing his daughter, all because she drove into the wrong driveway.

For the first time we’re hearing from Andrew Gillis, whose daughter Kaylin was killed in that tragic shooting.

“Kaylin’s two younger sisters Chloe and Maddie are going to have to grow up without their older sister,” Gillis said. “My wife Angel is going to have to go through the rest of her life without her baby girl.”

Gillis’ last words to his daughter were ”I love you.”

It’s one of several shootings that have taken place this week and Andrew wants something done about it. 

Kevin Monahan, 65, is now facing a second degree murder charge, after firing the gun that killed Kaylin, authorities said.

Kaylin was with her boyfriend, Blake Walsh and two others, driving on a rural road in Washington County, New York, looking for a friend’s house last weekend, when they lost cell service, terminating their GPS service.

Walsh then pulled into Monahan’s driveway. 

Monahan, who has a reputation in the area for being “confrontational and hot-tempered,” according to prosecutors, let off two shots, hitting Kaylin as the car was turning.

Vatican Sends Relic of True Cross to Britain’s King Charles

By Cindy Wooden

VATICAN CITY (CNS) — As Britain’s King Charles III walks into Westminster Abbey for his coronation, he will walk behind a processional cross containing a relic of Christ’s cross given to the king by Pope Francis.

“The fragments of the relic of the true cross were donated by the Holy See in early April, through the apostolic nunciature, to His Majesty King Charles III, supreme governor of the Church of England, as an ecumenical gesture on the occasion of the centenary of the Anglican Church in Wales,” Matteo Bruni, director of the Vatican press office said April 20.

A Vatican official said the two fragments in the coronation cross came from a relic preserved in the Lipsanoteca Room of the Vatican Museums.

The fragments now are under glass in the center of the coronation cross, which is made of recycled silver bullion.

Anglican Archbishop Andrew John of Wales blessed the cross during a service April 19.

The Anglican Church in Wales, which refers to the cross as the Cross of Wales, said it is inscribed on the back with words, in Welsh, from the last sermon of St. David, a sixth-century bishop and patron saint of Wales: “Be joyful. Keep the faith. Do the little things.”

King Charles has given the cross to the Christians of Wales, and after the coronation it will be shared by the Anglican and Catholic churches there.

“With a sense of deep joy, we embrace this cross, kindly given by King Charles, and containing a relic of the true cross, generously gifted by the Holy See,” said Catholic Archbishop Mark O’Toole of Cardiff in a statement published on the Church in Wales website.

The cross “is not only a sign of the deep Christian roots of our nation but will, I am sure, encourage us all to model our lives on the love given by our savior, Jesus Christ,” Archbishop O’Toole said.

Chris Trott, the British ambassador to the Holy See, said on Twitter that “we are deeply moved and grateful to Pope Francis for this extraordinary gift.”

The gift of the relic, he said, reflects the strength of the relationship between the Holy See and Great Britain, a “relationship that developed over the course of the reign of Her Late Majesty Queen Elizabeth, who met five popes!”

Msgr. Ervin Lengyel, secretary of the Vatican nunciature in London, tweeted: “In a significant ecumenical gesture, the Cross of Wales will incorporate a relic of the true cross, the personal gift of Pope Francis to His Majesty the King to mark the coronation.”