Monday, January 19, 2026

Bishop Barron: Battle gender ideology

“When I was still an auxiliary bishop in Los Angeles, I attended with my brother bishops from California an ad limina visit with Pope Francis. At the conclusion of the meeting, as we were rising to leave, the Pope stopped us and said, “I want you all to battle the gender ideology that is sweeping your country. It is opposed to the Bible and to our Catholic anthropology.” In his later declaration “Dignitas infinita,” Pope Francis strongly reiterated this position, arguing that gender ideology is deeply harmful to the dignity of young people.


“This is why I was so pleased to see Secretary Robert Kennedy’s announcement this morning that he is endeavoring to ban so-called gender re-assignment surgery and the use of puberty blockers that halt natural sexual development. The Catholic Church agrees with Secretary Kennedy that these procedures result in irreparable physical harm and typically increase the psychological distress of those who undergo them.  


“Anyone with a pastor’s heart sympathizes with those who suffer from gender dysphoria and insists that all people must be treated with love, compassion, respect, and dignity. But interventions that result in the mutilation of our young people are neither compassionate nor respectful. I’m grateful to Secretary Kennedy and the department of Health and Human Services for this action.”

@BishopBarron on Twitter/X.

Sunday, January 18, 2026

Pew report reveals why US Catholics leave their childhood faith

 Most Americans typically do so by age 30, with Catholics showing especially low retention

Catholics gather in East Los Angeles College stadium at the 91st Procession and Mass honoring Our Lady of Guadalupe and St. Juan Diego, in the traditionally Latino community of East Los Angeles, on Dec. 4, 2022, in Los Angeles, California.

Catholics gather in East Los Angeles College stadium at the 91st Procession and Mass honoring Our Lady of Guadalupe and St. Juan Diego, in the traditionally Latino community of East Los Angeles, on Dec. 4, 2022, in Los Angeles, California. (Photo: AFP)

Published: December 16, 2025 06:07 AM GMT







Americans who leave their childhood religion typically do so by the age of 30, with just under half saying they stopped believing their former religion's teachings.

For Catholics, retention rates tend to be significantly lower than for other faiths, while former Catholics cite varying reasons for leaving the church, depending upon their current religious affiliation -- or lack thereof.

And on balance, having positive childhood experiences of religion and growing up with regular religious practices both play a significant role in adult retention of childhood religious identity.

Those were among the findings released Dec. 15 by Pew Research Center in a report titled "Why Do Some Americans Leave Their Religion While Others Stay?"  
Pew drew on data from a May 5-11 survey of 8,937 US adults who are part of the center's American Trends Panel and from the center's 2023-2024 Religious Landscape Study, representing 36,908 U.S. adults.

Overall, slightly more than half (56%) of US adults still identify with their childhood religion, with 35% reporting they have "moved on from the religion of their youth," said Pew. Another 9% "weren't raised in a religion and still don't have one today," said the report.

Pew found that retention rates for Catholics (57%) -- who comprise 19% of US adults -- were much lower than those for Hindus (82%), Muslims (77%), Jews (76%) and Protestants (70%), although somewhat higher than for Latter-day Saints (54%) and Buddhists (45%).

Saturday, January 17, 2026

Beautiful reflection on marriage


Our final wedding of 2025 brought us somewhere we had long been told we must photograph. St. Lawrence in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania did not disappoint! FSSP North American Province: Priestly Fraternity of Saint Peter

On a golden November day, the light unfolded perfectly. Soft autumn color. A glowing sunset along the river. The Capitol rising with stately presence behind it all. One of those days that feels composed rather than chaotic, as if Heaven itself approved the schedule.

Julia was an elegant bride in every sense of the word. She met her tall, handsome groom where so many Catholic love stories begin. At Church, in the choir loft. Voices lifted together in praise. So, it was only fitting that they chose the feast of St. Cecilia for their wedding day, the beloved patroness of sacred music. So intentional, these young Catholics!

St. Cecilia is often described as singing to God in her heart even amid suffering, reminding us that true music is not performance but prayer. Marriage is much the same. A daily offering. A harmony learned over time. Two voices… distinct, yet ordered toward the same end.

St. Augustine tells us that to sing is to pray twice. Watching these two exchange vows within the ancient beauty of the Latin Mass, surrounded by sacred chant and soaring architecture, we were reminded that a Catholic marriage is meant to sound like something. Like reverence…Like joy... Like fidelity lived out loud.

May they make beautiful music together all the days of their marriage. All for His glory.

Latin Mass Photographer - Allison Girone with Regina Jelski and Miriam Cunningham

Source: G Photography on Facebook 

Friday, January 16, 2026

Liturgical vandals: When innovation and betrayal is spun as “necessary evolution”.

Robert Lazu Kmita:

« For the “reformists” who wish to definitively bury the Liturgy of the ages, there is no debate. For them, everything is clear, definitive, and irrevocable. Their radical historicism, which tells them that the new liturgy is the result of a necessary evolution, does not allow for alternatives. All their positions, from Pope Paul VI to Pope Francis, testify to this. Confronted with those represented by the Federation Una Voce and traditionalist priestly fraternities, they sometimes display—simultaneously—fury and astonishment. Everything is encapsulated in Ross Douthat’ question (already cited) that describes Pope Francis’s reaction to the traditionalists: "How can this thing still be sticking around?"...

The foundation of this attitude of rejection towards traditionalists and their message is strictly doctrinal: the Second Vatican Council and its reforms are an inevitable necessity. All those who oppose it are doomed to perish, as they resist the course of history and the inspiration of the Holy Spirit, which has set entirely different priorities for our times than those of the pre-Council Church: ecumenism, inter-religious dialogue, feminism, ecology, global governance, encouragement of immigration, etc.

Because of its irreconcilable demands with such “values,” the Gospel must be modified and attenuated, just like everything that represents traditional Christian identity. The modern world and the man of the revolutions are the landmarks that must be followed without hesitation”

https://x.com/drkwasniewski/status/2012198286447301103?s=46&t=IydJ-X8H6c0NM044nYKQ0w


Busting the myth of a “parallel Church” with the traditional rite of Mass



Towards a "normalization" of the Tridentine Mass?

 Those Catholics who pray in both Latin and French

La Croix
Matthieu Lasserre & Eve Guyot
December 14, 2025

 While Gregorian chants still resonate inside Saint George's, in Old Lyon, several fathers are already on the church square, letting their children get some fresh air. Among them is Grégoire, 31 years old. This Lyon native began attending the parish five years ago to follow his wife, a devotee of the Latin Mass. Full of preconceived notions about "this world of traditional Catholics," he now alternates between the ordinary rite without any problem: "First, there's the place of silence, which fosters my contemplation, and, more strangely, the power of Latin."

 The language, which had distanced him from religion during his time at a traditionalist school in his adolescence, ultimately reconnected him to his faith. "As an adopted child, I was also very afraid of not belonging here, but I was completely wrong," he insists, explaining that he has found "true diversity" there.


As the Mass draws to a close, the profile of the parishioners emerges at the door: numerous families with young children, a handful of elderly people, a few foreigners passing through the city. But also, and above all, young adults. "More and more of them are coming here, but without preventing themselves from attending Mass elsewhere and in other ways," observes Father Mathieu Grenier, chaplain of Saint-Georges.


A youth of both rites


The priest's observations extend beyond the capital of Gaul. According to a Bayard-La Croix study conducted by Ifop, 9% of regular churchgoers say that the Latin Mass is their preferred Mass, and 25% indicate that they like "the Latin Mass as much as the Mass in French." In total, 67% of Catholics who attend Mass every week state that they have at least no objection to the Tridentine Rite.


Thus, in recent years, a generation of "bi-ritualists" has emerged, Catholics who appreciate both missals, far removed from the historical divisions between traditionalists and those who follow the Second Vatican Council. The record attendance at the Chartres pilgrimage at Pentecost attests to this trend: the gathering now attracts people far beyond the "traditionalist" sphere.

La Croix wanted to understand this phenomenon: how can the two rites be complementary and nourish the faith of both groups? And above all, who are these Catholics capable of alternating between the liturgies, from one day or week to the next? Most of the faithful interviewed are young adults, under 35 years old, living mostly in large cities – where the availability of Masses offers them a choice. Rejecting labels of affiliation, they do not recognize themselves in the danger of a "parallel Church" that Pope Francis invoked in 2021 to restrict the celebration of the Mass in use before the Second Vatican Council.


More: https://x.com/roratecaeli/status/2000691245241213335?s=46&t=IydJ-X8H6c0NM044nYKQ0w

If I have not charity, “I am nothing”.

Lesson from the first letter of St. Paul the Apostle to the Corinthians

1 Cor 13:1-3
1 If I speak with the tongues of men, and of angels, and have not charity, I am become as sounding brass, or a tinkling cymbal.
2 And if I should have prophecy and should know all mysteries, and all knowledge, and if I should have all faith, so that I could remove mountains, and have not charity, I am nothing.
3 And if I should distribute all my goods to feed the poor, and if I should deliver my body to be burned, and have not charity, it profiteth me nothing.

Trump administration restores Title X funding to Planned Parenthood

Tens of millions of dollars of funding have been restored for Planned Parenthood’s birth control and other non-abortion services.

Trump administration restores Title X funding to Planned Parenthood
The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services headquarters building in Washington, D.C. | Credit: ajay_suresh, CC BY 2.0, via Wikimedia

By Katie Quinones - EWTN









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