Jesus was political and so are we ~ how christians vote matters

An Ecumenical Ministry in the Parish of St Patrick's Catholic Church In San Diego USA

米国サンディエゴの聖パトリックカトリック教会教区におけるエキュメニカル宣教

Our Mission: to see the baptized who live in SoNoGo worship in SoNoGo

Thursday, May 28, 2026

Remember that you are temples of the Holy Spirit

 

 We call this SoNoGo - South Park-North Park-Golden Hill & Our Mission: to see the baptized who live in SoNoGo worship in SoNoGo

New wesite: https://www.stpatrickschurchsd.org/ 

Saint Patrick Catholic Parish

The Catholic Church Explained

Father Gregory Ashe was the founding pastor of St. Patrick’s parish, beginning in 1921 and serving until 1925 when he was replaced by Father Thomas Healy, the parish’s second pastor, and first Augustinian.  Father Ashe eventually returned to Buffalo, New York to serve in parish work.  He died there in 1934.  Father Healy served as pastor of St. Patrick’s for a year and a half, after which he returned to Pennsylvania. He died a short time later in January 1927 at the age of 54.  Both Fathers Ashe and Healy were born in Ireland. The 1920s were good to San Diego and the community of North Park.  Businesses were thriving, new arrivals spurred development, and optimism was high.  Under Father Daley’s guidance, the parish decided to commit to the construction of a magnificent structure, Romanesque in style, using the best architecture and artistry available.  Frank Hope was contracted as the architect and the M.H. Golden company did the construction.  The contract was signed on October 15th, 1928, and work began almost immediately.  Amazingly, the church, the present structure, was finished by Easter Sunday, 1929, in just about six months, but it wasn’t dedicated until September 1929.  The cost of the structure was $37,000, and with all the interior additions the cost of the project was around $60,000.  Father Daley and the parishioners of St. Patrick’s were justifiably proud of their accomplishments.  The next step would be the construction of a school, and it probably would have gone forward but for one obstacle: the stock market crash of 1929 and the Great Depression.

Obedience became the instrument of humanity’s reconciliation to God.

 

“God so loved the world that he gave his only Son.”

 

How to preach the good news when you are suffering

How worship music became the soundtrack of today’s political right

How worship music became the soundtrack of today’s political right
Religion News Service: One of the most popular worship songs, “How Great Is Our God,” has moved from churches to political rallies in recent years.

 

Historic Black Baptist church closes chapter with downtown service amid sale
The Fort Worth Report: For over a century, Mount Gilead Baptist Church has been a cornerstone of Fort Worth African American history.

 

An Ohio pastor-turned-lawmaker backs a Charlie Kirk American Heritage Act for schools
NPR: The bill says it would permit the teaching of the positive impact of “Judeo-Christian” values in U.S. history. It lists two dozen examples, from appeals to divine power in the Declaration of Independence and the religious backgrounds of the signers, to the impact of evangelical Billy Graham.

 

The teens who attacked the Islamic Center of San Diego were latest to cite prior atrocities
The Associated Press: In rambling writings full of vitriol against a wide range of people, the teenagers who attacked the Islamic Center of San Diego this week, killing three men and themselves, left little doubt about the models for their violence.

 

Texas Senate runoff sees surge of anti-Muslim rhetoric in campaign ads
The Guardian: Runoff between John Cornyn and Ken Paxton features ads and legal disputes targeting Texas Muslims.

Cubans are coming to parishes saying they haven’t eaten in days

Cubans are coming to parishes saying they haven’t eaten in days, bishop laments

In a country where deprivation is the norm, the situation is exacerbated by deteriorating infrastructure and the U.S. fuel embargo. People are hungry and the Church is striving to meet their needs.

Young Catholics drive record crowds for Chartres Pilgrimage in France

Nearly 20,000 people from 22 countries took part in the three-day walk. An internal study of the pilgrims this year looked at their faith, practice, and motivations.

2 brothers ordained priests on same day in Brazil, fulfilling ‘God’s dream,’ bishop says

Taking different paths to the priesthood, two brothers were ordained on May 23 in their childhood parish, where they had served as altar boys and sang in the choir.

Charles Zech, professor who launched papal-approved church management program, dies at 79

The professor founded and led the Center for Church Management at Villanova University, where he taught economics for years.

Churchgoers hear about political, social issues in U.S. from pulpit, Pew survey says

White evangelical Protestants and U.S. Catholics were the most likely to report that clergy recently spoke about abortion.

Wednesday, May 27, 2026

UK government launches £92m Places of Worship Renewal Fund

Artificial Intelligence and the Catholic Church: 3 Questions for Discernment in a Speech by the Co-founder of Anthropic to Pope Leo XIV

ZENIT Staff

Full text in Spanish of the speech by Christopher Olah, co-founder of the AI company Anthropic, to Pope Leo XIV on the encyclical Magnificas Humanitas

The Israeli invasion of Palestine: governments, churches, and humanitarian groups are sounding the alarm

ZENIT Staff

In a rare and strongly worded joint declaration, the governments of France, Germany, Italy, the United Kingdom, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Norway, and the Netherlands warned that recent developments in the West Bank threaten both stability and the long-standing framework of a negotiated two-state solution.

UK government launches £92m Places of Worship Renewal Fund

ZENIT Staff

The Places of Worship Renewal Fund was announced in January 2026 and is funded by the Department for Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS) and delivered by Historic England.

Southern Lebanon: Stories of Occupation

ZENIT Staff

In the 600 square kilometers occupied by Israel in the south of the country, there are 68 villages under military control and more than 200,000 displaced people. The war has caused almost three thousand deaths. The Maronite Bishops urge Lebanon to be sovereign and neutral, while the population only asks to live with dignity. The testimony of Friar Toufic Bou Mehri, Franciscan parish priest.

German government recognizes the Catholic Church as a model in the fight against child sexual abuse

Joachin Meisner Hertz

One of her strongest observations concerns the local level, where child protection often succeeds or fails. She suggested that some Catholic communities have developed prevention mechanisms that, in practice, exceed standards found in municipal structures

Italian Car Company Presents Ferrari Luce to Pope Leo XIV and Gifts Him the Steering Wheel

ZENIT Staff

John Elkann donated the car’s steering wheel to the Pope

Freemasonry Behind the Campaign Against Pope Leo XIV’s Visit to Spain

ZENIT Staff

In Barcelona, a coalition of secularist organizations has launched a campaign under the slogan “I Do Not Wait for You,” calling for a boycott of the Pope’s visit

Everything You Need to Know About Mel Gibson’s Film «The Resurrection»: Release Date, Budget, Cast…

Rafael Llanes

The budget is US$250 million. The first images from the set have been released on social media.

Beautiful Stories of Priestly Longevity! These Are the Greatest Priests in the World

ZENIT Staff

The faithful often find in certain priests a wisdom that is difficult to replace. Decades of spiritual accompaniment, shared sufferings, and human experience allow them to speak serenely about faith, pain, death, and hope.

Africa is Catholicism’s future, but Pentecostal churches are growing faster

Conservative Christians love this painting of George Washington. The event it depicts may not have happened
NPR: A 1975 oil painting by Arnold Friberg of George Washington praying is on display at the Museum of the Bible in Washington D.C.

 

Africa is Catholicism’s future, but Pentecostal churches are growing faster*
The Washington Post: The growth of Christianity in Africa has turned the continent into a denominational battleground. Pope Leo’s visit to Angola came as his church confronts a rising challenge.

 

A seminary where queer students belong*
Insider Higher Ed: Union Theological Seminary offers an affirming faith community while challenging exclusionary narratives about LGBTQ+ identity.

 

Inside the unlikely Vatican-Anthropic relationship that's reshaping the AI ethics debate
Religion News Service: Pope Leo XIV’s new encyclical on AI was released Monday (May 25), with Chris Olah, a co-founder of Anthropic, at his side.

 

Religious leaders, lawmakers push for $1 billion to secure houses of worship
NPR: At a recent Shabbat service in West Bloomfield, Michigan, Rabbi Jen Lader shared plans to lobby Congress to pour more funding into a federal program that strengthens security at houses of worship.

Amani Interest List Now Open

 

U.S. bishops praise Leo’s encyclical on AI

Vice President Vance calls Magnifica Humanitas ‘profound’

“The thing about morality is that the principles never change, but the way you apply those principles does, because the world changes, right?” Vance told NBC News.

U.S. bishops praise Leo’s encyclical on AI, echo concern for human dignity, common good

Bishops encouraged “people of goodwill” to reflect and apply the teachings.

Anthropic co-founder points to 3 ethical challenges of AI at Magnifica Humanitas presentation

Christopher Olah singled out the duty to the global poor, rediscovering and rethinking what it means to flourish as a human being and the need for discernment on the part of AI model developers.

Society of St. Pius X names priests to be consecrated bishops July 1

The SSPX named four priests to be consecrated as bishops without papal permission — despite a warning from the Vatican that the “schismatic” consecrations would incur excommunication.

St. Philip Neri, the ‘Apostle of Rome,’ is an example of Christian charity and zeal

Deep in the catacombs, St. Philip Neri had his spiritual epiphany on the eve of Pentecost in 1544. Today, May 26, is his feast day.