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

Tuesday, February 17, 2026

RefugeeNet Story Fest '26

RefugeeNet Story Fest '26

St. Luke's Episcopal ChurchSan Diego, CA
Saturday, Mar 21 from 4 pm to 7 pm PDT
 

Our annual fundraiser, reimagined to deepen your encounter with the people, cultures, food, song, and dance of those whom we serve!

We're so excited to share that we've reimagined our annual fundraiser in order to deepen your encounter with the people, cultures, food, song, and dance of those whom we serve. We will be centering the stories of the families we've helped to resettle over the past year, inviting them to share what the first twelve months of life in San Diego has been like. It will be an unforgettable night!

We hope you'll join us in celebrating the resilience of the human spirit together.

4-6pm in the Courtyard + Fergusson Hall:

Food & Drinks, Story Circles, Global Crafts, Silent Auction and more!

*Chidcare available

6-7pm in the Sanctuary:

Gathering of Celebration with musical performances, story telling and an invitation to support the RefugeeNet community.

*Childcare available



 

Jesse Jackson, civil rights leader who ran for presidency, dies at 84

‘I am somebody!’: Jesse Jackson, civil rights leader who ran for presidency, dies at 84
Religion News Service: “I don’t think Jesse Jackson saw his political life as something different from his call from God as a preacher,” said the Rev. Valerie Bridgeman.
Politico: Jesse Jackson, civil rights activist and presidential candidate, dies at 84

How the university replaced the church as the home of liberal morality*
The New Yorker: As progressive Americans have become more secular, the academy has become their primary moral training ground. The results have not been good.

A binge and a prayer: Italian monks told to avoid Netflix and social media
The Guardian: A prior of an hermitage says digital technologies are designed to be addictive and present a “challenge for monastic life.”

Gaza’s Nasser Hospital condemns MSF decision to suspend most services
The Associated Press: The rare public friction between two well-known health care providers in Gaza came as the Palestinian death toll since the current ceasefire surpassed 600. At least 11 Palestinians were killed by Israeli fire in the last 24 hours, hospitals said.

‘Adopt a Statue’ program for Milan’s iconic Duomo restores centuries-old marbles
The Associated Press: The program recruits donors — either companies or individuals — to fund restoration of a statue under a loan agreement that allows it to occasionally be displayed outside the Duomo.

What the history of bread making teaches us about rest, curiosity and joy

 

This guide from the Calvin Institute of Christian Worship includes art, music, devotions, liturgies, books, sermons and other resources to help you plan worship for Lent. 

Q&A with Karl Stutzman and Ruth Szpunar

A new study examines how clergy find and evaluate the information they need and how they help congregants navigate today’s information landscape.

By Peggy Haymes

We have the right to grieve the loss of anything connected to our hearts. Church can be a place where those losses are recognized, writes a minister and therapist.

By Andy Stanton-Henry

Play helps us understand God and open new paths for ministry, says a pastor.

By William H. Lamar IV

In an excerpt from his new book, “Ancestors: Those Who Bless Us, Curse Us and Hold Us,” an AME pastor writes about the church as inherently political and why we cannot wait on God for change.

By Kendall Vanderslice

A writer who teaches bread baking as a spiritual practice reflects on human touch, innovation and lessons from Genesis.

By Daliah Singer

It took 16 years for Brigit’s Village, a 40-unit, intergenerational apartment complex in northern Colorado, to come to fruition.

43 Catholic Democrats pledge migrant solidarity, invoke Leo XIV, Francis

43 Catholic Democrats pledge migrant solidarity, invoke Leo XIV, Francis

Catholic U.S. House Democrats cited Church teaching in defense of the dignity of migrants as Trump administration officials defend immigration enforcement.

Bishop Barron lauds U.S. secretary of state’s speech to Munich Security Conference

Marco Rubio’s speech elicited a standing ovation and widespread accolades, including from the bishop of Winona-Rochester, Minnesota.

Pope Leo XIV eliminates committee created by Francis for World Children’s Day

Pope Leo XIV has eliminated the Pontifical Committee for World Children’s Day, transferring the committee’s functions to the Dicastery for the Laity, the Family, and Life.

Apostolic vicariate in Rome dedicates its day of arts to Gaza

The humanitarian situation in Gaza was the focus of a day of the arts at the Lateran Apostolic Palace on Feb. 14, drawing attention to the ongoing suffering of residents in the Gaza Strip.

Catholic priest who was abducted in Cameroon appointed auxiliary bishop

Father John Berinyuy Tatah was among six Catholic priests abducted in Cameroon’s Bamenda Archdiocese last year and later released.

Stephen Colbert hosts Texas State Rep. James Talarico

 

Stephen Colbert hosts Texas State Rep. James Talarico for an online-exclusive interview that touches on the issues raised in Talarico's campaign for the Democratic nomination for Senate including the separation of church and state, the dangers of consolidated corporate-owned media, and the fabricated culture wars pushed by Republicans in states like Texas. If you're curious why this interview with James Talarico was an online-exclusive, click here to watch Stephen Colbert explain:    • Why CBS Didn't Broadcast Stephen Colbert's...  .

Monday, February 16, 2026

Mass Abductions, Empty Villages and a New U.S. Military Footprint in Nigeria

The leader of the Ukrainian Catholic Church, the largest church in communion with Rome, is received by the Pope

ZENIT Staff

One of the most concrete moments of the audience came when the archbishop presented updated lists of prisoners of war and missing persons. These names, he explained, were gathered directly from families—an act that transforms abstract geopolitics into a ledger of human anguish

Mass Abductions, Empty Villages and a New U.S. Military Footprint in Nigeria

ZENIT Staff

Nigeria’s security emergency is often described in abstract terms: insurgency, extremism, instability. In Kadarko, it is experienced as a village 98 percent deserted and a list of names that grows longer with each passing week

Epstein’s documents, Pope Francis, and what they say about the Vatican

ZENIT Staff

Taken together, the correspondence portrays the Vatican as more than a spiritual authority in the eyes of Epstein and his associates. It appears as a pressure point in global politics: influential in debates over migration, environmental stewardship, populism and relations with China

Milei formally invites the Pope to visit Argentina: he sends his foreign minister to the Vatican to deliver a letter by hand to Leo XIV

Valentina di Giorgio

While no dates have been confirmed, high-level officials in Buenos Aires privately estimate the probability of a visit at 70 percent or higher, with the final quarter of the year emerging as the most plausible window

Listening and Fasting: Lent as a Time of Conversion. This is what Pope Leo XIV’s first message for Lent 2026 says

ZENIT Staff

Message from Pope Leo XIV for Lent 2026

The deputy director of the Vatican Press Office resigns. Pope Leo XIV appoints a Croatian nun as her replacement

ZENIT Staff

With this appointment, Sister Krapić becomes the third woman to hold the position of deputy director of the Holy See Press Office. The first was Spanish journalist Paloma García Ovejero, followed by Murray. Both predecessors eventually stepped down from the role.

Pope Leo XIV Suppresses Body Created by Pope Francis: The Pontifical Committee for World Children’s Day

ZENIT Staff

In a Chirograph, the Pope notes that he shares Pope Francis’s request «that the Church pay attention to children also by instituting a Day dedicated to them,» which implies that World Children’s Day will continue to be celebrated.

Cuban bishops cancel special visit to the Pope: there is no gasoline in the country, not even for airplanes

ZENIT Staff

When the visit is eventually rescheduled, it will likely carry an added layer of gravity. The reports the bishops bring to Rome will speak not only of parish life and vocations but also of blackouts, migration and the search for dialogue in a climate of scarcity

The Lefebvrians’ meeting with the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith at the Vatican, as told by themselves

ZENIT Staff

We now offer the statement issued by the General House of the Priestly Society of Saint Pius X on the same day

The number of students studying theology in Germany plummets: only Cardinal Woelki’s Cologne diocese sees growth

ZENIT Staff

Hartl argues that the distribution of enrollment losses may reflect more than demographic shrinkage or a generalized crisis of vocations. In his view, prospective theology students today are motivated by a desire to deepen and articulate their

This is how the inauguration of the new Catholic Archbishop of Westminster went

ZENIT Staff

The Archbishop of Canterbury, Dame Sarah Mullally, then greeted Archbishop Moth on behalf of the co-presidents of Churches Together in England, offering a word of welcome

Another Woman Appointed to the Dicastery for Bishops. Leo XIV Confirms Other Members

ZENIT Staff

She is Sister Simona Brambilla, M.C., Prefect of the Dicastery for Institutes of Consecrated Life and Societies of Apostolic Life

Questions about liturgy: The Baptist’s “Heavenly Birth”

ZENIT Staff

Answered by Legionary of Christ Father Edward McNamara, professor of liturgy and sacramental theology at the Pontifical Regina Apostolorum university.

What is true justice in love? Pope Leo XIV answers

ZENIT Staff

Address on the occasion of the Angelus prayer on Sunday, February 15, 2026

Catholic thinkers, tech experts reflect on promise and perils of AI at New York Encounter

DC bishop: Catholics should ‘get the facts’ on immigration, Church teachings

Washington, D.C., Auxiliary Bishop Evelio Menjivar-Ayala talks immigration and dialogue with high-ranking Catholics in the Trump administration.

Pope Leo XIV, in first Roman parish visit, calls for ‘disarming’ meekness

The pontiff urged “coherence between faith and life” and persistent prayer for peace.

Catholic thinkers, tech experts reflect on promise and perils of AI at New York Encounter

“The pope encouraged us to use AI responsibly, to use it in a way that helps us grow, not to let it work against us, ” said Davide Bolchini, the moderator of an AI panel at the weekend conference.

Pope Leo XIV prays for Madagascar after twin cyclones

In his catechesis before the Angelus, Leo said Jesus fulfills the Law by calling Christians beyond minimal righteousness to great love

‘It was the best thing I’ve ever done’: Abuse victim details papal meeting

David Ryan, a 61-year-old Irishman who suffered sexual abuse as a teenager, shared his story face-to-face with Pope Leo XIV, the first time the pope met with a victim individually.

Meet six Christians competing in the Milan Olympics

Meet six Christians competing in the Milan Olympics. 

For President’s Day, Marvin Olasky explores whether Abraham Lincoln was a Christian

Desperation can drive people to extreme options, Matthew Loftus writes. That’s why it’s all the more crucial to ban euthanasia and assisted suicide.

During the Civil Rights Movement, Christianity Today struggled to provide a clear voice on segregation and racial equality. 

Ross McCullough’s The Body of This Death is unapologetically literary. It’s also the best new book you’ll read this year, writes Brad East.

Behind the Story

From editor in chief Marvin Olasky: Abraham Lincoln spoke about civil war as a fearful thing. A lesser-known fact: It was also a fearful thing to be married to Mary Todd Lincoln. 

Lincoln’s immediate neighbor told of Mary in 1856 or 1857 chasing her husband down the street with a knife. Acutely aware of any possible slight, Mary was a jealous wife—but at least he could outrun her.

It’s also well-known that one of their sons died in 1862. Mary dealt with grief by searching out spiritist mediums, including one who took the name Colchester and pretended to be the illegitimate son of an English duke. Lincoln went to at least one séance with Mary and afterward joked that he had heard several spirits presenting contradictory messages, just as his cabinet members did.

Lincoln’s search for meaning took a different direction. My article describes how he went from making fun of Christianity as a young man to seeking God amid the tragedy of war. His realization is relevant to our own times: "The mercy of God alone can save us."



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