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Church bombings, reprisal attacks, claim 45 lives in Nigeria

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Catholic News Service

VATICAN CITY — Bishop George Dodo of Zaria, Nigeria, was in the middle of his homily June 17 “when we heard a loud explosion.” A car bomb had just exploded near the Cathedral of Christ the King, where the bishop was celebrating the second Mass of the day.

“The car bomb created a crater two feet deep; all around there was broken glass, rubble and burning cars,” the bishop told Fides, the news agency of the Congregation for the Evangelization of Peoples. Reuters, the British news agency, reported 10 people were killed at Christ the King.

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Irish cardinal expresses shame for church failures about abuse victims

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Catholic News Service

DUBLIN — As the daily theme for the 50th International Eucharistic Congress switched to reconciliation, Irish Cardinal Sean Brady told pilgrims he was ashamed that the church had failed to respond properly to abuse allegations.

“May God forgive us for the times when we, as individuals and as a church, failed to seek out and care for those little ones who were frightened, alone and in pain because someone was abusing them,” the cardinal, primate of All Ireland, told pilgrims in a rain-swept stadium June 14.

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Bishops see risk in Britain’s plans to redefine marriage

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LONDON — Proposals by the British government to redefine marriage to include same-sex couples will make the Catholic Church permanently and indefinitely vulnerable to the risk of legal action, said the bishops of England and Wales.

Archbishop Peter Smith of Southwark, speaking on behalf of the Bishops’ Conference of England and Wales, warned the government that its assurances that churches would not be compelled to conduct same-sex marriage ceremonies were meaningless.

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Philadelphia to host World Meeting of Families in 2015

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Catholic News Service

MILAN — The Archdiocese of Philadelphia will host the next World Meeting of Families in 2015, an event attended by hundreds of thousands of people from all over the world. It will be the first time the event, established by Blessed John Paul II in 1994, will be held in the United States.

Pope Benedict XVI made the announcement June 3 before reciting the noonday Angelus to 850,000 people gathered at Milan’s outdoor Bresso Park.

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Pope tells families to spread gifts of love, sacrifice to help others

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Catholic News Service

MILAN — As tens of thousands of families from all over the world gathered for the World Meeting of Families, Pope Benedict XVI urged them to use their Christian values and strengths to help bring peace, joy and solidarity to everyone in their lives.

“It is within a family that one experiences for the first time how the human person was not created to live closed up in himself, but in relationship with others,” the pope said as he appealed for continued help for those affected by two deadly earthquakes in northern Italy.

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Rio+20: Still trying to map a sustainable future for the world

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Catholic News Service

LIMA, Peru — Twenty years ago, a 12-year-old girl stood before government officials from most of the world’s countries and pleaded for her future. Worried about pollution and overuse of natural resources on her finite planet, she begged, “If you don’t know how to fix it, please don’t break it.”

The occasion was the 1992 Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro, which ended with the world’s countries committing — at least on paper — to make environmental concerns a priority and eliminate unsustainable forms of production and consumption. Above all, delegates agreed that development must not jeopardize the welfare of future generations.”

Reminding the grownups in the room that their children and grandchildren deserved a decent life, too, the girl asked, “Are we even on your list of priorities?”

Severn Cullis-Suzuki, who pleaded on behalf of her generation during the 1992 Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro, will return to Rio in late June, when delegates gather again to try to map a sustainable course for the world's 7 billion people. CNS photo/Mark Garten, UN

Canadian Severn Cullis-Suzuki — who pleaded on behalf of her generation then and who now has a toddler and an infant of her own — will return to Rio in late June, when delegates gather again to try to map a sustainable course for the world’s 7 billion people.

The theme is one often raised by Pope Benedict XVI. During a Sunday blessing last November, he urged delegates to an international climate conference to consider “the needs of the poorest and future generations.”

A few days later, he told young Italian members of a Franciscan environmental group, “There is no good future for humanity or for the earth unless we educate everyone toward a style of life that is more responsible toward the created world.”

Many observers, however, are dubious that delegates in Rio will map a route toward that lifestyle. So far, negotiators have failed to agree on the summit document, which was supposed to be 90 percent complete before the summit begins; an additional writing session was scheduled May 29-June 2.

Industrialized and developing countries have taken different stands on one of the summit’s key themes, the “green economy,” as well as a proposal to set “sustainable development goals” modeled on the Millennium Development Goals, which defined targets in areas such as health, education, maternal and child welfare and poverty reduction, with 2015 as the deadline.

“All people tend to find it easier to borrow than to pay back, but environmental debt, like all debt, tends to catch up with us,” Robert Engelman, director of the nonprofit Worldwatch Institute in Washington, said in April at the presentation of the organization’s annual State of the World report.

Titled “Moving Toward Sustainable Prosperity,” the report offers input for the Rio conference. Cullis-Suzuki spoke at the presentation via video link.

Engelman said the world needs “creative thinking about how to restructure economies, governance and our own lives.”

“Sustainable prosperity” is one name for a goal that would be reached when everyone’s basic needs are met, the dignity of all people is respected, and everyone is free to pursue happiness and allow others to do the same, according to speakers at the Worldwatch presentation.

“We need a new global solidarity for sustainability … that can produce win-win outcomes for everyone,” Worldwatch researcher Michael Renner said. “The winners will ultimately lose if the losers can’t win.”

In the market-driven world, development has become synonymous with economic growth, but Renner and others said that unlimited economic growth will strain the planet’s resources beyond their capacity. A key to sustainable development is “transforming a consumer culture,” said State of the World researcher Erik Assadourian. “We are trapped in a system that stimulates consumption.”

If everyone on the planet consumed at the rate of Americans, he said, the planet could support about 6.2 billion people, not the 7 billion who now inhabit it and a far cry from the 9 billion projected by the end of this century.

Suggestions for curbing consumption range from redistribution of tax burdens to retraining workers for a “green” economy. Such ideas, however, are likely to meet with opposition from both industrialized countries, which fear erosion of their standard of living, and developing countries, which exploit their natural resources to generate revenue to reduce poverty, provide services and build infrastructure.

The conflict plays out not only between nations, but also within countries. Throughout Latin America, rural communities are protesting plans for dams, mines, biofuel plantations and other large infrastructure projects. Proponents say the projects are crucial to maintain economic growth and support growing populations that want the comforts and conveniences — from private automobiles to televisions to smart phones — that are staples of life in industrialized countries.

Opponents say the projects’ social and environmental costs outweigh their benefits. Many opponents are indigenous people who espouse a principle called “buen vivir,” a Spanish term that means, roughly, “living well.”

They argue that while most people in Western society are intent on “living better” and obtaining more things, indigenous people only want to “live well,” meeting their own needs in a way that leaves enough for future generations.

Despite the skepticism over the Rio summit, Cullis-Suzuki finds hope at the grass roots.

“Real change lies in the communities,” she told the audience at the Worldwatch presentation. “Because we love our children, we must and we will find a way to become sustainable.”

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Italian bishops publish their first clerical sex abuse norms

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Catholic News Service

VATICAN CITY — The Italian bishops’ conference released its first ever set of guidelines for handling accusations of clerical sexual abuse, urging bishops to cooperate with civil authorities, but also making it clear that bishops in Italy have no legal obligation to report suspected cases to police.

Bishop Mariano Crociata, general secretary of the bishops’ conference, presented the guidelines to reporters May 22 and told them that 135 cases of clerical sexual abuse of minors had been reported between 2000 and 2012.

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Catholics must accept Vatican II on Judaism, cardinal says

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Catholic News Service

ROME — The Catholic Church’s relationship to Judaism as taught by the Second Vatican Council and the interpretations and developments of that teaching by subsequent popes, “are binding on a Catholic,” said the Vatican official responsible for relations with the Jews.

Swiss Cardinal Kurt Koch, president of the Pontifical Commission for Religious Relations with the Jews and a member of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, spoke to reporters May 16 after delivering a speech on Catholic-Jewish relations in light of Vatican II’s declaration “Nostra Aetate” on the church’s relations with non-Christian religions.

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Cardinal names new leaders of Regnum Christi

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ROME — The papal delegate of the Legionaries of Christ named the new leaders of the order’s lay movement, Regnum Christi.

Cardinal Velasio De Paolis, who has been governing the Legionaries since 2010, named the new heads and their advisers, which include two consecrated laypersons from the United States, as part of a major Vatican-led reform of the order. The reform efforts came after revelations that the order’s founder, the late Father Marcial Maciel Degollado, had fathered children and sexually abused seminarians.

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‘God bless Britain’ was called unsuitable for speech

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LONDON — Former British Prime Minister Tony Blair made an impassioned defense of religion, saying the world would be heading for tragedy and disaster without faith.

In a May 14 interview in front of more than 4,300 people at an Anglican conference in the Royal Albert Hall, London, Blair also revealed that he had once been rebuked by an official for proposing to end a speech with the words: “God bless Britain.”

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