The USCCB and a key Catholic bioethics group are both warning of a potential rewriting of U.S. law to broaden the definition of brain death.
School personnel in Virginia are now required to keep parents informed on “matters related to their child’s health, and social and psychological development.”
Massachusetts Rep. Ayanna Pressley and Illinois Sen. Dick Durbin introduced a bill to abolish the federal death penalty, calling the policy “deeply flawed.”
In its Tuesday statement, the bishops argued that the measure would constitute an “ethical indefensibility” against human rights and European law.
Archbishop Paul Richard Gallagher last week defended what he described as Pope Francis’ “strong and courageous” push for peace in Ukraine.
The leaked document from the bureau’s Richmond office discussed monitoring what it deemed “radical-traditionalist” Catholics.
As the subscription-based model of health care continues to grow, practitioners and patients say they are getting better care without compromising their beliefs.
Earlier this month an image had circulated on social media appearing to suggest Strickland backed a move toward a “separation from the Bergoglian sect.”
A man allegedly wearing priest’s vestments — and reportedly without pants on — broke into Our Lady of Rosary Catholic Church.
The Defense Department announced last week it would be sending “additional security assistance to meet Ukraine’s critical security and defense needs.”
The doctors argued in the letter published in the Wall Street Journal that the risks of cross-sex hormone usage for youths “are significant.”
On Thursday evening the Public Safety Committee voted to pass the bill, with the measure receiving near-unanimous approval.
Under state law, “serious” felonies may warrant life in prison or the death penalty.
The two-week course purports to “teach students the evidence-based treatment of LGBTQ+ patients in medicine.”
On July 5, 25-year-old Maxwell Emerson was shot and killed on the university’s Washington, D.C., campus.
Tamara Kay filed the suit against The Irish Rover in response to two articles that reported on the professor’s pro-abortion activism.
The resolution urges member states to more aggressively prosecute acts of religious-based antagonism.
The NWEA noted that the decline was sharper than what was observed in 2021-2022.
The new provision stems from concerns during the COVID-19 crisis that churches were being subject to overly strict pandemic mitigation policies.