Wednesday, February 3, 2010, 11:56 AM - General
Posted by Bryan Boyle
Did you get your throats blessed?Posted by Bryan Boyle
Newscast for 8 & 9PM tonight.
Click on link in the top box under Catholic Information Network at the right to listen. This will open up a new window with an embedded player.
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News, of the hour, on the hour, from Catholic Information Radio.
I’m Bryan Douglas in Philadelphia, and at this hour….
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Lead:
Attending a Catholic college has minimal impact on a Catholic student’s practice and embrace of the Catholic faith, according to a new study released Sunday at a gathering of Catholic college presidents in Washington, D.C.
The study was presented to the Association of Catholic Colleges and Universities (ACCU) by researchers at Georgetown University’s Center for Applied Research in the Apostolate (CARA).
The CARA study largely confirms a 2003 study released by The Cardinal Newman Society (CNS), which found significant declines in students’ support for Catholic moral teaching on abortion, marriage and sexuality after four years at a Catholic college or university. The declines were generally greater though at non-Catholic private and public institutions.
Commenting on the study, association president Richard Yanikoski argued that the loss of faith at Catholic colleges and elsewhere reflects societal trends. Despite the analysis showing that the choice of a Catholic college has little significant impact on a student’s faith practice and beliefs, Yanikoski pointed to the raw data indicating that a typical Catholic undergraduate student attending a Catholic college or university emerges more spiritually intact than if they had attended a public or secular private institution, but not nearly as spiritually active as would have been the case a few decades ago.
That’s hardly something to celebrate, a spokesman from the Cardinal Newman society noted.
I’ll be back with more after this.
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Story 2:
Pope Benedict once again commented on the theme of Anglican-Catholic relations as he met with Welsh and English bishops at the Vatican on Monday. During their meeting Pope Benedict reconfirmed the importance of his recent Apostolic Constitution.
After encouraging the bishops' important work in the areas of ecumenical and inter-religious dialogue, given the varied demographic profile of their flocks, Pope Benedict asked the bishops to be generous in implementing the provisions of the Apostolic Constitution in assisting those groups of Anglicans who wish to enter into full communion with the Catholic Church.
Story 3:
Cardinal Franc Rode, prefect of the Congregation for Institutes of Consecrated Life, told Vatican Radio yesterday that his office was working on two documents: one, a joint document with the Congregation for Divine Worship and the Sacraments on the importance of prayer in the life of religious; and the second, a document highlighting the importance of religious brothers in the church.
While the numbers of religious in every category have dropped in the last 50 years, the number of religious brothers has decreased most drastically, Cardinal Rode said, citing the example of the Christian Brothers who had 16,000 members in 1965 and have fewer than 5,000 today.
Story 4:
The third and final paternity claim against Paraguayan President Fernando Lugo, a former bishop, has been withdrawn. A campaign worker who had claimed that the president fathered her two-year-old boy dropped her request for a DNA test. Earlier DNA testing confirmed that the president fathered the child of the first woman to file a paternity suit. The bishop began a long relationship with the young woman when she was 16, approximately five years after his 1994 appointment as Bishop of San Pedro. Lugo resigned his office in 2005 but remained a bishop until his laicization in July 2008-- two weeks before his presidential inauguration.
This is Catholic Information News.
Story 5:
Vermont’s sole diocese has decided to sell its 32-acre headquarters-- valued at $6 million-- and other property in the hope of funding settlements for 25 pending lawsuits. Most of the lawsuits stem from Bishop John Marshall’s decision to allow notorious abuser Edward Paquette, now laicized, to minister in the diocese. Bishop Marshall, who died in 1994, governed the Diocese of Burlington from 1971 to 1991.
Story 6:
A British government source has told the Daily Telegraph newspaper that following Pope Benedict’s recent comments to the bishops of England and Wales, the government will withdraw the controversial provisions of the “Equality Bill” that threaten to undermine religious freedom.
The source said that it was clear that these parts of the Equality Bill should not go forward, noting he Pope's intervention made it clear that there would be resistance to its implementation. Ministers had tried to include a new definition of a priest in the flagship anti-discrimination law, but church leaders complained that the definition was far too narrow.
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And that’s top news of the hour.
I’m Bryan Douglas, CIR NEWS, for Catholic Information Radio.




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