Make Text Larger Make Text Smaller Email this Article to a Friend Print this Article

Irish bishops, French nun murdered, Cardinal O'Brien fallout

Published: March 08, 2013

Women deserve bigger role in church, says a key cardinal, Irish bishops are urged to act for censured priests, a French nun is murdered in Madagascar, and  Cardinal Keith O'Brien (pictured) faces a Vatican probe. 

Women deserve bigger role in church, says key cardinal (Yahoo7)

Cardinal O'Brien faces Vatican probe (Strathearn Herald)

Irish bishops urged to act fror censured priests (Tablet)

New bishop in Nigeria (Nigeria Times)

French nun murdered in Madagascar (ICN)

SSPX is pope's unfinished business (NCR)

Three priests defrocked in Massachussetts (IBT)

 

Response to articles is welcome. Simply follow the prompts to post your comment. No posting of more than 250 words will be published. While critical comment on stories and issues is welcomed, postings that descend to personal attacks on or impugn the integrity of other commentators will be blocked. Please use your own name, or initials, eg John Brown, or JB, or JAB, or Johnny. You are also required to add your location - as in, Sunshine, Victoria. Please provide your email address in the line supplied, followed by your contact phone number. These are requested for identification purposes only and will not be published. If you have any problems, please email news@cathnews.com


 


Recent Comments

  1. As a recent subscriber to CathNews i am delighted with the coverage of news items and information on particular aspects of general interest.
    Coverage of Benedict's abdication and the subsequent conclave have been covered very well .

Bookmark and Share

More from this section

  1. Anatomy of a conclave

    This special feature from Salt and Light provides a comprehensive insight into all of the facets of the conclave - the role of the Sistine chapel, the cardinal electors, the ballots and voting,the stove and smoke, how long previous conclaves have taken, the Habemus Papam moment, and more. It also contains a photo of every caridnal who will vote, their country and their age, and a video of Benedict's last moments as Pope on February 28.

  2. There was a man who had two sons

    Luke 15:1-32

    Now all the tax collectors and sinners were coming near to listen to him.2And the Pharisees and the scribes were grumbling and saying, ‘This fellow welcomes sinners and eats with them.’ 3So he told them this parable:

     ’There was a man who had two sons.12The younger of them said to his father, ‘’Father, give me the share of the property that will belong to me.” So he divided his property between them.13A few days later the younger son gathered all he had and travelled to a distant country, and there he squandered his property in dissolute living.14

  3. Having more or being more?

    I am challenged daily by what our Western world portrays as important in the human endeavour, writes Clare Condon SGS in The Good Oil.

  4. What the Pope achieved and what he leaves behind

    The challenge in choosing Benedict's successor will be to find someone who has the strength and ability to deal with the administrative side of the office of the papacy while retaining at least some of the intellectual flair and imagination of Benedict and his predecessor. There are many who think that either Cardinal Angelo Scola of Milan or Cardinal Marc Ouellet of Quebec could carry these responsibilities well, writes Tracey Rowland on the ABC website. 

  5. New schools, bushfire support, nurse training

    The plan for new Catholic schools in Victoria moves ahead, Archbishop Coleridge focuses on the New Evangelisation, Victorian Catholics maintain their support for survivors of the Black Saturday bushfires, and nursing students are offered cutting-edge training at Notre Dame University.

Church Resources provides a range of services for the Church and not-for-profit sector, including aggregating buying power for a wide range of products and services used by health, welfare, aged care, education and parish organisations. More »

Mass streamed live daily

From Our Lady of the Rosary Cathedral, Waitara, in the Broken Bay Diocese.
Weekdays live at 9.30am
Saturdays live 9.30am (followed by Adoration and Benediction)
Sundays live 9.30am
Click on this link at the appropriate time to connect.

Subscribe

To receive headlines from our faith-based news services, please subscribe below.

Email address

Newsletter


 

News Feed

Subscribe to the CathNews RSS feed to get the daily edition automatically delivered to you.
Subscribe to Faith Project RSS.