Jesus, Master Physician of all times,
Your Divinity did not require a Ph.D.
Eagerly, You resurrected the dead,
Restoring the health of the sick.
Be it physical or spiritual torment,
None were a great obstacle to You:
For Your loving power is omnipotent.
I ask for Your abounding healing love;
Maintain my body and soul vigorous
So I may fulfill my daily functions.
The world will be conquered by You,
All afflictions will be dissipated!
A reading from the Book of Samuel
15:16-23
Samuel said to Saul:
“Stop! Let me tell you what the LORD said to me last night.”
Saul replied, “Speak!”
Samuel then said: “Though little in your own esteem,
are you not leader of the tribes of Israel?
The LORD anointed you king of Israel and sent you on a mission, saying,
‘Go and put the sinful Amalekites under a ban of destruction.
Fight against them until you have exterminated them.’
Why then have you disobeyed the LORD?
You have pounced on the spoil, thus displeasing the LORD.”
Saul answered Samuel: “I did indeed obey the LORD
and fulfill the mission on which the LORD sent me.
I have brought back Agag, and I have destroyed Amalek under the ban.
But from the spoil the men took sheep and oxen,
the best of what had been banned,
to sacrifice to the LORD their God in Gilgal.”
But Samuel said:
“Does the LORD so delight in burnt offerings and sacrifices
as in obedience to the command of the LORD?
Obedience is better than sacrifice,
and submission than the fat of rams.
For a sin like divination is rebellion,
and presumption is the crime of idolatry.
Because you have rejected the command of the LORD,
he, too, has rejected you as ruler.”
From the Gospel according to Mark
2:18-22
The disciples of John and of the Pharisees were accustomed to fast.
People came to Jesus and objected,
“Why do the disciples of John and the disciples of the Pharisees fast,
but your disciples do not fast?”
Jesus answered them,
“Can the wedding guests fast while the bridegroom is with them?
As long as they have the bridegroom with them they cannot fast.
But the days will come when the bridegroom is taken away from them,
and then they will fast on that day.
No one sews a piece of unshrunken cloth on an old cloak.
If he does, its fullness pulls away,
the new from the old, and the tear gets worse.
Likewise, no one pours new wine into old wineskins.
Otherwise, the wine will burst the skins,
and both the wine and the skins are ruined.
Rather, new wine is poured into fresh wineskins.”
The Gospel of Mark (…) guides the disciple to recognize Jesus as the Son of God. (…) Today’s Gospel passage touches on the topic of fasting: (…) indeed, it recounts how while Jesus was at table in the house of Levi, the publican, the Pharisees and John the Baptist’s disciples asked why Jesus’ disciples were not fasting as they were. Jesus answered that wedding guests cannot fast while the bridegroom is with them and that they will fast when the bridegroom is taken away from them (cf. Mk 2: 18, 20). With these words, Christ reveals his identity of Messiah, Israel’s bridegroom, who came for the betrothal with his people. Those who recognize and welcome him are celebrating. However, he will have to be rejected and killed precisely by his own; at that moment, during his Passion and death, the hour of mourning and fasting will come. (Benedict XVI – Angelus, 26 February 2006)
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![Obituary: Capuchin Franciscan Father John Aurilia, St. Padre Pio secretary, 85 #Catholic - A Mass of Christian Burial will be held on Tuesday, Jan. 20, at 10:30 a.m. in the Sacred Heart Oratory in Wilmington, Del., for Capuchin Franciscan Father John Aurilia, former personal secretary of St. Padre Pio of Pietrelcina, Italy and a former pastor of Our Lady of Mount Carmel Parish in Passaic, N.J., who died on Jan. 13 at St. Francis of Assisi Friary, also in Wilmington. Father Aurilia was 85.
Father Aurilia was considered one of the last direct links to Padre Pio. He also was well known for sharing firsthand accounts of the Italian saint’s mystical gifts and daily life, according to Shekinah Global News.
Born on Dec. 8, 1940, in Montemarano, Italy, Father Aurilia entered the Capuchin Franciscan Order and was ordained a priest in 1966. He spent a month during the first year of his priesthood as the personal secretary of Padre Pio, born Francesco Forgione, ministering from the Capuchin friary in San Giovanni Rotondo in rural Italy.
Father Aurilia witnessed the miracle of the stigmata suffered by St. Pio, like the profuse bleeding in his hands, feet, and left side of his body that corresponded with the wounds suffered by the crucified Christ. This miracle attracted the devotion of faithful around the globe, as well as great fascination and even disbelief from some people, according to a story about Father Aurilia published in The Beacon on Jan. 3, 2013. Padre Pio was canonized a saint in 2002 in Rome.
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“Thousands of people around the world would write to St. Pio for prayers and advice. Hundreds of people would wait in line before his Masses at 4 a.m. It wasn’t St. Pio’s miracles [like the stigmata] that impressed me, but rather his simplicity and humility,” Father Aurilia told the Beacon.
Later, Father Aurilia came to the United States to work with the Italian-speaking community in northern New Jersey, including serving as associate pastor of Our Lady of Mount Carmel Parish in Passaic, N.J., from 1974 to 1976, and as pastor of the parish from approximately 2012 to 2015.
Father Aurilia continued his studies of philosophy, earning a doctorate, while serving in various parishes and ministries. He wrote a book, “Dearest Soul: A Spiritual Journey with Padre Pio,” published by Our Sunday Visitor in 2024.
The priest also served in other locations in the Garden State, including the former Don Bosco College, Newton, where he taught ethics; St. Francis Seminary in Lafayette; and Our Lady of Mt. Carmel Parish in Orange. He also served parishes in New York and North Carolina. Virginia, Florida, and Delaware.
Father Aurilia was predeceased by his sister, Sophia Ricciadi, and his brother, Orazio. He is survived by his sister, Maria Riccio; his brother, Generoso; his nephews, Michael Riccio and Anthony Ricciadi; and his nieces, Emanuela Harting and Nancy Rodriquez, and their spouses and children.
A viewing for Father Aurilia will be held on Tuesday, Jan. 20, beginning in the Sacred Heart Oratory in Wilmington, Del., followed by his 10:30 a.m. Mass of Christian Burial. A repast will be offered at the Francis X. Norton Center after the Mass. Burial will take place on Wednesday, Jan. 21, at 11 a.m. at St. Lawrence Friary in Beacon, N.Y.](https://unitedyam.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/obituary-capuchin-franciscan-father-john-aurilia-st-padre-pio-secretary-85-catholic-a-mass-of-christian-burial-will-be-held-on-tuesday-jan-20-at-1030-a-m-in-the-sacred-heart-oratory-in-wil.jpg)
Obituary: Capuchin Franciscan Father John Aurilia, St. Padre Pio secretary, 85 #Catholic – ![]()
A Mass of Christian Burial will be held on Tuesday, Jan. 20, at 10:30 a.m. in the Sacred Heart Oratory in Wilmington, Del., for Capuchin Franciscan Father John Aurilia, former personal secretary of St. Padre Pio of Pietrelcina, Italy and a former pastor of Our Lady of Mount Carmel Parish in Passaic, N.J., who died on Jan. 13 at St. Francis of Assisi Friary, also in Wilmington. Father Aurilia was 85.
Father Aurilia was considered one of the last direct links to Padre Pio. He also was well known for sharing firsthand accounts of the Italian saint’s mystical gifts and daily life, according to Shekinah Global News.
Born on Dec. 8, 1940, in Montemarano, Italy, Father Aurilia entered the Capuchin Franciscan Order and was ordained a priest in 1966. He spent a month during the first year of his priesthood as the personal secretary of Padre Pio, born Francesco Forgione, ministering from the Capuchin friary in San Giovanni Rotondo in rural Italy.
Father Aurilia witnessed the miracle of the stigmata suffered by St. Pio, like the profuse bleeding in his hands, feet, and left side of his body that corresponded with the wounds suffered by the crucified Christ. This miracle attracted the devotion of faithful around the globe, as well as great fascination and even disbelief from some people, according to a story about Father Aurilia published in The Beacon on Jan. 3, 2013. Padre Pio was canonized a saint in 2002 in Rome.
Click here to subscribe to our weekly newsletter.
“Thousands of people around the world would write to St. Pio for prayers and advice. Hundreds of people would wait in line before his Masses at 4 a.m. It wasn’t St. Pio’s miracles [like the stigmata] that impressed me, but rather his simplicity and humility,” Father Aurilia told the Beacon.
Later, Father Aurilia came to the United States to work with the Italian-speaking community in northern New Jersey, including serving as associate pastor of Our Lady of Mount Carmel Parish in Passaic, N.J., from 1974 to 1976, and as pastor of the parish from approximately 2012 to 2015.
Father Aurilia continued his studies of philosophy, earning a doctorate, while serving in various parishes and ministries. He wrote a book, “Dearest Soul: A Spiritual Journey with Padre Pio,” published by Our Sunday Visitor in 2024.
The priest also served in other locations in the Garden State, including the former Don Bosco College, Newton, where he taught ethics; St. Francis Seminary in Lafayette; and Our Lady of Mt. Carmel Parish in Orange. He also served parishes in New York and North Carolina. Virginia, Florida, and Delaware.
Father Aurilia was predeceased by his sister, Sophia Ricciadi, and his brother, Orazio. He is survived by his sister, Maria Riccio; his brother, Generoso; his nephews, Michael Riccio and Anthony Ricciadi; and his nieces, Emanuela Harting and Nancy Rodriquez, and their spouses and children.
A viewing for Father Aurilia will be held on Tuesday, Jan. 20, beginning in the Sacred Heart Oratory in Wilmington, Del., followed by his 10:30 a.m. Mass of Christian Burial. A repast will be offered at the Francis X. Norton Center after the Mass. Burial will take place on Wednesday, Jan. 21, at 11 a.m. at St. Lawrence Friary in Beacon, N.Y.
–
A Mass of Christian Burial will be held on Tuesday, Jan. 20, at 10:30 a.m. in the Sacred Heart Oratory in Wilmington, Del., for Capuchin Franciscan Father John Aurilia, former personal secretary of St. Padre Pio of Pietrelcina, Italy and a former pastor of Our Lady of Mount Carmel Parish in Passaic, N.J., who died on Jan. 13 at St. Francis of Assisi Friary, also in Wilmington. Father Aurilia was 85. Father Aurilia was considered one of the last direct links to Padre Pio. He also was well known for sharing firsthand accounts of the Italian saint’s mystical gifts and daily life, according to

Obituary: Elizabeth ‘Betsy’ A. Sutherland, Birth Haven founder, 95 #Catholic – ![]()
A Mass of Christian Burial was held on Jan. 15 at Our Lady Of The Lake Church in Sparta, N.J., for Elizabeth “Betsy” A. Sutherland, founder of Birth Haven in Newton, N.J., who died on Jan. 11. She was 95.
Many parishes, religious organizations, and individual Catholics in the Paterson Diocese in New Jersey have supported Birth Haven, an independent, nonsectarian, nonprofit organization that provides shelter, support, and education for homeless pregnant women and girls. It was founded in 1985.
Born on March 4, 1930, in Newark, N.J., Sutherland moved with her family to South Orange, N.J., graduating from Our Lady of the Valley High School in Orange, N.J. In 1952, she earned an accounting degree from the College of St. Elizabeth, now St. Elizabeth College, in the Convent Station neighborhood of Morris Township, N.J., and started working at Picatinny Arsenal in Rockaway Township, N.J., that same year. Later, she earned a bachelor’s degree from the former Upsala College in East Orange, N.J., in her 50’s.
In 1952, Sutherland married Gene Sutherland. They settled in Lake Mohawk, a neighborhood between Byram and Sparta townships in New Jersey, where they had met as teens on the boardwalk. They founded Sutherland Poly Box (now Sutherland Packaging) in 1964.
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Sutherland was chairwoman of the Sussex County Chapter of the Fresh Air Fund from the late 1960s into the 1970s while hosting many children; became the first woman member of the Sparta Planning and Zoning Board in 1975; and was the leading force in the founding of Birth Haven in 1985. For decades, she served as chair of Birth Haven, which celebrated its 40th anniversary last year.
Also, Sutherland was an extraordinary minister of the Eucharist at Our Lady of the Lake Parish in Sparta, N.J., and at Andover Nursing Home. She was involved with the Parents’ Association of Rev. Brown Memorial School in Sparta, the Booster Club for Pope John XXIII Regional High School in Sparta, the Sparta Ecumenical Council on Senior Citizen Housing as a founding member, and the Sussex County Arts Council. Sutherland was a trained artist and worked in many mediums, including oil, acrylics, pastels, and charcoal.
Sutherland’s honors include Grand Marshal of the 2018 Sussex County St. Patrick’s Day Parade, Patriots’ Council Tribute to Women Award and Lifetime Achievement Award, Birth Haven Lifetime Achievement Award, Soroptimist International Community Service Award, Pope John XXIII Endowment Humanitarian Award and the Sussex County Chamber of Commerce David Herzenburg Memorial Award on behalf of Birth Haven.
Sutherland was predeceased by her parents, Walter and Katherine Reilly; her husband, Eugene; her son, Peter; and her siblings, Frances Corbin, Peggy McGovern, and Daniel Reilly.
Survivors include her children, Eileen Brupbacher (Josh), Mike (Joanna), Tom (Irene), Dan (Therese), Margaret Keller (Mike), Joe (Anna) and Patrick (Sonali); her grandchildren, Jason Brupbacher, Dan Brupbacher, Jake Sutherland, Natalie Sutherland, Ian Sutherland, Kristin Whitehouse, Brian Sutherland, Brielle Medina, Alex McCaffrey, Michael McCaffrey, Andrew McCaffrey, Kiera Keller, Ella Sutherland, Rish Sutherland, and Lokesh Sutherland; and her great grandchildren, Tory Brupbacher, Will Brupbacher, Jack Brupbacher, Reilly Brupbacher, Quinn Brupbacher, Reid Brupbacher, Amara Edemobi, Rowan Sutherland, Sophia Sudziarski, Mila Whitehouse, Ella Whitehouse, Fern Sutherland, Olive Sutherland, Madie Sutherland, Roy Sutherland, and James McCaffrey.
Please make donations in Elizabeth Sutherland’s honor to Birth Haven, Our Lady of the Lake, or the Peter J. Sutherland Memorial Scholarship Fund.
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A Mass of Christian Burial was held on Jan. 15 at Our Lady Of The Lake Church in Sparta, N.J., for Elizabeth “Betsy” A. Sutherland, founder of Birth Haven in Newton, N.J., who died on Jan. 11. She was 95. Many parishes, religious organizations, and individual Catholics in the Paterson Diocese in New Jersey have supported Birth Haven, an independent, nonsectarian, nonprofit organization that provides shelter, support, and education for homeless pregnant women and girls. It was founded in 1985. Born on March 4, 1930, in Newark, N.J., Sutherland moved with her family to South Orange, N.J., graduating from Our Lady of


Keynote speakers at “The Beauty of Truth: Navigating Society Today as a Catholic Woman” conference, held Jan. 9-10, 2026, in Houston (left to right): Erika Bachiochi, Mary Eberstadt, Angela Franks, Pia de Solenni, and Leah Sargeant. | Credit: Photo courtesy of the University of St. Thomas
Jan 18, 2026 / 10:26 am (CNA).
This past week, nearly a quarter of U.S. states sued the federal government for defining biological sex as binary, the U.S. Supreme Court heard arguments for and against legally allowing males to compete against females in sports, and a Vatican official called surrogacy a “new form of colonialism” that commodifies women and their children.
These are just the latest legal and cultural effects of a “mass cultural confusion” surrounding the meaning and purpose of the human body, and particularly women’s bodies, according to Leah Jacobson, program coordinator of the Catholic Women’s and Gender Studies Program at the University of St. Thomas in Houston.
On Jan. 9–10, the program sponsored a symposium titled “The Beauty of Truth: Navigating Society Today as a Catholic Woman,” which brought together a group of Catholic women who have used their gifts of intellect and faith to serve as what Jacobson calls an “antidote” to the “chaos and confusion” of the cultural moment.
The speakers presented on a wide range of topics concerned with the beauty, truth, and necessity of the Church’s teachings on human sexuality, while also acknowledging how difficult living according to those teachings can sometimes be.
‘Each of these acts is an act of human subtraction’
In one of the first talks, writer Mary Eberstadt argued that the question “Who am I?” became harder to answer due to the widespread use of the birth control pill, which has led to huge increases in abortion, divorce, fatherlessness, single parenthood, and childlessness.
“Each of these acts is an act of human subtraction,” Eberstadt said. “I’m not trying to make a point about morality, but arithmetic.”
“The number of people we can call our own” became smaller, she said.
While she acknowledged that not everyone has been affected equally, “members of our species share a collective environment. Just as toxic waste affects everyone," she said, the reduction in the number of human connections “amounts to a massive disturbance to the human ecosystem,” leading to a crisis of human identity.
This reduction in the number of people in an individual's life, she argued, resulted in widespread confusion over gender identity and the meaning and purpose of the body.
Eberstadt also attributed the decline in religiosity to the smaller number of human connections modern people have.
“The sexual revolution subtracted the number of role models,” she said. “Many children have no siblings, no cousins, no aunts or uncles, no father; yet that is how humans conduct social learning.”
“Without children, adults are less likely to go to church,” she said. “Without birth, we lose knowledge of the transcendent. Without an earthly father, it is hard to grasp the paradigm of a heavenly father.”
‘A love deficit’
“Living without God is not liberating people,” she continued. “It’s tearing some individuals apart, making people miserable and lonely.”
When the sexual revolution made sex "recreational and not procreative, what it produced above all is a love deficit,” Eberstadt said.
At the same time, secularization produced “troubled, disconnected souls drifting through society without gravity, shattering the ability to answer ‘Who am I?’”
“The Church is the answer to the love deficit because Church teachings about who we are and what we’re here for are true,” she said.
She concluded with a final note on hope, saying “it is easy to feel embattled, but we must never lose sight of the faces of the sexual revolution’s victims,” she said, “who are sending up primal screams for a world more ordered than many of today’s people now know; more ordered to mercy, to community and redemption.”
The Church’s teachings were ’truly beautiful’ but 'very, very hard to live'
Erika Bachiochi, a legal scholar and fellow at the Ethics and Public Policy Center who has taught a class for the graduate program, shared her experience as a mother of seven who tried to live according to the Church’s “difficult” teachings.
As her children began to arrive at “a breakneck pace” and each pregnancy was “a bit of a crucible,” Bachiochi said being a mother was “very hard” for her, partly due to wounds from her youth (among other troubles, her own mother had been married and divorced three times), and partly because of a lack of community.
Echoing Eberstadt’s “arithmetic” problem, Bachiochi described having very few examples of Catholic family life and a very small support system.
Bachiochi said she believes God heals us from our wounds through our “particular vocations,” however.
Of motherhood, she said: “I think God really healed me through being faithful to teachings that I found quite hard, but truly beautiful. I was intellectually convinced by them and found them spiritually beautiful, but found them to be very, very hard to live.”
“Motherhood has served to heal me profoundly," she said, encouraging young mothers to have faith that though it might be difficult now, there is an “amazing future” awaiting them.
“It’s really an incredible gift that Church has given me … the gift of obedience,” she said.
She also said by God’s grace, she was given an “excellent husband” and has found that “just as the Church promises, that leaning into motherhood, into the little things, the daily needs, the constant requests for my attention, has truly been a school of virtue.”
The Catholic Women’s and Gender Studies Program is a new part of the Nesti Center for Faith and Culture at the University of St. Thomas, a recognized Catholic cultural center of the Vatican’s Dicastery for Culture and Education.
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Keynote speakers at “The Beauty of Truth: Navigating Society Today as a Catholic Woman” conference, held Jan. 9-10, 2026, in Houston (left to right): Erika Bachiochi, Mary Eberstadt, Angela Franks, Pia de Solenni, and Leah Sargeant. | Credit: Photo courtesy of the University of St. Thomas
Jan 18, 2026 / 10:26 am (CNA).
This past week, nearly a quarter of U.S. states sued the federal government for defining biological sex as binary, the U.S. Supreme Court heard arguments for and against legally allowing males to compete against females in sports, and a Vatican official called surrogacy a “new form of colonialism” that commodifies women and their children.
These are just the latest legal and cultural effects of a “mass cultural confusion” surrounding the meaning and purpose of the human body, and particularly women’s bodies, according to Leah Jacobson, program coordinator of the Catholic Women’s and Gender Studies Program at the University of St. Thomas in Houston.
On Jan. 9–10, the program sponsored a symposium titled “The Beauty of Truth: Navigating Society Today as a Catholic Woman,” which brought together a group of Catholic women who have used their gifts of intellect and faith to serve as what Jacobson calls an “antidote” to the “chaos and confusion” of the cultural moment.
The speakers presented on a wide range of topics concerned with the beauty, truth, and necessity of the Church’s teachings on human sexuality in many realms.
‘Every act is an act of human subtraction’
In one of the first talks, writer Mary Eberstadt argued that the question “Who am I?” became harder to answer due to the widespread use of the birth control pill, which has led to huge increases in abortion, divorce, fatherlessness, single parenthood, and childlessness. These effects led to a reduction in the number of people in an individual's life, which, she argued, resulted in widespread confusion over gender identity and the meaning and purpose of the body.
While she acknowledged that not everyone has been affected equally, “members of our species share a collective environment.”
“Just as toxic waste affects everyone,” she said, the reduction in the number of human connections “amounts to a massive disturbance to the human ecosystem,” leading to a crisis of human identity.
“The number of people we can call our own” became smaller, she said. “Each of these acts is an act of human subtraction,” Eberstadt said. “I’m not trying to make a point about morality, but arithmetic.”
Eberstadt also attributed the decline in religiosity to this decline in the number of human connections modern people experience.
“The sexual revolution subtracted the number of role models,” she said. “Many children have no siblings, no cousins, no aunts or uncles, no father, yet that is how humans conduct social learning.”
“Without children, adults are less likely to go to church,” she said. “Without birth, we lose knowledge of the transcendent. Without an earthly father, it is hard to grasp the paradigm of an earthly father.”
‘A love deficit’
“Living without God is not liberating people,” she continued. “It’s tearing some individuals apart, making people miserable and lonely.”
When the sexual revolution made sex "recreational and not procreative, what it produced above all is a love deficit,” Eberstadt said.
At the same time, secularization produced “troubled, disconnected souls drifting through society without gravity, shattering the ability to answer ‘Who am I?’”
“The Church is the answer to the love deficit because Church teachings about who we are and what we’re here for are true,” she said.
She concluded with a final note on hope, saying “it is easy to feel embattled, but we must never lose sight of the faces of the sexual revolution’s victims,” she said, “who are sending up primal screams for a world more ordered than many of today’s people now know; more ordered to mercy, to community and redemption.”
The Church’s teachings were ’truly beautiful’ but 'very, very hard to live'
Erika Bachiochi, a legal scholar and fellow at the Ethics and Public Policy Center who teaches a class for the graduate program, shared her experience as a mother of seven who tried to live according to the Church’s “difficult” teachings.
As her children began to arrive at “a breakneck pace” and each pregnancy was “a bit of a crucible,” Bachiochi said being a mother was “very hard” for her, partly due to wounds from her youth (among other troubles, her own mother had been married and divorced three times), and partly because of a lack of community.
Echoing Eberstadt’s “arithmetic” problem, Bachiochi described having very few examples of Catholic family life and a very small support system.
Bachiochi said she believes God heals us from our wounds through our “particular vocations,” however.
Of motherhood, she said: “I think God really healed me through being faithful to teachings that I found quite hard, but truly beautiful. I was intellectually convinced by them and found them spiritually beautiful, but found them to be very, very hard to live.”
“Motherhood has served to heal me profoundly," she said, encouraging young mothers to have faith that though it might be difficult now, there is an “amazing future” awaiting them.
“It’s really an incredible gift that Church has given me … the gift of obedience,” she said.
She also said by God’s grace, she was given an “excellent husband” and has found that “just as the Church promises, that leaning into motherhood, into the little things, the daily needs, the constant requests for my attention, has truly been a school of virtue.”
The Catholic Women’s and Gender Studies Program is a new part of the Nesti Center for Faith and Culture at the University of St. Thomas, a recognized Catholic cultural center of the Vatican’s Dicastery for Culture and Education.
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Pope Leo XIV waves to crowds in St. Peter's Square after praying the Angelus on Jan. 18, 2026. | Credit: Vatican Media
Jan 18, 2026 / 09:44 am (CNA).
Pope Leo XIV on Sunday urged prayers for peace in the Democratic Republic of the Congo as violence in the country’s east continues to drive families from their homes and across borders.
“Many have been forced to flee their country – especially to Burundi – due to violence, and they are facing a serious humanitarian crisis,” the pope said after praying the Angelus in St. Peter’s Square on Jan. 18. “Let us pray that dialogue for reconciliation and peace may always prevail among the parties in conflict.”
Leo also assured those affected by severe flooding in southern Africa of his prayers.
The pope also marked the start of the Week of Prayer for Christian Unity.
“During these days, I invite all Catholic communities to deepen their prayers for the full, visible unity of all Christians,” Leo said, recalling that “the origins of this initiative date back two centuries,” and noting that Pope Leo XIII “greatly encouraged it.”
The theme for this year’s observance is drawn from St. Paul’s Letter to the Ephesians: “There is one body and one Spirit, just as you were called to the one hope of your calling” (4:4). The prayers and reflections, the pope said, were prepared by “an ecumenical group coordinated by the Armenian Apostolic Church’s Department of Interchurch Relations.”
In his reflection before praying the Angelus, Leo connected the call to peace and unity with a warning against what he described as a culture of appearances, urging the faithful to follow the example of St. John the Baptist, who stepped aside once he had pointed others to Christ.
The day’s Gospel reading (Jn 1:29-34), the pope noted, shows John identifying Jesus as the Messiah: “Behold, the Lamb of God, who takes away the sin of the world!” (v. 29). John’s humility remains a needed witness, Leo said, because “approval, consensus and visibility are often given excessive importance, to the point of shaping people’s ideas, behaviors and even their inner lives.”
“This causes suffering and division, and gives rise to lifestyles and relationships that are fragile, disappointing and imprisoning,” the pope said.
Instead of chasing what he called “substitutes for happiness,” Leo said Christians should remember that “our joy and greatness are not founded on passing illusions of success or fame, but on knowing ourselves to be loved and wanted by our heavenly Father.”
Leo emphasized that God’s love is not about spectacle but about closeness and compassion: “The love of which Jesus speaks is the love of a God who even today comes among us, not to dazzle us with spectacular displays, but to share in our struggles and to take our burdens upon himself.”
He concluded by urging believers to resist distractions and cultivate prayer and simplicity: “Let us not waste our time and energies chasing after appearances,” he said, encouraging Catholics to make time each day, when possible, for silence and prayer — “to withdraw into the desert,” in order to meet the Lord.
This story was first published in two parts by ACI Prensa, CNA’s Spanish-language news partner. It has been translated and adapted by CNA.
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Bishop Michael Burbidge of Arlington and Bishop Barry Knestout of Richmond. | Credit: Katie Yoder/EWTN News; photo courtesy of the Archdiocese of Washington
Jan 18, 2026 / 08:00 am (CNA).
The Virginia Catholic bishops on Friday spoke out against an abortion amendment that would remove state protections for unborn children, calling the measure “extreme.”
The Virginia General Assembly passed a proposed amendment that would add a fundamental right to abortion to Virginia’s constitution, if voters approve it this November.
The proposed abortion amendment would establish a “fundamental right to reproductive freedom, including the ability to make and carry out decisions relating to one’s own prenatal care, childbirth, postpartum care, contraception, abortion care, miscarriage management, and fertility care.”
Bishops Michael Burbidge of Arlington and Barry Knestout of Richmond called the move “shocking to the conscience,” noting that lawmakers quickly moved the proposed amendment through both chambers in the early days of its 60-day session.
“The extreme abortion amendment, which will proceed to a referendum for voters to decide later this year, would go far beyond even what Roe v. Wade previously allowed,” the bishops said in the Jan. 16 statement. “It would enshrine virtually unlimited abortion at any stage of pregnancy, with no age restriction.”
The bishops cautioned that the amendment would “severely jeopardize Virginia’s parental consent law, health and safety standards for women, conscience protections for health care providers, and restrictions on taxpayer-funded abortions.”
“Most tragically of all, the extreme abortion amendment provides no protections whatsoever for preborn children,” the bishops continued.
“Most importantly, human life is sacred,” the bishops said. “The lives of vulnerable mothers and their preborn children must always be welcomed, cared for, and protected.”
“Parental rights and the health and well-being of minors must be defended,” the bishops said. “So too must religious liberty. No one should ever be forced to pay for or participate in an abortion. Health and safety should be enhanced, not diminished.”
In addition, the bishops urged Virginia voters to oppose a measure that would repeal a 2006 provision defining marriage as between one man and one woman. The bishops also expressed support for a measure that would restore voting rights to those who have completed prison sentences.
“We will be deeply engaged in the work of helping to educate voters on these proposed amendments and will fight the extreme abortion amendment with maximum determination,” the bishops concluded.
The joint statement followed a statement by Burbidge, who on Jan. 15 urged Catholics to “to pray, fast, and advocate for the cause of life” amid the “looming threat” of the abortion amendment.
“Prayer opens our hearts to God’s wisdom and strengthens us to act with courage and charity,” Burbidge wrote. “Fasting makes reparation for sin and reminds us that true freedom is found not in self-indulgence but in self-gift. Advocacy allows us to bring our convictions into the public square with respect, clarity, and perseverance.”
“Our response as Catholics — and as citizens committed to justice — must be rooted in faith, truth, and love,” he continued.
Burbidge also reminded Catholics of the mercy of the Church.
“It is essential to reaffirm a truth that lies at the very center of the Church’s pro-life mission: The Church is a loving mother,” Burbidge continued. “To any man or woman who carries the pain, regret, or sorrow of participation in abortion, know this clearly — you are not alone, and God awaits you with love and mercy. The Church desires to walk with you on a journey of healing and hope.”
“May we together pray fervently, act courageously, and serve generously,” Burbidge said. “May our witness help build a culture in Virginia — and beyond — that recognizes every human life as sacred, every person as beloved, and every moment as an opportunity to choose life.”
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A woman receives a baby shower at her local church through Embrace Grace. | Credit: Embrace Grace
Jan 18, 2026 / 06:00 am (CNA).
Amy Ford was 19 years old when she found herself with an unplanned pregnancy. Scared and thinking her life and dreams were over, she attempted to get an abortion but was unable to go through with it.
Ford and the baby’s father turned to their church for support and received none. The experience led her to create Embrace Grace, a nonprofit that provides support and community through local churches for pregnant mothers in need.
The story behind the ministry
Ford told EWTN News that she thought “my life was over, my dreams were over, that my parents were going to hate me.” She said she thought she would end up homeless.
“The father of the baby felt the same way and we just thought we could have an abortion and maybe that’s a quick fix and we’ll just deal with the consequences of a broken heart later. And even though we grew up knowing abortion was wrong, we just kind of went into this mode of trying not to feel anything,” Ford recalled.
So, she went to an abortion clinic. As the nurses explained what they were going to do during the procedure, Ford began to hyperventilate and passed out. She was told she was “too emotionally distraught” to make a decision and that she could go back to the abortion clinic another day.
As she walked into the waiting room, she told the baby’s father that she was still pregnant. At that moment, the two decided they would keep the child. The high school sweethearts knew they wanted to get married one day; they just didn’t expect to have a child before marriage.
The two went to an evangelical pastor whom they knew personally to ask him if he could marry them.
“He said, ‘No, I’m sorry, because you sinned I will not bless this marriage,’” Ford shared.
The couple found another pastor to marry them and got married when Ford was 16 weeks pregnant. They tried going back to their church after that but it was “the elephant in the room” — others changed how they interacted with them and they decided to stop attending church for a period of time.
Ford and her husband welcomed their son — who is now 27 years old and also works in the pro-life movement — and have been married for 27 years, welcoming three more children after their firstborn.

Helping women
Looking back at her experience, Ford felt called to help women who found themselves in these situations, not sure where to go, and weren’t aware of the resources available to them. So she started a small group at her church for women who were experiencing an unexpected pregnancy.
Ford admitted that back then she didn’t know what a pregnancy center was or what the pro-life movement was.
“If someone would have said, ‘I work in the pro-life movement,’ I would have assumed that meant picketing because that’s the only thing the media shows,” she admitted. “I didn’t know what a pregnancy center was even when I started Embrace Grace, the group. I didn’t know anything about it. So, I never thought, ‘I’m starting a pro-life group.’ That wasn’t even on my mind. I just wanted to start a small group for women that have unexpected pregnancies.”
In 2008 Ford hosted her first group, which was made up of three women who met at a local church in the Dallas-Forth Worth area. After meeting for 12 weeks as a group, “they didn’t even seem like the same person by the end of it,” Ford recalled.
“They had completely transformed. They were empowered as women to be the moms that God created them to be.”
After the first group, Ford held another Embrace Grace session, and another and another. With each passing session, more and more young women were attending and slowly more and more churches were getting involved.
Today, Embrace Grace is in over 1,200 churches across the country — mostly in evangelical, Baptist, and Catholic churches.
A woman who joins an Embrace Grace group goes through a 12-week curriculum that aims to help her experience healing and remind her of who God made her to be as a daughter of God and a mother. Additionally, the church hosting the group throws each woman a baby shower.

Embrace Grace also has two other programs: Embrace Life and Embrace Legacy.
Embrace Life is a 20-week program that teaches the women more practical skills in terms of parenting, the newborn phase and postpartum, how to manage finances, and more. Embrace Legacy is a 12-week program aimed at new or single fathers.
Ford hopes that Embrace Grace serves as a tool of “courage and the bridge to get them actually going to church and raising their kids in the church and being a part of a spiritual family.”
The nondenominational nonprofit also works in partnership with local pregnancy centers that are within a 30-mile radius of a church that hosts an Embrace Grace group by giving them what they call “Love Boxes” to give women who find out they are pregnant and are seeking support. The Love Box contains a onesie with the words “Best Gift Ever,” a book called “A Bump in Life” — which contains 20 testimonies from women who chose life — a journal, a handwritten letter encouraging a new mother, and an invitation to join the local Embrace Grace group.

“Because most pregnancy centers have sonogram machines, that means they’re medical, which means they have HIPAA laws that they have to abide by. So, they can’t just give the church the girl’s name,” Ford explained. “So these Love Boxes are kind of a way, another touch, for the mom to find out more … and that there’s a church that wants to walk alongside you.”
Embrace Grace recently reached a milestone by giving out 150,000 Love Boxes since its launch in 2018.
Looking ahead, Ford’s goal is to be in 23,400 churches. If that number sounds specific, that’s because it is. By using different tools, Ford and her team concluded that if they want every woman who finds herself in an unplanned pregnancy to be able to turn to a church for support, Embrace Grace needs to be in “23,400 churches strategically placed around the United States … so that no mom would ever have to walk alone.”
“We are just putting it out there, trying to partner with as many churches as possible, so that we can make that happen,” she said. “That is our big dream. That that’s what the world would look like — that no mom would have to walk alone and that she would have a church to turn to in her local area.”
“I believe in leading Embrace Grace, we have front-row seats to miracles.”
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