Browsing News Entries
Catholic schools add security, including armed staff, after Minneapolis school shooting
Posted on 09/11/2025 21:27 PM (CNA Daily News - US)

CNA Staff, Sep 11, 2025 / 17:27 pm (CNA).
After two children died and more than 20 people were injured by a transgender-identifying man in Minneapolis in August, Catholic schools around the country have been evaluating their security measures, with some hiring security guards and others allowing teachers and staff to be armed.
The Diocese of Buffalo this week announced it has hired armed security guards for the 29 Catholic elementary schools in its jurisdiction and has also engaged a “security consultant” to help create “comprehensive safety plans tailored to each school community.”
Catholic schools superintendent Joleen Dimitroff sent a letter to parents informing them of the decisions, which she said are “a reflection of our shared belief that the safety of our children is priceless and must be protected with the highest level of care.”
Parents’ reactions have been mixed. Marc Bruno, a longtime Buffalo public school teacher, called the move “a necessary step.”
“No one wants to see guns in the schools,” he told local ABC news station WKBW. However, he continued, “if you look at some of the previous shootings, principals have thrown their bodies at the gunman, and you know, our bodies don’t stand a chance against a bullet.”
One mother opposed the move, saying having armed security guards will put “children’s lives in danger.” She said she will not continue sending her child to school with armed guards present, emphasizing that her child “isn’t allowed to have peanut butter in his classroom to protect kids, but you want a stranger strolling the halls with a gun?”
Arming teachers
A less-talked-about solution among Catholic schools is the practice of arming school staff, including teachers.
In Ohio, nearly 100 public school districts — and even some private Christian schools — have anonymous armed staff this year, up from 67 the year before, according to a roster released by the Ohio Department of Public Safety.
Hametown Christian Academy, a private school in Norton, Ohio, allows armed staff.
Associate pastor and head of school safety at the school Rick Wright told the Akron Beacon Journal on Aug. 25 that the school board decided it was “prudent to arm teachers and staff members” due to the increase in school shootings in recent years.
“A gun is not evil,” Wright said. “It is a tool, and the fact that some of our staff may be armed is a deterrent.”
The names and numbers of teachers and other school staff carrying guns are not publicly available, nor are the total number of armed staff in each district. All armed staff are trained to use their weapons, according to Wright.
Schools post signs alerting visitors of the gun policy, hoping the knowledge that staff are armed will serve as “a deterrent,” Wright said.
If you “put up a no gun zone sign,” Wright said, “you’re telling somebody you can come in here and shoot all you want.”
“It works the opposite (of the intent); you’ve made yourself a soft target,” he said.
An independent Catholic school in the South that wishes to remain unnamed told CNA that after extensive discussion about campus security, administrators arrived at an “informal” security policy that involves armed staff.
“We’re pretty sure some of the teachers have guns in their cars,” an administrator told CNA.
When asked whether teachers were also carrying concealed weapons, the administrator said he does not know, and the school has “never said yes or no” to the practice.
Because of the “high quality of the teachers” at the school, the administrator said the leadership “came to the conclusion that the teachers would go after a guy with a gun rather than run away.” The school would “call the police and then the teachers with weapons would use … deadly force” if necessary to protect students.
“We’re willing to bet that would be a sufficient response,” he said.
Funding for security measures
Funding for the new security measures in the Buffalo Diocese for the 2025-2026 school year has been provided by the Foundation for the Roman Catholic Diocese of Buffalo, according to Dimitroff. Tuition will increase in subsequent years to cover the cost, which might also be covered by public funding.
James Cultrara, the director for education for the New York State Catholic Conference, told CNA after the 2012 school shooting in Sandy Hook, Connecticut, that New York state lawmakers had instituted two funding streams to address school security: one for public schools and one for private schools.
The private school funding program has expanded tenfold, from $7 million initially to more than $70 million. Schools can use the funds to address anything related to “health, safety, and security.” Environmental hazard mitigation as well as security cameras, security guards, and remote door locks are covered by the funding, Cultrara said.
The Minnesota Catholic Conference released a statement on Sept. 5 saying it “welcomes a broader legislative discussion about preventing gun violence” and asking the state Legislature to address security funding disparities between public and private schools.
Jason Adkins, executive director of the Minnesota Catholic Conference, noted that while the Catholic Church in Minnesota “has long supported commonsense gun regulations, such as protective orders and expanded background checks,” neither of those measures prevented “the Annunciation tragedy.”
Adkins noted that while “Americans have a right to possess firearms,” that right comes with responsibilities, including that of public officials to address the “deeper causes of violence — mental health struggles, family breakdown, and a growing despair often worsened by harmful ideologies, substance abuse, and the effects of the absence of God in people’s lives.”
Adkins urged the Legislature to reconsider recently-enacted laws that loosen restrictions on THC (a cannabis plant derivative) and “the widely debated treatment of young people experiencing gender dysphoria.”
A controversial Minnesota law prohibits mental health counselors from practicing so-called conversion therapy on LGBT youth, which in practice means that therapists who want to help people who do not want to embrace a LGBT identity are fearful of doing so, according to Christian therapist Dr. David Kirby, who testified against the legislation before it passed.
Catholic and U.S. leaders offer prayers on 24th anniversary of 9/11
Posted on 09/11/2025 17:34 PM (CNA Daily News - US)

Washington, D.C. Newsroom, Sep 11, 2025 / 13:34 pm (CNA).
On the 24th anniversary of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, Catholic and U.S. leaders offered prayers and paid tribute to those who lost their lives that day and for all those who continue to grieve.
“Today we remember Sept. 11, 2001,” Cardinal Timothy Dolan of the Archdiocese of New York wrote in a joint post to social media. “We continue to pray for the souls lost that day, the families who still mourn, the heroes who served, and all those who have since died from 9/11-related illnesses or continue to suffer.”
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Dolan’s post offered a prayer to be said on the anniversary: “Lord, on this Sept. 11, we remember all who died 24 years ago in our city and throughout the country. We hold in our hearts those who still carry loss and grief from that day.”
“Grant eternal rest to the departed, strength to survivors and their families, and protection for first responders and all who serve our communities with courage and dedication. Lord God, continue to watch over our city and country, and help us turn hearts toward compassion and peace. Amen.”
In a post to X, the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) also offered a prayer in memory of the attack: “God of understanding, overwhelmed by the magnitude of this tragedy, we seek your light and guidance as we confront such terrible events. Grant that those whose lives were spared may live so that the lives lost here may not have been lost in vain.”
“Comfort and console us, strengthen us in hope, and give us the wisdom and courage to work tirelessly for a world where true peace and love reign among nations and in the hearts of all.”
U.S. leaders also commemorated the day and paid tribute to the victims.
President Donald Trump and First Lady Melania Trump attended an event at the Pentagon in Virginia on Thursday morning where prayers were offered for all the victims, first responders, those who continue to grieve, and U.S. active military members.
“To every family member that still feels a void every day of your lives, the First Lady and I unite with you in sorrow,” Trump said at the event. “And today, as one nation, we renew our sacred vow that we will never forget Sept. 11, 2001.”
U.S. Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth also spoke, asking the crowd to honor the memory of the victims and to acknowledge “the decades of courage that followed” the attack.
“We gather to pay tribute to the first responders who charged into the flames and up the stairs, to those trapped on planes fighting their final fight, and to the families whose lives were forever altered by that fateful day,” Hegseth said.
“I thank God for all of you and all of our fighters from that day, to today and beyond. May God bless our warriors as they ruthlessly seek out enemies on behalf of the fellow citizens they love.”
Politicians, faith leaders condemn political violence after Charlie Kirk assassination
Posted on 09/11/2025 17:04 PM (CNA Daily News - US)

Washington, D.C. Newsroom, Sep 11, 2025 / 13:04 pm (CNA).
Faith leaders and political leaders are uniting their voices to condemn politically motivated violence following the assassination of Turning Point USA Founder Charlie Kirk.
Following the confirmation of Kirk’s death by President Donald Trump, some hours after the TPUSA founder was shot at a Utah Valley University event on Wednesday afternoon, Sept. 10, countless faith and political leaders began to speak out against the scourge of political violence.
In a statement, Bishop Michael Burbidge of the Diocese of Arlington, Virginia, railed against the “vicious pattern of political and social disorder” of the past several weeks, citing the Annunciation Catholic school shooting, the murder of Ukrainian refugee Iryna Zarutska, “and now the political assassination of Charlie Kirk, known for his commitment to civil and rational discourse.”
As Americans, we are witnesses in just the past few weeks to a vicious pattern of political and social disorder. At Annunciation Catholic Parish in Minneapolis, the killings of Harper Moyski and Fletcher Merkel, two innocent children. In Charlotte, the murder of Ukrainian refugee…
— Bishop Burbidge (@BishopBurbidge) September 10, 2025
“What we see unfolding in our nation is a vicious pattern of hatreds rooted in the rejection of God, of the dignity of the human person, and the sanctity of the family,” the bishop observed.
“We are living through a perilous moment,” Burbridge continued. “Our challenge is not only one of partisan disagreement, law, and policy, but in a deeper way our challenge is to uphold the central goods of American political life: of faith, of families, and of a national commitment to live together in harmony as brothers and sisters.”
Kirk’s assasination hit Bishop Barron particularly hard
“I am devastated by the news of Charlie Kirk’s death,” Winona-Rochester, Minnesota, Bishop Robert Barron said after news of Kirk’s death was confirmed by President Donald Trump.
Barron went on to reveal that Kirk had been scheduled to appear on his show, “Bishop Barron Presents,” in 10 days. The founder of Word on Fire called Kirk “a great debater and also one of the best advocates in our country for civil discourse, but he was, first and last, a passionate Christian,” recalling that when they first met four years ago, “we didn’t talk much about politics. We talked about theology, in which he had a deep interest, and about Christ. I know I’m joining millions of people around the world in praying that he rests now in the peace of the Lord.”
Moral theologian on root of problem
“You have to be willfully blind not to see that the root of the problem is political hatred, and that that hatred is no more obvious than in those who cannot restrain themselves from badmouthing a man even when he lay dying,” said Edward Feser, a Catholic philosopher and professor at Pasadena City College.
I have nothing against reasonable gun control laws. But you have to be willfully blind not to see that the root of the problem is political hatred, and that that hatred is no more obvious than in those who cannot restrain themselves from badmouthing a man even when he lay dying.
— Edward Feser (@FeserEdward) September 10, 2025
In a joint post showcasing their shared perspective across ideological divides, Princeton legal scholar Robert George and Harvard theology and philosophy professor Cornel West said: “For our nation, this is a moment for deep healing and for bearing witness to the precious humanity of all our brothers and sisters — those with whom we agree and those with whom we disagree.” The pair had appeared together on Kirk’s show recently.
We join our fellow citizens of all faiths in praying for the repose of the soul of Charlie Kirk and for the comfort and consolation of his wife, two small children, and other loved ones.
— Robert P. George (@McCormickProf) September 11, 2025
We recently appeared as guests on Charlie’s podcast, where he engaged us with moral…
Meanwhile, CatholicVote President Kelsey Reinhardt said the tragic shooting “was not merely an assault on one man: It was an assault on the principles of free dialogue, civic order, and human dignity.”
It is with profound grief that I respond to the brutal assassination of Charlie Kirk during his “American Comeback” tour at Utah Valley University. Today, our nation mourns not only the loss of a bold voice for truth, but a husband and father who leaves behind a wife and two…
— Kelsey (Wicks) Reinhardt (@catholickelsey) September 10, 2025
“As Catholics, we affirm with unwavering conviction that every human life is sacred,” Reinhardt continued, offering prayers for the repose of Kirk’s soul. “I call upon every leader, regardless of party or persuasion, to condemn this murder unequivocally. To remain silent in the face of such evil is to be complicit in its advance. Let this tragedy awaken America to the urgent need to recover respect for life, civility in discourse, and courage in the pursuit of truth.”
Heritage Foundation President Kevin Roberts also weighed in, writing: “What a horrific day in American history.”
What a horrific day in American history.
— Kevin Roberts (@KevinRobertsTX) September 10, 2025
To Charlie’s family, friends, and @TPUSA colleagues: we must never, never, never, never, never, never stop fighting to build the America that he helped make possible. He restored optimism about the American future for millions of… pic.twitter.com/VYP2WUaRiD
“To Charlie’s family, friends, and @TPUSA colleagues: We must never, never, never, never, never, never stop fighting to build the America that he helped make possible,” Roberts added.
Netanyahu: Kirk ‘stood tall for Judeo-Christian civilization’
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu joined world leaders in condemning Kirk’s assasination, writing: “Charlie Kirk was murdered for speaking truth and defending freedom. A lion-hearted friend of Israel, he fought the lies and stood tall for Judeo-Christian civilization.”
Charlie Kirk was murdered for speaking truth and defending freedom. A lion-hearted friend of Israel, he fought the lies and stood tall for Judeo-Christian civilization. I spoke to him only two weeks ago and invited him to Israel. Sadly, that visit will not take place.
— Benjamin Netanyahu - בנימין נתניהו (@netanyahu) September 10, 2025
We lost an…
Netanyahu revealed he had spoken to Kirk “only two weeks ago” and had invited the late TPUSA founder to visit Israel.
“Sadly, that visit will not take place,” the prime minister said. “We lost an incredible human being. His boundless pride in America and his valiant belief in free speech will leave a lasting impact.”
In another tribute, California Gov. Gavin Newsom, who hosted Kirk as the first guest on his new podcast, said: “His senseless murder is a reminder of how important it is for all of us, across the political spectrum, to foster genuine discourse on issues that deeply affect us all without resorting to political violence.”
We should all feel a deep sense of grief and outrage at the terrible violence that took place in Utah today. Charlie Kirk's murder is sick and reprehensible, and our thoughts are with his family, children, and loved ones.
— Governor Gavin Newsom (@CAgovernor) September 10, 2025
I knew Charlie, and I admired his passion and commitment…
“The best way to honor Charlie’s memory is to continue his work: Engage with each other, across ideology, through spirited discourse,” he continued. “In a democracy, ideas are tested through words and good-faith debate — never through violence.”
Newsom added: “Honest disagreement makes us stronger; violence only drives us further apart and corrodes the values at the heart of this nation.
Former Vice President Kamala Harris and President Joe Biden both took to social media as well, with Biden writing in a post: “There is no place in our country for this kind of violence. It must end now. Jill and I are praying for Charlie Kirk’s family and loved ones.”
There is no place in our country for this kind of violence. It must end now. Jill and I are praying for Charlie Kirk’s family and loved ones.
— Joe Biden (@JoeBiden) September 10, 2025
“I am deeply disturbed by the shooting in Utah. Doug and I send our prayers to Charlie Kirk and his family,” Harris wrote, adding: “Let me be clear: Political violence has no place in America. I condemn this act, and we all must work together to ensure this does not lead to more violence.”
I am deeply disturbed by the shooting in Utah. Doug and I send our prayers to Charlie Kirk and his family.
— Kamala Harris (@KamalaHarris) September 10, 2025
Let me be clear: Political violence has no place in America. I condemn this act, and we all must work together to ensure this does not lead to more violence.
‘God is with Nicaragua!’ exclaims first Nicaraguan consecrated bishop in the U.S.
Posted on 09/11/2025 12:00 PM (CNA Daily News - US)

ACI Prensa Staff, Sep 11, 2025 / 08:00 am (CNA).
“Today, we Nicaraguans are making history again. Do not forget: God is with us and God is with Nicaragua!” said Pedro Bismarck Chau, the new auxiliary bishop of Newark, New Jersey, at the Sept. 8 Mass for his episcopal consecration, making him the first Nicaraguan-born bishop in the United States.
Amid a festive atmosphere and before a packed Sacred Heart Cathedral in Newark, where he had been rector since 2020, Chau received episcopal consecration through the laying on of hands by several bishops. The principal consecrator was Cardinal Joseph Tobin, the archbishop of Newark.
As part of the celebration, Cardinal Christoph Pierre, apostolic nuncio to the United States, read the letter in which Pope Leo XIV officially appointed Chau as bishop and encouraged him to allow himself to be strengthened “by the grace of this jubilee year and you will have reason to be confident in the gift of hope, which does not disappoint. May God continue to bless you and may he bless the people of God in this archdiocese.”
The good shepherd gives his life for the sheep
In his homily in English and Spanish, Tobin encouraged the new bishop to remember that “you have been called from among the people of God and for the people of God. Not for yourself, but for the things that belong to God. Indeed, episcopacy is the name of a service, not an honor, for a bishop should strive to serve rather than rule.”
“According to the Master’s commandment, whoever wants to be great among you must be your servant, and whoever wants to be first among you must be the slave of all … Be a faithful steward and dispenser of the mysteries of Christ. Always follow the example of the Good Shepherd, who knows his sheep and is known by them, and who did not hesitate to give his life for them.”
The cardinal then recalled that “Pope Francis never tired of repeating to bishops that there are three aspects to a bishop’s closeness to the people he serves: closeness to God in prayer, the first task; closeness to the priests and deacons of the Church; and closeness to the people of God. … Do not forget your roots, do not forget those who have passed on the faith to you.”
‘God is with Nicaragua!’
At the beginning of his address as a newly consecrated bishop, Chau thanked the Deaf community in sign language, recalling that for 17 years they have been a great support and encouragement in his ministry, offering them his prayers and concluding with a clear: “I love you!”
Speaking later in Spanish, he addressed his “dear Hispanic community: Thank you for the faith and devotion you possess. You are a great gift of life for the Church in the United States. Continue, brothers, to be a Church that goes out in search of the lost sheep.”
“I would also like to acknowledge the presence this afternoon,” Chau continued, “of a group of people here from a very small country but with a big and resilient heart that cries out with a phrase that no other country has: ‘Who causes so much joy? The conception of Mary. Mary of Nicaragua! Nicaragua of Mary!’”
The prelate addressed his family, especially his mother: “Thank you, my dearest mother, for everything and for praying so many rosaries for me, three, four, and five times a day that you pray for me. I need them, so don’t stop praying those rosaries for me. OK, Mommy?”
“I love you very much,” he told his family, “you know I love you with all my heart.”
The example of the Virgin Mary
Chau said he hopes to “follow the example of Mary, whose birthday we celebrate today. Happy birthday, Mary! She trusted in God’s plan even though she didn’t know what she was being called to or where it would take or lead her. She renounced all the dreams and aspirations that a young girl would have and put God’s will first.”
Then addressing all those assembled he said: “I humbly ask you to remember me in your prayers to the Lord and to ask the Virgin to watch over me and bring me closer to her son, Jesus, so that I may reflect for you the image of the Good Shepherd. Thank you, and may God bless you all!” he said.
Words of Bishop Silvio Báez
Following the Mass, Bishop Silvio Báez, the exiled auxiliary bishop of Managua, Nicaragua, who has been living in the U.S. since 2019, said the episcopal consecration of Chau was a “historic celebration. The first Nicaraguan, born in Nicaragua, to be ordained a bishop in the United States. He was baptized and took his first steps in the faith in Nicaragua.”
“This is a sign of the richness and fruitfulness of the Church of Nicaragua and a message of hope for all the people of God in our country. The fact that Bismarck came from Nicaragua and settled in the United States shows that it is possible to move forward despite the difficulties one may encounter,” he added.
When asked about his meeting with Pope Leo XIV at the Vatican in August, along with two other exiled Nicaraguan bishops — Carlos Herrera and Isidoro Mora — the prelate said: “The interview with the Holy Father was a moment of grace, a moment of hope, seeing how deeply he holds Nicaragua in his heart as well as the situation the Nicaraguan people are experiencing at this time.”
Who is Bishop Pedro Bismarck Chau?
Pedro Bismarck Chau was born on June 28, 1967, in Managua, Nicaragua. He studied at Seton Hall University in South Orange, New Jersey, earning a bachelor’s degree in psychology.
He completed his ecclesiastical studies at Immaculate Conception Seminary in South Orange and later earned a master’s degree in counseling from Seton Hall University.
He was ordained a priest of the Archdiocese of Newark on May 24, 2008.
He served as parochial vicar of Our Lady of Mount Virgin in Garfield, New Jersey, from 2008–2012; as director of vocations from 2012–2016; and as head of campus ministry at Rutgers University and the New Jersey Institute of Technology from 2015–2020.
He also served as pastor of the Pro-Cathedral of Sts. John and Patrick in Newark from 2015–2020 and rector of the Cathedral Basilica of the Sacred Heart since 2020.
This story was first published by ACI Prensa, CNA’s Spanish-language news partner. It has been translated and adapted by CNA.
Pew Research surveys role of religion in how Americans vote
Posted on 09/11/2025 11:00 AM (CNA Daily News - US)

Washington, D.C. Newsroom, Sep 11, 2025 / 07:00 am (CNA).
A new Pew Research Center study found that religion does not play a large role in how most Americans vote in U.S. elections.
The research was conducted as part of Pew’s “About the American Trends Panel.” It was conducted May 5–11 and surveyed a representative sample of 8,937 U.S. adults. The margin of sampling error was plus or minus 1.4 percentage points.
Of the responding participants, 56% of Americans said religion shapes how they vote “a little” or “not at all,” 18% said religion shapes how they vote “some,” and 25% said religion affects how they vote “a great deal” or “quite a bit.”
Susan Hanssen, a professor of history at the University of Dallas, told CNA the data is “striking” because “it does not follow a normal curve.”
“One would expect that on the edges of the sociological spectrum, a small portion of people would not vote according to their religious beliefs, the majority of people would vote somewhat in accordance with their religious beliefs, and a small number of people would vote absolutely based on their religious beliefs. But this curve is the opposite.”
“This follows what we know to be true about people who say grace before meals,” Hanssen explained. “People either always say grace before meals and vote according to their religious beliefs, or they never say grace before meals and do not vote according to religious beliefs. Very few people only say grace every once in a while, and only consider God every once in a while while voting. It seems to be a kind of all or nothing thing with God.”
Hanssen explained a possible reason behind the research findings. She said: “The fact that a majority of people are on one end of the spectrum, not taking God or religion into account when voting, matches perfectly with our deplorable birth rate.”
“Clearly people are living for their immediate economic benefit and not thinking about either the next generation (their children and grandchildren) nor eternity. The widespread contraceptive mentality has undermined people’s habit of voting for family, values, and religious principles.”
Catholic subset
Among Catholic respondents, 24% said religion affects their voting patterns “a great deal” or “quite a bit,” 22% said “some,” and 54% said “a little” or “not at all.”
The majority (67%) of Catholics also said “God does not get involved in U.S. presidential elections.” The research found that 26% of Catholics reported they agree Trump’s election “must be part of God’s overall plan, but doesn’t necessarily mean God approves of Trump’s policies.” Only 5% said “God chose Trump to become president, because God approves of his policies.”
The Pew report revealed that religion affects how evangelical Christians vote the most among religious affiliations. Out of respondents, more than half (51%) of white evangelical Christians said their religion affects how they voted “a great deal” or “quite a bit.”
Voters least affected by religious beliefs were unsurprisingly self-identified atheists, with 88% reporting that it affects them “a little” or “not at all.” Out of religiously affiliated, nonevangelical Christians were least likely to report their religious beliefs affect how they vote.
Republicans (34%) were almost twice as likely as Democrats (18%) to report religion shapes how they vote. Republicans were also more likely to believe that recent election results must be part of God’s overall plan, even if God doesn’t necessarily approve of the winner’s policies.
In regard to the most recent presidential election, the survey posed a question to Christians about what “good Christians” should think of Trump. It found that 80% of U.S. Christians said “good Christians can disagree about Donald Trump,” 11% said “opposing Trump is essential to being a good Christian,” and 7% said “supporting Trump is essential to being a good Christian.”
Catholic nursing students live faith on hospital ship in Madagascar
Posted on 09/11/2025 10:00 AM (CNA Daily News - US)

CNA Staff, Sep 11, 2025 / 06:00 am (CNA).
Three nursing students from a Catholic liberal arts school in North Carolina spent two weeks on a hospital ship in Madagascar this summer.
Emma Harris, who will graduate from Belmont Abbey College in Charlotte in May 2026, joined fellow students Caroline Gutierrez and Eric Dike on a service-oriented internship in Madagascar with an international faith-based group called Mercy Ships. After returning to the U.S., Harris said she was “transformed.”
Mercy Ships operates the two largest nongovernmental hospital ships worldwide, delivering free surgeries and health care services “to those with little access to safe medical care,” according to the organization. The three Belmont students, along with two other students, were selected to make up the first-ever cohort of The Mercyship, the hospital ship’s summer internship program.
Harris joined Mercy Ships because she wanted to follow Jesus’ example.
“Being on Mercy Ships completely transformed me,” Harris said. “I went in with my whole life mapped out, but the experience changed my perspective and priorities.”

Mercy Ships, which has been operating for nearly 50 years, brings medical care to people in need around the world while incorporating the faith.
Kerry Peterson, senior vice president of advancement at Mercy Ships, said its mission is “not just about providing medical care but creating a community centered on love, service, and faith.”
More than 2,500 volunteers serve on the two ships. Students work with volunteer professionals “and witness firsthand how transformative health care can restore hope and dignity,” Peterson said.
“Serving with Mercy Ships is a unique experience because it brings people from all over the world together with one purpose: using their skills and gifts to bring healing and hope to those who need it most,” Harris said.
Faith and service in a ‘medical desert’
Madagascar is a “medical desert,” Peterson said. It is a country of more than 28 million residents, 75% living under the poverty line, and for every 1,000 people, there are 0.2 physicians, according to Peterson.
The Africa Ship, one of the two hospital ships, arrived in Madagascar in February 2024 and will remain there until the end of 2025.
“Access to safe surgical care is extremely limited, making it one of the world’s medical deserts where patients would otherwise go untreated for conditions that are easily treatable,” Peterson said.
But the Mercy Ships program helps in “cultivating the next generation of faith-inspired health care leaders who will carry forward our commitment to bringing hope and healing to those who need it most,” Peterson said.
“We hope students leave with a transformed understanding of what health care can be when delivered with compassion and cultural humility, seeing how healing encompasses dignity and hope far beyond clinical procedures alone,” Peterson said.
Dike, a senior from Wake Forest, North Carolina, said: “Being part of this program was both eye-opening and deeply fulfilling.”

“While I was there, I could see how God was working through the staff to bring healing to those who need it most,” Dike told CNA. “None of the staff are paid, yet they serve with so much joy and love — a rare and inspiring thing to witness.”
Harris said she “was inspired to join Mercy Ships because of my faith in Jesus and my desire to follow his example of serving others with compassion.”
“Mercy Ships’ mission to bring hope and healing through love perfectly reflects the calling I feel to use my gifts in service,” Harris said. “I have always had a passion for caring for others, especially children and families, and the vision of Mercy Ships, to provide free medical care and show God’s love in practical, life-changing ways was the perfect way to do that.”
For Harris, Mercy Ships is a “tangible” connection to Christ.
“For me, it connects deeply to my walk with Jesus, because he calls us to care for the sick, love our neighbors, and serve with humility,” she said.

“Being part of this program is important to me because it lets me live out my faith by serving others, growing in my walk with God, and using my gifts to make a difference,” Harris said.
Gutierrez, a senior in the nursing program at Belmont Abbey from North Carolina, joined the program because she said she felt “drawn to helping people in some of their toughest, most vulnerable, painful moments, because we are called as Christians to heal the sick, feed the poor, and show love to those rebuked by the world.”
“At Mercy Ships, they start the day with prayer and worship, offering up their work and service up to God,” Gutierrez said. “Everyone is there out of love of God and love of others — I found this to be the unifying key to the mission of mercy ships.”
“Mercy Ships is truly something bigger than yourself,” Dike said, adding that the program helped him realize “how beautiful people’s hearts can be.”
“Everyone on the ship speaks passionately about how much they love being a part of Mercy Ships and how it has become a lifelong calling for many of them,” he said. “I was grateful to share even a small part of that by caring for patients and witnessing their joy and gratitude.”
Communicating beyond words
Mercy Ships gives students the opportunity to “witness how our volunteer medical professionals combine clinical excellence with genuine care for each patient’s whole being,” Peterson said.
Dike said it was a “unique experience” and “very different from nursing in America.”
Health care practitioners on board “rely on translators for every patient,” he noted.
“This taught me the importance of communicating beyond words, through body language and facial expressions, when language barriers exist,” Dike said.
Peterson hopes students view “their work not just as jobs but as callings to serve.”
“This immersive experience shows them that faith, service, and clinical excellence aren’t separate components but integrated aspects of transformative health care that treats each patient with dignity and compassion,” Peterson said.
After the transformative experience, Harris said she is setting her sights on a future of service.
“Now, the one thing I know for certain is that I want to finish my degree and get back on the ship as soon as I can,” Harris said. “It showed me what it really means to serve, to live in community, and to trust God with my future.”

UPDATE: Colorado high school shooting suspect was ‘radicalized,’ police say
Posted on 09/11/2025 00:14 AM (CNA Daily News - US)

Denver, Colo., Sep 10, 2025 / 20:14 pm (CNA).
The suspect in a school shooting in Evergreen, Colorado, has died of self-inflicted wounds after shooting two of his peers.
After a shooting at Evergreen High School in Jefferson County, Colorado, on Wednesday, one student remains in critical condition while the other was released from the hospital in stable condition, according to the hospital’s trauma director, Dr. Brian Blackwood.
The suspected shooter, identified as Desmond Holly, 16, had been “radicalized,” according to the sheriff’s office. Social media accounts apparently belonging to Holly featured white supremacist content and “explicitly antisemitic” posts, as well as posts suggesting an interest in mass shootings, according to a report by the Denver Post.
The students were treated at CommonSpirit St. Anthony Hospital in Lakewood, Colorado. One of the two victims was identified as Matthew Silverstone, 18. The family has asked for privacy “as we continue to heal and navigate the road ahead,” the Silverstone family said in a statement.
The shooting took place at midday about 30 miles southwest of Denver at a high school of 900 students. Hundreds of law enforcement rushed to the scene. The school has since been cleared by law enforcement and there is no longer an ongoing threat, according to local police.
“My heart is with the students, parents, and teachers at Evergreen High School. Today, we grieve for those critically shot and those left frightened and shaken,” Archbishop Samuel Aquila of Denver said in a statement.
“We are grateful for the swift response of law enforcement on the scene, whose courage brought calm amid chaos, and for the doctors and medical teams working tirelessly to care for the injured,” he continued. “The victims have been taken to St. Anthony’s Hospital, a Catholic hospital, where they are receiving compassionate care.”
“To our young people, know that Jesus is near you, hears your cries, and his mother Mary holds you close,” Aquila said. “To hurting families, the Church is with you, and we lift you and your children up in prayer.”
“May Christ bring comfort to your hearts and may Mary at the foot of the cross wrap you in her tender care,” he said.
The nearby parish, Christ the King Parish, is offering ministry for students, families, and staff amid the tragic event, according to the archdiocese.
A team of deacons “trained to serve in disasters and critical incidents” has also been put on alert.
“These deacons, who have partnered with the American Red Cross in past crises, stand ready to offer pastoral outreach and guidance should they be needed at the hospital or school,” read a statement from the archdiocese.
“Students should be able to attend school safely and without fear across our state and nation,” Colorado Gov. Jared Polis said in a statement. “We are all praying for the victims and the entire community.”
FBI Director Kash Patel posted about the tragedy, saying that the FBI was “on the scene and in full support of local authorities to ensure everyone’s safety.”
This is at least the seventh school shooting in Colorado since the 1999 Columbine High School shooting.
The shooting took place within hours of the shooting of conservative commentator Charlie Kirk at a rally at Utah Valley University.
“In addition to praying for Charlie Kirk, please also pray for my hometown Evergreen, Colorado, where there is a school shooting and at least two students have been shot,” said Catholic commentator and Daily Wire show host Isabel Brown.
This story was updated most recently on Sept. 12, 2025, at 1:24 p.m. ET.
Christian conservative activist Charlie Kirk dies after being shot at Utah Valley University event
Posted on 09/10/2025 21:37 PM (CNA Daily News - US)

Washington, D.C. Newsroom, Sep 10, 2025 / 17:37 pm (CNA).
Charlie Kirk — founder of the conservative campus activist organization Turning Point USA and outspoken evangelical Christian — was shot dead in an apparent assassination during an event at Utah Valley University on Wednesday afternoon, Sept. 10.
The 31-year-old was fatally shot in the neck while taking questions from audience members during a stop at the university as part of his American Comeback Tour. He is survived by his wife, Erika Frantzve, and his 3-year-old daughter and 1-year-old son.
The shooting occurred when Kirk was answering a student’s question about transgenderism and gun violence at about 12:10 p.m. MST, shortly after the event began. Utah Valley University was Kirk’s first tour stop.
Kirk, who often debated students on campus, strongly defended free speech at colleges and was an outspoken critic of discrimination against Christians and gender ideology. He founded Turning Point USA in 2012 when he was just 18 years old to promote free speech and conservative values on college campuses.
Vice President JD Vance posted on X that Kirk’s campus events “are one of the few places with open and honest dialogue between left and right,” noting that Kirk “would answer any question and talk to everyone.”
“Eternal rest grant unto him, O Lord,” Vance said in a follow-up post.
Kirk was a close ally of President Donald Trump, who expressed sadness about his death in a Truth Social post and referred to Kirk as “great, and even legendary.”
“No one understood or had the heart of the youth in the United States of America better than Charlie,” he wrote. “He was loved and admired by ALL, especially me, and now, he is no longer with us. Melania and my sympathies go out to his beautiful wife Erika and family. Charlie, we love you!”
Kirk has also been outspoken about his Christian faith on social media, in interviews, and on his previous campus tours.
In a post on X last week, Kirk expressed optimism about a “revival in the Christian church.”
“Churches are growing,” Kirk said. “Young people are flocking to faith in God. You do not want to live in a non-Christian country. Even the most hardened atheists or agnostics are blessed by the church’s influence.”
As of early Wednesday evening, the shooter has not yet been confirmed captured. The motive is not yet known.
Trump ordered all American flags in the United States to be flown at half-staff until 6 p.m. on Sunday, Sept. 14, to honor Kirk’s legacy. The president said Kirk was “ a truly Great American Patriot.”
Charlie Kirk dies after being shot at college event in Utah
Posted on 09/10/2025 19:54 PM (CNA Daily News - US)

Washington, D.C. Newsroom, Sep 10, 2025 / 15:54 pm (CNA).
Founder and President of Turning Point USA Charlie Kirk has been shot in an incident that took place at a Utah Valley University event earlier this afternoon.
Prayer requests for Kirk flooded across social media platforms after video footage depicting him being shot in the neck began to circulate on X. Kirk had been discussing the rising phenomenon of violent attacks perpetrated by trans-identifying individuals.
AP News reported on X that Kirk has died.
“Say a prayer for Charlie Kirk, a genuinely good guy and a young father,” Vice President JD Vance wrote immediately after news broke of the attack.
Dear God, protect Charlie in his darkest hour. pic.twitter.com/RqNYfHLs2b
— JD Vance (@JDVance) September 10, 2025
“Dear God, protect Charlie in his darkest hour,” Vance wrote in another post.
President Donald Trump also posted his platform Truth Social: “We must all pray for Charlie Kirk, who has been shot. A great guy from top to bottom. GOD BLESS HIM!”
Kirk is married to his wife, Erika, and is the father of two children.
Police have reportedly arrested a man in connection with the attack, according to videos posted on social media. The man has not been identified.
St. Joseph’s Catholic Church on Capitol Hill will host a prayer vigil for Kirk after its 5:15 p.m. Eucharistic adoration.
Kirk, who has described himself as evangelical, recently went viral on social media for his surprising take on the Virgin Mary, saying during an episode of “The Charlie Kirk Show” on the Real America’s Voice channel that he believed Protestants do not talk about or venerate Mary enough, adding that Mary “is the solution” to “toxic feminism in America.”
“Mary was clearly important to early Christians,” Kirk said. “Have more young ladies be pious, be reverent, be full of faith, slow to anger, slow to words at times. Mary is a phenomenal example, and I think a counter to so much of the toxicity of feminism in the modern era.”
Bishop Robert Barron was among those to post immediately after the attack, writing: “Please pray for Charlie Kirk.”
FBI Director Kash Patel said that “agents will be on the scene quickly,” and that the FBI would be standing “in full support of the ongoing response and investigation.”
We are closely monitoring reports of the tragic shooting involving Charlie Kirk at Utah Valley University. Our thoughts are with Charlie, his loved ones, and everyone affected. Agents will be on the scene quickly and the FBI stands in full support of the ongoing response and…
— FBI Director Kash Patel (@FBIDirectorKash) September 10, 2025
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis stated: “I’ve been briefed on the shooting in Utah. Casey and I are praying for Charlie Kirk and his family.”
I’ve been briefed on the shooting in Utah. Casey and I are praying for Charlie Kirk and his family.
— Ron DeSantis (@GovRonDeSantis) September 10, 2025
“My heart is sick. Charlie is a friend. A good, courageous man. Who cares passionately and deeply about this country. Who loves life. A father and husband. Pray for him, pray earnestly. Pray for his family. Pray for our country. Lord Jesus Christ, have mercy,” Live Action Founder Lila Rose wrote in a social media post.
This is a developing story. This story was last updated on Sept. 10, 2025, at 4:48 p.m. ET.
7 Catholic bishops join record-breaking UK March for Life in London
Posted on 09/10/2025 15:25 PM (CNA Daily News - Europe)

National Catholic Register, Sep 10, 2025 / 11:25 am (CNA).
This year’s March for Life UK saw its largest-ever number of participants on Sept. 6, drawing together families and individuals from a diverse mix of backgrounds and nationalities as well as Catholic priests, religious, seven Catholic bishops and, for the first time, a message from the Holy Father.
Held in a festive atmosphere and under warm, sunny September skies, organizers estimated 10,000 participants took part in the 10th annual multidenominational Christian march, which began near Westminster Cathedral and ended close to the Houses of Parliament.

A bagpipe player led the marchers through the meandering streets as placards and banners were held aloft that included messages such as “Human Rights Begin at Conception,” “Life From Conception No Exception,” and “Abortion Stops a Beating Heart.”
Despite several unforeseen obstacles, including the suspension of the March for Life UK X account two days before the march, the event was widely viewed as a great success.
“It’s been absolutely fantastic, by far the biggest march yet with amazing support in so many ways,” Isabel Vaughan-Spruce, director of March for Life UK, told the National Catholic Register, CNA’s sister news partner.
“We’ve seen not just a rise in numbers but more younger people, more religious leaders, more people from all spectrums, and people who have no religious beliefs. We’ve just seen it growing in every corner — it’s fantastic, really.”

But Vaughan-Spruce was keen to stress that while the numbers are important, the march has become “much more” than that, and it involves the “beautiful, individual, and personal stories” that people bring to the event.
“It’s so wonderful because ultimately those that come on this march are actually already living in this profound truth that human life is sacred,” said Bishop David Waller, ordinary of the Personal Ordinariate of Our Lady of Walsingham. “And it’s not just about the unborn child; there are all sorts of issues in our society here, but if the unborn child isn’t sacred, then really everything falls from then on.”
Waller told the Register that many people at the march will have had abortions (according to statistics, 1 in 3 women in England will have had an abortion by the age of 45), but he stressed “it’s not about hating people who have turned to abortion, because their lives, too, are holy and sacred. It’s about the fundamental dignity of human life.”

Anti-life Parliament
This year’s march took place in the context of Britain facing one of its most anti-life Parliaments in history. In June, legislators in the House of Commons passed an assisted suicide bill and an amendment to a bill that removes criminal liability for women who end their own pregnancies at any gestational age, including up to birth. Both pieces of legislation must still pass other legislative stages before becoming law, but they both garner considerable support among political leaders and much of the British public.
Asked about the legislation, Paul Malloy, a Catholic layman taking part in his fifth U.K. March for Life, said such legislation “surely is a horror” and that by basically making “doctors into killers, the future of our society is under threat.”

Yet despite these threats and the increased participation in the March for Life, he said the march is “never referenced by the BBC” or other mainstream media outlets.
“It’s all part of this silence that is drawn over this issue, and so the pretense continues that they’re not real lives, they’re not human lives, which the culture keeps saying louder and louder,” Malloy said. “But the reality, which we all know, is that human life from conception is a human life.
“We’re here, as you can see, people of all ages, to actually show the reality,” he said.
Father Martin Boland, a priest from the Diocese of Brentwood, northeast of London, was “very heartened” by the presence of so many young people at the march, which showed they are “reflecting more deeply on these life issues.” He expressed hope that in future years “more and more priests will feel confident inviting their parishioners” to join the march, as he had done.
“If everybody, if every parish, was represented in the land, the numbers would really swell,” he told the Register.

The march passed a small but vocal group of pro-abortion protesters, most wearing surgical masks. One of the masked protesters explained they were wearing them because they were “afraid of surveillance” and possibly also for “health reasons.”
The march concluded with various keynote speeches, including one from Oklahoma’s Josiah Presley, who shared a stirring testimony of how he had survived an attempted surgical abortion that left him with a deformed arm.
Raised by loving adoptive parents, Presley was once filled with bitterness toward his biological parents who tried to have him aborted, but he shared how an encounter with Jesus Christ at 16 changed his life, reminding him of his “value and worth.” He urged the crowd not to stop speaking the truth but to act upon it.
Vaughan-Spruce urged those present to take a side on the issue of the unborn. “Priceless human beings or worthless bits of tissue — what do you believe and, more importantly, how will you respond?” she asked. “Parents, politicians, pastors, police, medics, lawyers, journalists, and every single person here must make that choice. These two worldviews cannot coexist. They can’t both be right. Pick your side, but remember what they say: The fence belongs to Satan.”
Human rights ‘in the dark’
The theme for the U.K.’s March for Life 2025 — “Human Rights for All Humans” — was the focus of impassioned talks and two panels of speakers that took place at an evangelical church hall just before the march got underway.
Professor Philip Booth, who teaches at St. Mary’s University in Twickenham, London, reminded participants to pray for the unborn and for parents of unborn children in their parish, and for those mothers and fathers who have suffered from the miscarriage of their preborn child. He also invited the faithful to encourage women who have had miscarriages and perhaps ask them to give a talk in the parish.
“If we are truly to change culture so that once again we think of an unborn baby as a human person, we must begin with our own practice, and we can do that in simple ways, and that can then really change the culture significantly,” he said.

At a panel titled “Human Rights in the Dark: What Women Aren’t Told,” a woman named Natalia recounted how when pregnant in 2020 at age 19 she had visited an abortion center three times, each time too emotionally distraught to have an abortion, but on the third visit she was offered and accepted abortion pills (made legal in the U.K. in 2018) after it was suggested it might be easier. She later found support following the trauma of her abortion through the group Rachel’s Vineyard and is now the mother to a young child, whom she brought to the march.
Suzanne, an American mother on the panel, was told by doctors when 22 weeks pregnant that her unborn baby had something chromosomally wrong with her, that the child would certainly not live, and that Suzanne’s life was threatened too. So doctors pressed her to have an abortion. Suzanne and her husband were opposed and, after her own mother told her daughter, “If there’s still a heartbeat, there’s hope,” Suzanne went against the doctors’ advice and kept her child. Rachel Mary was born at 26 weeks and is now a healthy young woman who was present in the audience.
“Abortion is not health care, and doctors should never, ever utter the word abortion,” Suzanne fervently stressed to resounding applause.
A second panel discussed the state of freedom of speech and association in the United Kingdom, the potential risk of persecution for pro-life advocacy online and in the workplace, and what Britain might look like should the Abortion Act of 1967 be overturned.

Pope Leo greets participants
In his message to the participants delivered through the apostolic nuncio, Pope Leo XIV sent his “greetings of good wishes” to the participants at “this significant event” and reiterated what he had told members of the diplomatic corps in May — that it is government leaders’ “responsibility to work to build harmonious and peaceful civil societies.”
Above all, he said, this can be achieved “by investing in the family [and] respecting the dignity of every person, especially the most frail and vulnerable, from the unborn to the elderly.”
He closed by imparting his apostolic blessing “to all participating in the March for Life UK” and, through the intercession of the Mother of God, invoked “an abundance of divine graces.”
This story was first published by the National Catholic Register, CNA’s sister news partner, and has been adapted by CNA.