St. Mary's Church / Iglesia Santa María

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Hoy celebramos a San Francisco Javier, quien llevó a Cristo a los confines de la tierra

Cada 3 de diciembre la Iglesia celebra a San Francisco Javier (1506-1552), paradigmático sacerdote jesuita y misionero español del siglo XVI. La tradición suele referirse a él como el “Gigante de la Historia de las Misiones”, debido a su ímpetu evangelizador y a la fuerza espiritual con la que condujo empresas apostólicas extremadamente difíciles.

Gobierno de Canadá podría eliminar exenciones religiosas de las leyes sobre discurso de odio

Los legisladores en Canadá estarían muy cerca de eliminar las protecciones religiosas de las leyes sobre discurso de odio del país como parte de un esfuerzo por reprimir los símbolos de odio en todo el territorio nacional.

Obispo advierte sobre supuesto sacerdote en México: “no está en comunión con nuestra Iglesia”

Mons. Luis Martín Barraza Beltrán, Obispo de Torreón, Coahuila (México), advirtió sobre celebraciones de un supuesto sacerdote en su diócesis, y precisó que “no es sacerdote católico, como pudiera parecer; no está en comunión con nuestra Iglesia”.

Así podrás enviar tus intenciones a la Virgen de Fátima

La plataforma de oración internacional Hozana anunció que llevará las intenciones de cualquier persona hasta los pies de la Virgen de Fátima, además de entregar miles de rosas como ofrenda espiritual en el marco del centenario de la aparición a Sor Lucía.

Con este libro gratuito puedes prepararte para vivir mejor la Fiesta de la Virgen de Guadalupe

La Iglesia Católica en México publicó un subsidio digital gratuito titulado Caminemos en la esperanza con María de Guadalupe, que apunta a que los fieles puedan vivir una “Semana Guadalupana”, a puertas de la Fiesta de Nuestra Señora de Guadalupe, que se celebra el 12 de diciembre.

U.S. Supreme Court hears dispute over faith-based pregnancy centers

null / Credit: Wolfgang Schaller/Shutterstock

Washington, D.C., Dec 2, 2025 / 17:04 pm (CNA).

The U.S. Supreme Court heard oral arguments Tuesday on whether a New Jersey faith-based pregnancy center may immediately assert its First Amendment right to challenge a state subpoena demanding donor information — including names, addresses, and places of employment — in federal court, or whether it must first proceed through the state court system.

The case, First Choice Women’s Resource Centers, Inc. v. Platkin, has drawn support from a diverse array of groups, including the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, members of Congress, the Trump administration, and the ACLU. All argue that First Choice should be able to challenge the subpoena in federal court without first litigating the issue in New Jersey state court.

At the center of the dispute is a 2023 subpoena issued by New Jersey Attorney General Matthew J. Platkin seeking extensive donor information from First Choice. In 2022, Platkin created what he called a “reproductive rights strike force” to “protect access to abortion care,” and his office issued a “consumer alert” describing crisis pregnancy centers like First Choice as organizations that may provide “false or misleading information about the safety and legality of abortion.”

In its Supreme Court brief, First Choice describes itself as a faith-based nonprofit serving women in New Jersey by providing material support and medical services such as ultrasounds and pregnancy tests under a licensed medical director. The organization does not provide or refer for abortions, a point it plainly and repeatedly states on its website.

Platkin’s subpoena commanded First Choice to produce documents and information responsive to 28 separate demands, including the full names, phone numbers, addresses, and current or last known employers of every donor who contributed money by any means other than one specific website. It warned that failure to comply could result in contempt of court and other legal penalties.

The attorney general’s office said it needed donor identities to determine whether contributors were “misled” into believing First Choice provided abortions. Platkin argued he needed donor contact information so he could “contact a representative sample and determine what they did or did not know about their donations.”

First Choice quickly sued in federal court, arguing the subpoena violated its First Amendment rights by chilling its speech and freedom of association. The federal district court dismissed the case as “unripe,” ruling that the pregnancy center must wait until a New Jersey court seeks to enforce the subpoena. The Supreme Court later agreed to hear the case to determine whether First Choice may pursue its challenge in federal court now.

At oral argument, First Choice’s attorney, Erin M. Hawley, told the justices that the court has “long safeguarded the freedom of association by protecting the membership and donor lists of nonprofit organizations.” Yet, she said, “the attorney general of New Jersey issued a sweeping subpoena commanding on pain of contempt that First Choice produce donor names, addresses, and phone numbers so his office could contact and question them. That violates the right of association.”

Hawley urged the court to recognize that the subpoena was issued by “a hostile attorney general who has issued a consumer alert, urged New Jerseyans to beware of pregnancy centers, and assembled a strike force against them.”

She also noted that the attorney general “has never identified a single complaint against First Choice” and that the threat of contempt and business dissolution is “a death knell for nonprofits like First Choice.”

Arguing for New Jersey, Sundeep Iyer, the attorney general’s chief counsel, said First Choice had not demonstrated that the subpoena “objectively chilled” its First Amendment rights. He argued that the subpoena is “non-self-executing,” meaning it imposes no immediate obligation and cannot require compliance unless a court orders enforcement.

Justice Neil Gorsuch appeared skeptical, noting that New Jersey law gives attorney general subpoenas the force of law and allows the attorney general to seek contempt orders against those who fail to comply. “I don’t know how to read that other than it’s pretty self-executing to me, counsel,” he said.

Justice Elena Kagan questioned whether an “ordinary person” receiving such a subpoena would feel reassured by the claim that it required court approval before being enforced. A donor, she said, is unlikely “to take that as very reassuring.”

In an amicus curiae brief, the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops urged the court to side with First Choice. “Compelling disclosure of a religious organization’s financial support violates the constitutional guarantee of freedom of religion,” the bishops wrote. Forced donor disclosure, they argued, interferes with a religious organization’s mission and burdens the free-exercise rights of donors who give anonymously in accordance with scriptural teachings.

The Supreme Court is expected to issue a decision in the coming months.

Santos y festividades católicas destacadas del mes de diciembre 2025 según el Calendario Litúrgico

Estas son algunas de las fechas más destacadas del calendario litúrgico para el mes de diciembre de 2025. Están incluidas las fiestas de santos conocidos, así como otras festividades importantes.

U.S. Catholic bishops award over $7.8 million for mission dioceses 

Bishop Chad W. Zielinski of New Ulm, Minnesota. / Credit: Diocese of Fairbanks

Washington, D.C. Newsroom, Dec 2, 2025 / 15:38 pm (CNA).

The United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) allocated more than $7.8 million to strengthen American mission dioceses, which are dioceses that cannot sustain themselves without additional funds.

The USCCB Subcommittee on Catholic Home Missions announced the grants on Dec. 1, which will provide 69 dioceses and eparchies with funds for the 2025-2026 budget year, according to a news release. The subcommittee reviewed the grant requests in the fall.

Per the news release, the funds were generated through collections from parishioners during the Catholic Home Missions appeal, which is taken up annually throughout the country. Many mission dioceses are in regions with small Catholic populations and in rural areas that are affected by economic hardship, the bishops said in the announcement.

“When parishioners contribute to the Catholic Home Missions Appeal, they bring faith, hope, and love where it is most needed, regardless the amount of their gift,” Bishop Chad Zielinski of New Ulm, Minnesota, subcommittee chair, said in a statement.

“Their gifts have a profound, positive impact on Catholics who face poverty or the isolation of being a small, minority faith,” he said.

The recipients include the Diocese of Rapid City’s Standing Rock Reservation Ministry, which serves the Standing Rock Sioux tribe. Three Franciscan sisters and one priest lead the team to provide home visitations and faith formation, which cares for 500 Catholics at four parishes and offers social support and accompaniment to 8,000 other residents, according to the bishops.

Recipients include the Diocese of Brownsville, Texas, for its Office of Deliverance Ministry, which provides prayers of deliverance for those with spiritual struggles. 

Another recipient is the Syro-Malankara Eparchy of St. Mary Queen of Peace, which has 24 priests that serve 11,000 parishioners but has no paid lay staff. The grant supports a youth summer camp, retreats, family conventions, and vocational discernment.

“These stories reveal the wide range of spiritual and financial needs that the Catholic Home Missions Appeal addresses,” Zielinski said. 

“Parishioners in mission dioceses already give sacrificially from their limited means,” he added. “My prayer is that their example of faith will inspire the rest of us [to] dig deeper to help our neighbors carry out the mission that Jesus has entrusted to us,” Zielinski said. 

Las mejores fotos del viaje apostólico del Papa León XIV a Turquía y Líbano

León XIV realizó su viaje apostólico a Turquía y Líbano, marcado por gestos espirituales y momentos profundamente emotivos. En Turquía celebró el 1700 aniversario del Concilio de Nicea, un acontecimiento histórico clave para el cristianismo, mientras que en Líbano llevó un mensaje de consuelo y esperanza a un pueblo golpeado por la violencia.

Monjas austriacas que escaparon de asilo para regresar a su convento rechazan posible acuerdo

Un intento de solución amistosa en el conflicto sobre el monasterio de Goldenstein, en Austria, ha fracasado: Las tres ancianas monjas agustinas han rechazado una oferta de acuerdo de su superior. Ahora se espera que Roma decida.