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Centros de ayuda a embarazadas en EE.UU. brindaron más de 450 millones de dólares en apoyo en 2024, revela informe

Cuando Jessica Williams quedó embarazada del hijo de otro hombre mientras ella y su esposo estaban separados, su esposo la presionó para abortar.

La música sacra es buena tanto para el cerebro como para el alma, afirma un neurocientífico

Hace 1700 años, se atribuyó a San Agustín la frase: “Quien canta, ora dos veces”. Hoy, las investigaciones científicas muestran que quien canta, interpreta o escucha música también enriquece y fortalece su cerebro, según la neurocientífica católica Kathlyn Gan.

“Nadie actúa a la perfección frente a los abusos”: Comisión vaticana urge a avanzar con transparencia

En la V Jornada Nacional de Oración por las víctimas de abusos en la Iglesia, Mons. Thibault Verny reiteró que “frente al escándalo de los abusos sexuales, nadie puede afirmar que actúa a la perfección”.

Presidente del Episcopado español critica la ideologización de la memoria impulsada por el Gobierno 

El presidente de la Conferencia Episcopal Española critica la ideologización de la memoria histórica impulsada por el Gobierno y que se censure el debate sobre el aborto. 

León XIV: Los grandes misioneros recuerdan que la inculturación no es una actitud folclórica

El Papa León XIV advirtió que los grandes misioneros nos recuerdan que la inculturación no es una actitud folclórica, “porque nace del deseo de dedicarse a la tierra y a las personas que servimos”.

Abusos a consagradas: “Las primeras palabras deben ser: te creo, no estás sola”

El desafío de afrontar los abusos dentro de la vida consagrada, en todas sus dimensiones: sexual, de poder, de conciencia y también económica

St. Rose Philippine Duchesne: Great missionary of the Midwest

Children play as procession participants wait to enter the Shrine of St. Rose Philippine Duchesne for adoration. / Credit: Jonah McKeown/CNA

CNA Staff, Nov 18, 2025 / 04:00 am (CNA).

On Nov. 18 the Catholic Church celebrates the feast day of St. Rose Philippine Duchesne, a French religious sister who came to the United States as a missionary in the 1800s. 

Rose was born on Aug. 29, 1769, in Grenoble, France. On the day of her baptism, she received the names Philip, honoring the apostle, and Rose, honoring St. Rose of Lima. She was educated at the Convent of the Visitation of Ste. Marie d’en Haut and became drawn to contemplative life. At the age of 18, she became a novice at the convent. 

During the revolution in France, Rose’s community was dispersed and she ended up returning to her family home. After the Concordat of 1801, she tried to rebuild her community’s monastery but was unable to do so. 

In 1804, Rose heard of a new congregation — the Society of the Sacred Heart of Jesus. She became a novice in the society that same year. 

Despite her great desire for contemplative life, Rose also felt a calling for missionary work. 

In a letter she wrote to Mother Madeleine Sophie Barat, the foundress of the society, Rose described an experience she had during adoration: “I spent the entire night in the New World ... carrying the Blessed Sacrament to all parts of the land ... I had all my sacrifices to offer: a mother, sisters, family, my mountain! When you say to me ‘now I send you,’ I will respond quickly, ‘I go.’”

In 1818, Rose was finally sent to do missionary work. Bishop Louis William Valentine DuBourg, the St. Louis area’s first bishop, was looking for a congregation of educators to help him evangelize the children of the diocese. At St. Charles, near St. Louis, Rose founded the first house of the society outside of France.

That same year, Rose and four other sisters opened the first free school for Native American children in the United States. By 1828 Rose had founded six schools.

The saint once said: “You may dazzle the mind with a thousand brilliant discoveries of natural science; you may open new worlds of knowledge which were never dreamed of before; yet, if you have not developed in the soul of the pupil strong habits of virtue, which will sustain her in the struggle of life, you have not educated her.”

Rose always carried a desire to serve Native Americans. In 1841, at the age of 71, she established a school for Potawatomi girls in Sugar Creek, Kansas. She spent a year with the Potawatomi, spending much of her time in prayer because she was unable to help with much of the physical work. They gave her the name “Quah-kah-ka-num-ad,” which means “woman who is always praying.”

In 1842, Rose returned to St. Charles and died there on Nov. 18, 1852, at the age of 83. She was declared a saint by Pope John Paul II on July 3, 1988, and is buried at the Shrine of St. Rose Philippine Duchesne in St. Charles, Missouri.

This story was first published on Nov. 18, 2024, and has been updated.

"Es superstición pensar que la Virgen frena la ira de Dios", dice experto vaticano sobre título de "Corredentora"

El experto presentó hace unos días el nuevo documento junto al cardenal Víctor Manuel Fernández, prefecto del Dicasterio para la Doctrina de la Fe.

Hoy se celebra la dedicación de las Basílicas de los apóstoles San Pedro y San Pablo

Cada 18 de noviembre la Iglesia Católica celebra la dedicación de las Basílicas de San Pedro y San Pablo, templos históricos ubicados en la ciudad de Roma, en los que reposan los restos de estos dos grandes apóstoles y santos, símbolos de la unidad de la cristiandad, auténticos pilares de la Iglesia.

Inventos y descubrimientos de origen católico que dieron forma al mundo 

La Iglesia Católica ha sido protagonista de avances científicos, culturales y sociales que hoy forman parte de la vida cotidiana.