Tag: Christianity

  • The highest IQ or Jesus Christ? Debating true intelligence

    One of the people culture maven and best-selling author Malcolm Gladwell profiled in his 2008 blockbuster “Outliers: The Story of Success” (Back Bay Books, $11.64) is a man named Chris Langan, who supposedly has the highest IQ in the world.

    This record has since been disputed but at the very least, we can agree that the man is very, very smart.

    Langan grew up poor, had an abusive stepfather, and even after educating himself to the skies in philosophy, physics, mathematics, and linguistics, had been unable to achieve mainstream success. Here was a man “with a one-in-a-million mind, and he had yet to have any impact on the world,” noted Gladwell.

    Langan wasn’t holding forth at scientific conferences or prestigious universities. He’d never learned to “play the game.” He’d worked for years as a bouncer. He’d dropped out of college rather than kowtow to the dean, now lived on a horse farm in Missouri, “seemed content,” “had farm animals to take care of, and books to read, and a wife he loved.”

    But then I watched a YouTube clip of Langan in which he suggested implanting all children above the age of 10 with a birth control chip, selectively breeding out human imperfection, and basically making himself head of the world.

    With an off-the-charts IQ of between 195 and 210, “faith is dead,” Langan declared. “We need a church based on logic and mathematics.”

    His first priority, per Wikipedia, would be to set up an “anti-dysgenics” project. He would advocate practicing “genetic hygiene to prevent genomic degradation and reverse evolution.” He would prevent people from “breeding as incontinently as they like.”

    Which got me to thinking that if you try to come at life without your moral and emotional intelligence as well as your ability to reason and compute, then you reach the same conclusion Langan did: to annihilate all that doesn’t fit in with your sanitized, straight-ahead plan. 

    Which in turn got me to thinking that the truest, deepest intelligence is grounded in and arises from love. Which means that the most intelligent person who ever lived was Christ.

    True intelligence doesn’t seek to get rid of the imperfect. True intelligence embraces and encompasses the imperfect: the blind, the lame, the leper. True intelligence sees its own imperfection, and grasps, however dimly, that its imperfections save it from becoming monstrous.

    True intelligence regards itself and asks, “Why do I suffer? Why must I die?” Intelligence regards the suffering of the rest of the world and realizes, “I’m complicit in it.”

    True intelligence asks not: How can I kill the parts I don’t like? It asks: How can I give my whole heart, mind, and strength toward carrying life on?

    The most intelligent man who ever lived didn’t need to develop a theory called the Cognitive-Theoretic Model of the Universe (CTMU), as Langan has. The most intelligent man who ever lived pretty much summed up all scientific, philosophical, and theological thought in two commandments: “You shall love the Lord, your God, with all your heart, with all your soul, and with all your mind” (Matthew 22:37), and “You shall love your neighbor as yourself” (Matthew 22:39).

    Since Gladwell published “Outliers,” we’ve seen the rise of “artificial intelligence,” and Langan got me thinking about AI, too.

    Self-renunciation, sacrifice, blood, sweat, tears, and, for that matter, joy are beyond the reach of even the highest IQ, in and of itself — and therefore certainly beyond the reach of AI.

    That’s because true intelligence requires an incarnate body. Can AI share its last bit of bread with a brother? Raise a child? Sacrifice a day of rest to sit with a dying friend? Stop by the side of the road for a stranger? Help another alcoholic stay sober?

    Can AI take the place of another concentration camp inmate in a starvation bunker, as St. Maximilian Kolbe did? Can AI face a firing squad, the guillotine, or the stake and die for love of its beliefs?

    Can AI pray? Weep? Give birth? AI might be able to destroy human life, or control human life, but it cannot create, nourish, or sustain it.

    Langan has a body but with all his intelligence, he seems never to have considered offering it up, nor laying down his life for his friends.

    “Have you ever met someone smarter than yourself?” the interviewer asks near the end of the YouTube clip.

    “As near as I can tell, no,” Langan responds. “And if someone walked up to me right now and claimed to be smarter than me, I’d put him through his paces. I’d try to find out how sophisticated a picture of reality he’d evolved. Try to see what he was holding in his mind simultaneously and what he could do.”

    I wanted to take Langan by the hand (he still felt bad about himself at the time for working as a bouncer) and say, “This is what a truly sophisticated picture of reality looks like. This is what it looks like to simultaneously hold in your mind every idea in the world. This is what the most intelligent man who ever lived or ever will live can ‘do.’ ”

    Heather King is a blogger, speaker, and the author of several books. Visit heather-king.com.

    Source: Angelus News

  • At National Prayer Vigil for Life, special collection taken for LA fire victims

    In a basilica “adorned with beautiful mosaic art,” the “most impressive” mosaic was “the gathering of people from so many different places coming together to stand for life and to be a light in our culture,” Archbishop Joseph F. Naumann of Kansas City, Kansas, said Jan. 23.

    The archbishop was the main celebrant and homilist at the National Prayer Vigil for Life at the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception in Washington. A congregation of 5,500 filled the Great Upper Church. The annual vigil precedes the March for Life.

    Four cardinals were among the concelebrants: Cardinal Wilton D. Gregory, now retired as Washington’s archbishop, and his newly named successor, Cardinal Robert W. McElroy, formerly the bishop of San Diego; Cardinal Sean P. O’Malley, retired archbishop of Boston; and Cardinal Christophe Pierre, apostolic nuncio to the United States.

    Among the 22 bishops concelebrating was the president of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, Archbishop Timothy P. Broglio of the U.S. Archdiocese for the Military Services. Fifty deacons and 300 seminarians were also at the altar.

    During Mass, a second collection was taken to benefit the victims of the Los Angeles wildfires.

    Young people pray at the National Prayer Vigil for Life Mass at the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception in Washington Jan. 23, 2025, the evening before the annual the March for Life. (OSV News photo/Mihoko Owada)

    In his homily, Archbishop Naumann had a special message for young people, recalling that Pope St. John Paul II’s custom almost everywhere he went in the world was to meet with young people. “He challenged them to be light as only young people can be light. … The Lord has this particular love for the young to be his instruments of grace in the world,” Archbishop Naumann said.

    “My good young people, say not that you are too young to be a light in our culture and society,” the archbishop said, pointing to many young saints in the life of the church, such as St. Agnes, an early Christian martyred for her faith when she was 12 or 13, and Blessed Carlo Acutis, who will be canonized in April. Widely regarded as a computer whiz, Blessed Carlo catalogued true stories of Eucharistic miracles before his death at age 15 from leukemia in 2006.

    Archbishop Naumann called on young people “to be witnesses to your peers. You’re called to help them to come to know what brought you here tonight.”

    Since the U.S. Supreme Court’s 2022 Dobbs decision that overturned Roe v. Wade and returned the issue to lawmakers, a victory for the pro-life movement, there have been “many disappointments” with the outcome of state referendums, “beginning with my state of Kansas,” where nearly 60% voted to uphold legal abortion access.

    Much of that victory was due to young voters who have “grown up in a culture where they’ve never known anything but legalized abortion,” the archbishop said, acknowledging that “my generation has failed to protect them.”

    “These defeats have been sober reminders that we need to re-intensify our efforts” to build a culture of life, he said. “If we’re gonna follow (Jesus), we have to follow him all the way to Calvary. We have to be prepared to take up the cross to transform our culture.”

    Archbishop Joseph F. Naumann of Kansas City, Kansas, preaches at the National Prayer Vigil for Life Mass at the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception in Washington Jan. 23, 2025, the evening before the annual the March for Life. (OSV News photo/Mihoko Owada)

    Archbishop Naumann said he was “encouraged to hear” that earlier in the day President Donald Trump had pardoned 23 pro-life activists convicted of violating the federal Freedom of Access to Clinic Entrances Act, or FACE Act, that afternoon. He also prayed for Trump and Vice President JD Vance “that they will have wisdom to be good leaders for our nation.”

    The archbishop is a past chairman of the U.S. bishops’ Committee on Pro-Life Activities and has served seven terms as a member of the committee. He was filling in as main celebrant and homilist for the current chairman, Bishop Daniel E. Thomas of Toledo, Ohio, who was not able to attend due to a death in the family. The wife of his late brother, who was his only sibling, died unexpectedly, and he had to be with family in Philadelphia, Archbishop Naumann said, asking for a moment of silent prayer for the bishop and his family.

    The archbishop shared notes from Bishop Thomas on the homily he would have given. His overall theme was “light and life.”

    With the March for Life and the National Prayer Vigil for Life that precedes it, Bishop Thomas wrote, “we take the time to give voice to our praise and thanksgiving for the gift of Christ, who is our life and light, to praise and thank him for the gift of human life in all its forms and at every stage, for the gift of life and light he has given each of us. (We’re) called to witness to his life and light, in particular for the preborn, who may not have the opportunity to be born into this world and who may never see the light of day.”

    In concluding his homily, Archbishop Naumann said, “We ask Jesus — this word made flesh who humbled himself to be an embryo,” carried to term by Mary, “and humbles himself again to be present to us in the Eucharist — to give us food for the journey. Let us take up the banner to be pilgrims of hope intent on building a culture of life and civilization of love.”

    Cardinal Christophe Pierre, apostolic nuncio to the United States, speaks at the National Prayer Vigil for Life Mass at the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception in Washington Jan. 23, 2025, the evening before the annual the March for Life. (OSV News photo/Mihoko Owada)

    At the beginning of the Mass, Cardinal Pierre read a message from Cardinal Pietro Parolin, Vatican secretary of state, issued on behalf of Pope Francis, who sent “the assurance of his spiritual closeness to those from throughout the United States who are participating in this 2025 March for Life.”

    The pope expressed appreciation “for this long-standing public witness to the sanctity of human life” and prayed that this annual gathering “may always be a visible sign of the immense goodness present in our world.”

    The focus of the Jubilee Year that the Catholic Church is observing in 2025 is a message of hope, which “entails having enthusiasm for life and the readiness to share it,” the pope said. He encouraged all people of goodwill, especially young people, “to continue to foster a culture in which the innocent and most vulnerable are welcomed and protected.”

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    Source: Angelus News

  • Pope, Vatican official ask journalists to share Holy Year hope, grace

    The hope and grace that come from taking part in a Jubilee celebration is not a personal privilege, but must communicated and shared with others, said Archbishop Rino Fisichella, the chief Vatican organizer of the Holy Year 2025.

    “This is why the first big event (after the start of the Holy Year) is with the world of communications,” he told reporters during a briefing marking the start of the three-day Jubilee of the World of Communications.

    If people are able to experience the jubilee and its events firsthand, “well, then they are also able to recount it, to share, to talk about it with others. This is what we are hoping for,” he said Jan. 24, the feast of St. Francis de Sales, patron saint of journalists.

    About 10,000 people from 138 countries signed up to take part in the events Jan. 24-26 in Rome for the special jubilee for writers, communicators and those working in media.

    Maria Ressa, a Filipino and U.S. journalist, told reporters that a jubilee, which is only celebrated once every 25 years, is “so extremely needed in our world today.”

    “It feels like the right time to come together and go back to our values, a period of grace, remember the good, and then gain strength and courage and hope from that. That’s why I’m here,” said Ressa, who was awarded the 2021 Nobel Peace Prize jointly with a Russian journalist for their efforts to safeguard freedom of expression.

    Even though only 25 years have elapsed since the last Jubilee for communicators in 2000, it feels like a century for how much the world of communication has changed, Archbishop Fisichella said.

    “Today we are in a situation in which we have a culture of ‘right now,’ everything today and immediately, which is not always positive because it impedes reflection” and consistency, he said.

    When asked how journalists are supposed to be better at telling stories of hope without ignoring important news, too, the archbishop said, “even bad news must be full of hope, otherwise we fall into desperation.”

    For a person of faith, he said, everything is filled with hope, starting with waking up in the morning, “the first thing that accompanies us is hope.”

    Colum McCann, an Irish writer and author of seven novels, said, “I believe what we do is at the forefront of our ability to at least give meaning if not hope,” which possesses a particular power.

    “Samuel Beckett, the Irish playwright said, ‘Can’t go on, must go on.’ And that feels like some of the atmosphere that we’re in at this particular moment. The idea that we must tell one of those stories” that give meaning or hope, he said.

    People connect and understand one another through stories and storytelling, “not didactic ideas that are pushed down,” McCann said. And “if we don’t understand one another, we’re doomed,”

    Paolo Ruffini, prefect of the Vatican Dicastery for Communication, said communicating based on hope means building a relationship with readers or viewers and fostering relationships between others.

    Hope is a call to action, a call to build a bridge and communicate better, especially stories of hope, which is why the dicastery was launching the hashtag #HopeTelling.

    “It doesn’t mean not seeing the evil that exists, but hoping that things can change,” he said.

    Pope to media: Share hope, build community, shun aggressiveness

    Pope Francis urged communicators to use their platforms to inspire hope by avoiding aggressive language and rejecting rhetoric that dehumanizes others.

    “I dream of a communication capable of making us fellow travelers, walking alongside our brothers and sisters and encouraging them to hope in these troubled times,” the pope wrote in his message for the World Day of Communications.

    The pope’s message was released Jan. 24, the feast of St. Francis de Sales, patron saint of journalists, and the start of the Vatican celebration of the Jubilee of the World of Communications.

    The Vatican and most dioceses will celebrate the World Day of Communications June 1, the Sunday before Pentecost.

    Describing his dream particularly for Catholic communicators, Pope Francis said theirs should be “a communication capable of speaking to the heart, arousing not passionate reactions of defensiveness and anger, but attitudes of openness and friendship.”

    And with the Holy Year 2025 being focused on hope, the pope said communications should be “capable of focusing on beauty and hope even in the midst of apparently desperate situations, and generating commitment, empathy and concern for others.”

    A Christian form of communication, he said, “does not peddle illusions or fears, but is able to give reasons for hope.”

    The theme for the church’s 59th celebration of World Day of Communications is “Share with gentleness the hope that is in your hearts,” taken from the First Letter of St. Peter.

    Pope Francis wrote that he chose the theme because modern communication is increasingly “characterized by disinformation and polarization, as a few centers of power control an unprecedented mass of data and information.”

    “Too often today communication generates not hope, but fear and despair, prejudice and resentment, fanaticism and even hatred,” he wrote in the message. “All too often it simplifies reality in order to provoke instinctive reactions; it uses words like a razor; it even uses false or artfully distorted information to send messages designed to agitate, provoke or hurt.”

    In his letter, the apostle Peter tells Christians that they have an obligation to give others an account of their hope, something which the pope said is accomplished best when Christians allow “the beauty of love” to shine through their words and actions.

    Pope Francis asked Catholic communicators “to discover and make known the many stories of goodness hidden in the folds of the news, imitating those gold prospectors who tirelessly sift the sand in search of a tiny nugget.”

    Seeking out those “seeds of hope” and sharing them, he said, “helps our world to be a little less deaf to the cry of the poor, a little less indifferent, a little less closed in on itself.”

    “Be witnesses and promoters of a nonaggressive communication; help to spread a culture of care, build bridges and break down the visible and invisible barriers of the present time,” the pope asked Catholic media professionals.

    “May you always find those glimmers of goodness that inspire us to hope,” he told them. “This kind of communication can help to build communion, to make us feel less alone, to rediscover the importance of walking together.”

    Source: Angelus News

  • A Theophany Miracle in Our Family

    Photo: multiurok.ru   

    This happened in January 2011. My Moscow aunt was returning home from church after the evening service for the Let’s Make the Paths to the Lord StraightDear brothers and sisters, let us hear St. John the Baptist’s call for repentance today, let us mend our ways, make our paths to the Lord straight, and come to the Lord without any shadow of sin, trusting in His mercy and love for us.

    “>Eve of Theophany with full bottles of About Holy WaterOn Theophany, that is, the Day of the Lord’s Baptism, every year a great miracle is performed. The Holy Spirit, coming down upon the water, changes its natural properties. It becomes incorrupt, that is it does not spoil, remains transparent and fresh for many years, receives the grace to heal illnesses, to drive away demons and every evil power, to preserve people and their dwellings from every danger, to sanctify various objects whether for church or home use. “>Theophany water. She was in an uplifted, festive spirit. It was a wonderful snowy evening. She then slipped and fell on the ice, and broke her arm.

    The fracture turned out to be complex, with a slipped bone. She managed to drag herself home from the hospital and called her husband. My uncle was visiting their daughter in Germany. Without delay he returned his ticket for the end of January and flew to Moscow on the next flight. While my aunt was waiting for him, she was committing the sin of murmuring: the pain was wearing her out, all the worse for her absolutely helpless state. She was unable to dress or undress herself, couldn’t take a shower or even fix a meal. And she was tormented by perplexity: Why did it happen? On such a great feast! After all, she wasn’t coming home from a night out, she was returning from church, pure as the driven snow! She had received Communion the day before. Hadn’t argued with anyone. She’d lived a whole two months in reclusion. And Batiushka sprinkled her with holy water after the moleben!

    Something akin to resentment was clawing at her soul.

    As she sat with her husband at tea, they went over what she might have done wrong. They bounced around from hospital to hospital—right up to January 24. That was the day that my uncle was supposed to have flown home according to the original ticket, and she was supposed to have met him at Domodedovo Airport. What was their amazement when they saw the news on television about the terrorist act in Domodedovo Airport! There was an explosion in the arrivals waiting area. Many people died that day.

    That is precisely where my aunt would have been at the moment of the explosion, waiting for the very flight that would have delivered my uncle, arriving from Dusseldorf. He would have been descending the steps from the airplane.

    If she hadn’t broken her arm…

    Not a miracle, you say? It certainly was a miracle. An ordinary Theophany

    “>Theophany miracle.

    After that, my dear relatives had a moleben of thanksgiving served and celebrated my aunt’s second birthday.

    And for me, this was an important lesson. It’s so much easier to live when you know that no matter what happens, even the worst things, it’s only because the Lord saved you from something worse.

    Source: Orthodox Christianity

  • New Martyr Mikhail Novoselov: the “Compensating Link”

    Icon of the New Martyr Mikhail Novoselov The Lord has arranged the universe wisely, from the most microscopic to the most gigantic forms.

    In October 2022, an article entitled, Scientists Discover a Mechanism for Repairing Damage to the DNA Chain, was published on the website of Lomonosov Moscow State University. The article described how, thanks to the observation method, scientists had seen the process of “patching a gap” in the DNA molecule, inherent in the molecule itself. In this regard, interesting is a statement by Olga Sokolova, a Ph.D in Biology, Professor of the Department of Biology of Moscow State University, Professor of the Russian Academy of Sciences, who participated in this scientific work: “DNA damage leads to the accumulation of mutations, and, as a result, death or disruption of cell function.” It follows from this that in the absence of such a compensating mechanism, the entire body can be very seriously affected. But God provides for everything. From the same article: “Every day, ten to 100,000 such ruptures occur in human cells because of external influences and internal processes. Most of them are corrected with the help of special proteins, the so-called repair system… For a cell to function, ruptures must be repaired in time.”

    Very often in our daily lives we can see work of this “repair system”: not at the molecular level, but quite visibly and clearly for us, even on a historical scale. When circumstances or other people compensate for the “ruptures”, mistakes made by someone else.

    But let’s return to Mikhail Novoselov. The Novoselov family of priests (yes, dear readers, that’s right; virtually all of New Martyr Mikhail’s ancestors, with the only exception, were priests) dates to the seventeenth century. The originator was named Afanasy Stepanov. The Novoselov family has had this surname since the eighteenth century, after the village where they served as priests.

    This pious tradition of the priesthood continued until the mid-nineteenth century. Something “broke” on New Martyr Mikhail’s grandfather, Grigory Alekseevich Novoselov. No, he didn’t cast prudence to the winds. Like his pious ancestors, he graduated from a theological seminary and served as a priest for forty years. He was the head of a deanery, received high State awards, which eventually gave him the right to become a member of nobility. But a “rupture” happened in Grigory Alexeyevich’s worldview. How could this happen? What was the cause? God alone knows.

    But if we read Time to Read (or Reread) DostoevskyThe details of all his characters, their mannerisms, their actions, their thoughts and words, even their names, all paint individual pictures of the human condition in relation to God and the devil—pictures that don’t fade with time, and are applicable in any culture.

    “>Fyodor Mikhailovich Dostoevsky carefully, namely his novel Demons, we can see a brilliantly described picture of the stupefied fascination of all strata of Russian society in the mid-nineteenth century (except among the common people) with revolutionary liberal ideas.

    Grigory Alexeyevich Novoselov was carried away by the ideas of Count Leo Tolstoy—A Mirror of Russian Doubt”To the attentive reader, several Tolstoys exist: in Chertkov’s publication we see the accuser, the struggler against monarchy. Another Tolstoy is the doubter, the truth seeker, and that is the image which the modern reader has yet to rediscover.”

    “>Leo Tolstoy. The principle of “non-resistance to evil by violence” is still being chewed over in our society by some individuals. But it is still not the essence of Tolstoyism. This is what Priest Sergei Bulgakov wrote about this phenomenon in his work, A Handbook for Church Servers and Clergy: “In his teaching, Tolstoy not only betrays the foundations of the Orthodox Christian faith, but also of every religion… If we summarize Tolstoy’s ‘faith’, it appears that it is a bizarre mixture of all the wrong beliefs of our age coming to us from The West and adopted by him during his life, namely: rationalism and the so-called ‘negative criticism’, then atheism or, at least, pantheism, Buddhism (in his teaching on morality and, in particular, non-resistance to evil), cosmopolitanism and even nihilism and anarchism (in the sense of a negative destructive principle), where he mercilessly condemns and denies the existing social order and preaches universal revolution and the destruction of this order.”

    And this is what Leo Nikolaevich himself wrote, responding to the decree of the Holy Synod on his excommunication: “It is said that ‘he denies God worshipped in the Holy Trinity, the Creator and Protector of the universe; denies our Lord Jesus Christ, God-man, Redeemer and Savior of the world…; denies the immaculate conception of the Lord Christ as man, and the virginity before his birth and after his birth of the Most Pure Mother of God.’ That I deny the incomprehensible Trinity; the fable, which is altogether meaningless in our time, of the fall of the first man; the blasphemous story of a God born of a virgin to redeem the human race—is perfectly true… If one is to understand by life beyond the grave, the Second Coming, a hell with eternal torments, devils, and a Paradise of perpetual happiness—it is perfectly true that I do not acknowledge such a life beyond the grave… It is also stated that I reject all the Sacraments. That is quite true. I consider all the Sacraments to be coarse, degrading sorcery, incompatible with the idea of God or with the Christian teaching, and also as infringements of very plain injunctions in the Gospels.”1

    ​L. N. Tolstoy. 1908 ​L. N. Tolstoy. 1908     

    In the writer’s view, the Church has ceased to be the spiritual guide of society and has only “misinterpreted the metaphysical teaching of Christ, so that it cannot prevent people from living the way they lived.” Tolstoy believed that “all living things have fallen away from the Church and all the churches and live their own lives independently of the Church”, and religion was used to justify social evil and the existing State order. This last maxim was later widely used by the Bolsheviks in their satanic struggle against Christ and His Church. And all these false beliefs found a place in the heart of the venerable Archpriest Grigory Alexeyevich Novoselov…

    It is no wonder that Grigory Alexeyevich’s son Alexander flatly rejected the possibility of serving the Orthodox Church as a priest. He graduated from St. Petersburg University, married a young lady from a family of the same liberal views, worked all his life as a school principal (that is, he spread his liberal ideas among the masses of students, presenting them as an axiom) and taught ancient languages.

    In 1864, Alexander Novoselov’s son Mikhail was born. He would become the very link that would rectify the errors in the chain of his once pious family. But it wouldn’t happen right away.

    Endowed by God with a pure, sincere and merciful soul, but raised in a family infected with liberalism, young Mikhail embraced the ideas of Tolstoyism with enthusiasm. However, not those ideas that Bulgakov exposed in his work, but the external side of Tolstoyism: “a peaceable disposition”, romanticization of peasant life, and the “joy” of communal living. By that time, his father was close to Tolstoy, and his grandfather, Grigory Alexeyevich, would send his greetings via Mikhail to Leo Nikolaevich and his joy over Tolstoy’s struggle with the institution, “which he despises from the bottom of his heart”—the Orthodox Church.

    After graduating from school, Mikhail wanted to get a medical degree: he had the desire to help the suffering. But his father opposed this and demanded that Mikhail become, like him, a teacher of ancient languages. The young man’s tact is amazing: “I can’t say that I agreed with him, but to go against his will and insist on money from him for further education… I did not consider it appropriate.” So he obeyed his father’s decision. When Mikhail was twenty-three, his father died. After graduating from the teachers’ seminary, the young man did not return to his original choice, but continued his studies to become a teacher. He entered the Department of History and Study of Languages and Literature at Moscow University. Mikhail dreamed of teaching history, “so that the past life of mankind could give students ideas about the people and their actions from the perspective of their approaching to or distancing from the teachings of Christ.” Conscience, the voice of God in the human soul, did not allow liberal teachings to parasitize Mikhail’s worldview. For him the most important Figure in human history was Christ.

    ​Pokrovka Street. High school for boys no. 4, 1900-1905. Pastvu.com ​Pokrovka Street. High school for boys no. 4, 1900-1905. Pastvu.com     

    Mikhail was maturing and now he started asking Tolstoy extremely uncomfortable questions: “Why do you use the very money, the lawlessness of living off which you openly acknowledge? Why do you and your family surround yourselves with splendor and luxury and participate in pagan meals? Why all these togas, which are so repulsive to Christ?…”

    But the culmination of these doubts, which led to Mikhail’s sobering up and break with Tolstoy and Tolstoyism, was a statement by Leo Nikolaevich himself during a private talk in a company of like-minded people. This is how Mikhail recalled it: “I was sitting with Tolstoy and someone else, and they were enumerating the great founders of religions: Buddha, Confucius, Lao Xi, Socrates, and so on. At some point one of them said that it would be nice to see them in person. He asked Tolstoy which of them he would like to meet. Tolstoy mentioned someone, but… not Christ.” Then Mikhail asked Tolstoy: “Wouldn’t you like to see Christ, Leo Nikolaevich?” He replied bluntly and firmly, “‘Certainly not. I confess, I would not like to meet Him. He was a very disagreeable Gentleman.’ It was so unexpected and appalling that everybody fell silent…” Then Mikhail broke up with Tolstoy and wholeheartedly converted to Orthodoxy.

    Many years later, in 1901, Mikhail Alexandrovich would write a letter to Tolstoy following the great writer’s excommunication: “I am taking up my pen under the impression I have on reading your response to the Synod’s resolution of February 20-22. I did not find anything new in your answer; nevertheless, I felt an urge to say a few words to you about your fresh confession… I have read this brief ‘creed’ of yours several times, and each time I have always had the same wistful, oppressive feeling. The words are all good: ‘God’, ‘Spirit’, ‘love’, ‘truth’ and ‘prayer’, but after reading them the soul feels emptiness. There is no life in them, no breath of the Spirit of God… Your God, Spirit, love and truth are lifeless, cold and rational… I have been praying for you and for your loved ones ever since, having broken up with you, I returned to the bosom of the Church of Christ after long wanderings on the paths of sectarianism.”

    Returning to the bosom of the Church, which patiently awaits any person in delusion, Mikhail chose worthy mentors for himself. He was pastored by St. John of Kronstadt and the elders of Zosima’s Hermitage Convent. Mikhail’s friend, the philosopher Vladimir Kozhevnikov, wrote about him: “Straightforward and unshakeable, He was on the Patristic path with his whole being.”

    St. John of Kronstadt in the garden of his house, 1899 St. John of Kronstadt in the garden of his house, 1899     

    Now Mikhail Alexandrovich set vigorously about fighting against heresies. Inspired by missionary endeavors, he published educational pamphlets and books, known collectively as the Religious and Philosophical Library. Thirty-nine general-purpose books plus twenty publications dedicated to special issues were released. No one even counted the published bulletins of the Religious and Philosophical Library. A contemporary commented on the Library as follows: “It was as if living water had been sprinkled onto dry theological diagrams and a stream of fresh and clean air had suddenly burst into the stuffy atmosphere of scholarly, abstract theological and philosophical thought.” For his efforts in the field of education, Mikhail Alexandrovich was elected honorary member of the Moscow Theological Academy.

    Highly educated, an intellectual with a soul imbued with Patristic teachings, he perfectly understood the consequences of the 1905 Revolution for his Motherland. In October 1905, he wrote to a friend: “Now it seems the situation of the Russian people is getting worse in all things. ‘Freedom’ has created an oppression surpassed only during the Tatar yoke. And most importantly, lies have so entangled the whole of Russia that I can’t see a glimpse of hope anywhere. The press acts in a way that deserves to be whipped, not to say guillotined. Falsehood, insolence, folly-–everything has been mixed up in suffocating chaos. Russia has disappeared somewhere, and I can hardly see it. If not for faith that all this is the Lord’s judgments, it would be hard to survive this great ordeal. I feel that there is no solid ground anywhere, volcanoes are everywhere, except for the Cornerstone—our Lord Jesus Christ. I place all my trust in Him.”

    Together with like-minded people, Mikhail Alexandrovich set up the Circle of Those Seeking Christian Enlightenment in the Spirit of the Orthodox Church of Christ. He did not stop his educational activities, publishing works and books. He did not abandon them even when all the spiritual and moral foundations that had developed over the centuries in Rus’ were swept away by the revolutionary storm of 1917. He called on the faithful children of the Church to stand up for it and protect churches from Bolshevik raids.

    S. Bulgakov, Fr. P. Florensky, M. Novoselov. 1913. Blog.predanie.ru S. Bulgakov, Fr. P. Florensky, M. Novoselov. 1913. Blog.predanie.ru     

    It is unbelievable, but he, a frank, intelligent, ardent believer, a talented educator and missionary, was not touched in the first years of persecutions. The first search at his apartment was carried out on July 11, 1922. Fortunately, Mikhail Alexandrovich was away at that moment, so he was not arrested. But from that moment on he had to hide. At that time, Mikhail Alexandrovich published the work, Letters to Friends, where the author gives answers to pressing questions for Orthodox Christians and more subtle philosophical and religious questions. There are twenty letters in all, like kathismas in the Psalter. In a sense, Mikhail Novoselov, in those terrible times of doubt, loss of faith by the Orthodox, aggressive anti-religious propaganda, and violent methods of eradicating the Christian teaching on Russian soil, appeared in these letters like the holy Psalmist David, praising God and His Church. The first letter, dated February 24 / March 9, 1924, denounces the so-called “Living Church” (how relevant this is to modern Ukraine, where the canonical Orthodox Church is going through real persecution, and the dead structure called the “Orthodox Church of Ukraine” (OCU) claims to be the only canonical Church! It is like a carbon copy of the “Living Church” in Soviet Russia in the early twentieth century). The final letter, dated December 31, 1927, begins with the praise of the Nativity of Christ and contains a number of subheadings: (“Church and History”, “Church and State”, “Church and Nature”), as well as a serious section, “The Church’s War with the Devil”. The subheadings are very eloquent: Mikhail Alexandrovich speaks about the meaning imperious to developing a stable Orthodox worldview.

    Was it in demand? Yes. There were still an impressive number of highly educated people in the country, for whom proper and sober guidance in such matters was vital.

    Mikhail Alexandrovich saw the causes of the Revolution in people’s falling away from God. “Russia has internally long begun moving away from the Church; no wonder the State has rejected, ‘separated’ the Church from itself and subjected it to persecution. The long-standing and ever-deepening many-sided departure of the people from the path of God could only bring Divine punishment, perhaps to save what could be saved from perdition through the purifying fire of trials.”

    Mikhail Novoselov was first arrested on March 22, 1929. He was confined in the Butyrka Prison. The reason for his arrest was his Letters to Friends.

    From the protocol of Mikhail Alexandrovich’s interrogation:

    “I believe that the current situation is a test for the faithful, and for the past State system it is a punishment and the verdict of history… These views of mine are partly expressed in my Letters to Friends, of which I have written twenty. The two typed books of letters I am being charged for are precisely a collection of my Letters.”

    He was sentenced to three years of imprisonment “in places subordinate to the OGPU,”2—that is, strict-regime closed prisons. He was sent to the Yaroslavl OGPU Political Isolation Prison (“Politizolyator”) to serve his term. Mikhail Alexandrovich’s health deteriorated significantly—he was plagued by bouts of hypertension and severe purulent inflammation of the eyes. Mikhail Alexandrovich’s condition was aggravated by the fact that he had no close relatives; he was not married and had no children, therefore he received no parcels with the most necessary things. And what was given out in prison was, to put it mildly, not sufficient for a normal existence.

    ​Korovniki Prison (from 1925: Yaroslavl OGPU Political Isolation Prison) ​Korovniki Prison (from 1925: Yaroslavl OGPU Political Isolation Prison)     

    Mikhail Alexandrovich’s letter to the head of the Yaroslavl Political Isolation Prison, written on March 13, 1930: “Since it is hard for me to walk in felt boots (valenki) due to the heavy snowmelt, and my lace-up boots let water in almost as much as do felt boots, I ask you to provide me with government-issued lace-up boots for a while, until I receive the galoshes I appealed to the Red Cross for about two weeks ago.” He had to write such letters all the time. He, a refined intellectual, a nobleman, and a great, intelligent man, had to beg the prison governor for the bare necessities.

    Mikhail Alexandrovich, who had already been convicted, was again prosecuted on August 7, 1930. He was transferred to Moscow where he was often interrogated. The questions mostly concerned his convictions. From the interrogation protocol of April 9, 1931: “Regarding my attitude towards the Soviet Government, I must say that I am its enemy, because of my religious beliefs. Since the Soviet Government is godless and even anti-religious, I believe that, as a true Christian, I cannot support this power in any way, because of its, I repeat, God-fighting nature.”

    The investigation lasted more than a year. On September 3, 1931, the sentence was announced: eight years in prison. Mikhail Alexandrovich was sent back to the Yaroslavl Political Isolation Prison. But this time the conditions were absolutely unbearable. The saint’s Life contains his request to be transferred to a solitary cell (which was refused). What did Mikhail Alexandrovich experience in the cell from which he asked to be transferred? A large number of inmates incompatible with the cell size? Lack of space to sleep? Abuse by fellow prisoners? We will never know—all of the above is possible, or maybe something else. In the end he was transferred to a neighboring cell for two.

    It is impossible to explain with reasonable arguments what was happening in Soviet prisons in the 1930s. Inhumanity, cruelty, humiliation, physical abuse in various forms… It was satanism, a mockery of man as the image of God—there is no other explanation.

    On December 4, 1935, the seventy-one-year-old Mikhail Alexandrovich Novoselov was refused white bread by the prison doctor. I’ll just say a few words: White bread saved prisoners from pneumonia and other lung diseases. In the letters of prisoners to their relatives of that period we often read requests to send them dry white bread (not rye bread, but white bread, as the camp physicians recommended). But here we see something totally different: the doctor forbids giving white bread to an elderly prisoner with poor health.

    In 1937, Mikhail Alexandrovich’s term ended, but it was lengthened by three years. The sufferer was transferred to Vologda Prison, and maltreatment continued here. For speaking loudly, the inmates were forbidden to walk outdoors and to correspond with their relatives.

    A photo from the investigation file of M. Novoselov. 1929. Missioner-tver.ru A photo from the investigation file of M. Novoselov. 1929. Missioner-tver.ru     

    The warden’s shout: “Hurry up!”

    “I’m walking as fast as I can,” Mikhail Alexandrovich replied.

    “Not ‘as fast as I can’, but hurry up!”

    This was classified as “loud talking, and coughing” and entailed disciplinary punishment.

    Soon materials on Mikhail Alexandrovich began to be collected. They put their stool-pigeon into the cell who described Novoselov as “an ardent monarchist, a hopeless obscurantist, a religious fanatic, and a Russian.”

    The stool-pigeon reported every word uttered in the cell. No matter how hard Mikhail Alexandrovich and his cellmates tried to control their words, they could not remain in such tension around the clock. Something would inevitably slip out—dissatisfaction with the prison regime, with the Government, and the situation in the country. As a result, the case materials were collected. From the prison description: “Mikhail Alexandrovich Novoselov, seventy-four, has been in prison for nine years now, has a higher ‘theological education’, and his worldview and political convictions are based on this ‘education’, expressed in his religious fanaticism and political obscurantism… He does not repent of his beliefs and is not going to—he has already resigned himself to the idea of dying in prison for his beliefs, especially since he has no relatives, and he does not want to bother his friends.”

    The charge was naive and untenable: “Reading newspapers, he deliberately distorts the reported facts and slanders the internal situation in the USSR, spreading deliberate lies and slander for counterrevolutionary purposes, putting his cellmates under his counterrevolutionary influence and having a corrupting effect on them.” But in 1938 no one cared about the truth anymore. In order to deal with someone, his sincere faith in God and persistent and firm confession of it were enough.

    The Icon, the “Synaxis of the New Martyrs and Confessors of the Russian Church” The Icon, the “Synaxis of the New Martyrs and Confessors of the Russian Church”     

    On January 17, 1938, Mikhail Alexandrovich was sentenced to execution by firing squad. The persecutors did not care that the sufferer was in his seventy-fifth year at that time. Satanic malice is insane—they couldn’t even wait for his natural death. The New Martyr Mikhail Novoselov was shot on January 20, 1938.

    This is a lesson for all of us: how yielding to distorted ideas and the lack of seriousness of some become the cause of sorrows, confession and the feats of others.

    Mikhail Alexandrovich Novoselov truly straightened the chain of his family, becoming its “compensating link”. But how high the price of this compensation is! The blood of the New Martyrs is the great price of the spiritual rebirth of Russia, just as the Blood of Christ once became for people the earnest of eternal life with God in His Kingdom. I would like to conclude with the words of His Holiness Patriarch Alexei II, which contain much pain, but also much light and hope:

    “I sincerely believe and hope that in the depths of the consciousness of the Russian people, in our spiritual deserts, the roots of piety and genuine faith have been preserved. Watered with the blood of countless Russian New Martyrs, they are able to revive our Church vineyard, which, by the grace of God, is already beginning to flower—to which we are witnesses.”

    Source: Orthodox Christianity

  • Can Pope Francis’ new autobiography survive ‘papal fatigue’?

    A new book by Pope Francis is causing one of the strangest controversies of his pontificate: Was his autobiography ghostwritten?

    Hope: The Autobiography” was released this month, and the book was originally supposed to be put in the closet until after the pontiff’s death.

    However, Francis decided the 2025 Jubilee Year was a good time to tell his story. The book goes into many of the details of his early life, and reiterates some of his present views which have caused controversy in the Church.

    The book is co-written with the Italian journalist Carlo Musso, but some critics claim Musso is the primary author.

    Of course, Pope Francis is 88 years old, and a pope using ghostwriters is not unheard of. Vatican insiders have long debated who “really” writes documents such as papal encyclicals.

    It is also important to point out that in many European countries, even legal courts will rewrite testimony so it makes more sense, and get the person to sign the new work as the “official” testimony.

    Complaints that the autobiography doesn’t always reflect the “real voice” of the pope seem to put aside the fact the book reflects his real opinions.

    The 303-page volume covered a number of issues, including the controversial decision to allow priests to give a blessing to homosexual couples that requested it.

    “It is the people who are blessed, not the relationships,” Francis writes. “Everyone in the Church is invited [for a blessing], including people who are divorced, including people who are homosexual, including people who are transgender.”

    Of course, the decision caused an uproar among Catholics in Africa, and hurt relations with the Eastern Churches — a fact the book passes by.

    Francis also defends his work against traditionalist Catholic priests, who he has often accused of being “rigid.”

    “This rigidity is often accompanied by elegant and costly tailoring, lace, fancy trimmings, rochets. Not a taste for tradition but clerical ostentation,” he says.

    The pope has done much to end the policies of his predecessor Pope Benedict XVI, who gave a lot of freedom to clergy who wanted to use the pre-Vatican II Mass, and as well the faithful who preferred it.

    However, Francis used the book to complain about how “old rite” Catholics dressed and acted.

    “These ways of dressing up sometimes conceal mental imbalance, emotional deviation, behavioral difficulties, a personal problem that may be exploited,” Francis claims.

    He also complained about the attire he refused to wear in the moment after his election in 2013.

    “They were not for me. Two days later they told me I would have to change my trousers, wear white ones. They made me laugh. I don’t want to be an ice cream seller, I said. And I kept my own,” the pope says.

    “The red shoes? No, I have orthopedic shoes. I’m rather flat-footed,” Francis continues.

    In much of the book, Francis seems to be using the opportunity to defend himself against the attacks from more conservative Catholics. Of course, this is not unprecedented; after all, after his retirement, Benedict also often defended the decisions he made.

    Francis is also in a unique position, in that he follows two popes who had a more conservative view of what Vatican II represented. In Catholic theological terms, St. Pope John Paul II and Benedict came from the Communio school, which very much put the Council in a more direct relationship with the Church before the Council.

    The present pope is very much in the Concilium school, which endorses the “spirit of Vatican II.” This means Francis has more reasons to explain his views in interviews and books.

    However, “Hope: The Autobiography” also suffers from this tendency. Just last year, “Life: My Story Through History” was published (strangely, the “first papal biography” has been announced more than once), and soon after “Hope” was released, Francis did a lengthy interview on Italy’s television show Che Tempo Che Fa, which pushed his new book off the headlines.

    These follow various interviews he gives to journalists — sometimes without even mentioning it to his own press office — and his often headline-inducing statements aboard the papal plane during trips to foreign countries.

    There is a danger that this constant stream of written works by the pope — usually involving his personal opinions on controversial matters — is causing “papal fatigue.” I must admit, I had even forgotten “Life: My Story Through History” had come out less than a year ago.

    Worse, it could make Francis’ words become something of a papal cotton candy: a great treat when it first appears, but easily dissolving in short order. 

    Charles Collins is an American journalist currently living in the United Kingdom, and is Crux’s Managing Editor. He worked at Vatican Radio from 2001 – 2017, both in the features and new division. He has also written for Our Sunday Visitor, The Irish Catholic, and Inside the Vatican.

    Source: Angelus News

  • PA: Parish of St. John (Maximovitch) begins services in newly built church

    Winfield, Pennsylvania, January 24, 2025

    Photo: eadiocese.org     

    Several years of work and construction culminated in December as the parish of St. John the Wonderworker, which has been worshiping in rental spaces around Lewisburg, Pennsylvania, for nearly a decade, moved into and held services in its own church building.

    The new church, in the jurisdiction of the Eastern American Diocese of the Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia, sits on a 6-acre plot in Winfield, Pennsylvania, including a small cemetery and room for future expansion.

    It is the only ROCOR church in central Pennsylvania. Most of the parishioner are converts, and the parish is connected to the Orthodox community at nearby Bucknell University, where rector Fr. Paul Siewers is a professor of Christian literature and chaplain, the diocese reports.

    Photo: eadiocese.org Photo: eadiocese.org     

    A cross was erected on the future site of the church in Cross erected on future site of St. John of San Francisco Church in rural PennsylvaniaThe small town of Winfield, Pennyslvania, will soon be home to a new Orthodox church named for one of the greatest saints to have served in America.

    “>June 2021, and the groundbreaking was celebrated in Pennsylvania: Groundbreaking for new Russian Orthodox church in central Susquehanna ValleySt. John Russian Orthodox Parish is building a Church temple in Winfield, with groundbreaking being celebrated this week.”>October 2023.

    “Members and friends rejoiced in the new space, and they continue with beautification efforts both inside and outside, including plans for an ‘onion dome’ and cross to be installed on the roof hopefully this spring.”

    The mission’s move to its new building coincides with expanded outreach: an online catechism course, Fr. Paul’s weekly Bible study at the Bucknell bookstore, and daily Gospel reading videos with Patristic commentary. The community is planning to hold regular student dinners and has increased its liturgical schedule to include weekly Vigil and all major feast services.

    Learn more about the mission and donate to the further beautification of the church at www.stjohnthewonderworker.com.

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    Source: Orthodox Christianity

  • South Africa: More than a dozen baptized on eve of Theophany

    Tulbagh, South Africa, January 24, 2025

    Photo: exarchate-africa.ru   

    More than a dozen people were united to Jesus Christ in the holy Orthodox Church in South Africa over the weekend.

    Mass Baptisms around the world for the feast of TheophanyOrthodox churches across the world welcomed new members this past weekend as mass Baptisms were held, timed to the feast of Theophany, commemorating Christ’s Baptism in the Jordan River.

    “>Earlier this week, OrthoChristian reported on mass Baptisms on the feast of Theophany in the U.S., England, and the Philippines.

    And on January 18, the eve of the feast, 14 people were baptized by Fr. Nikolai Esterhuysen, reports the Russian Orthodox Church’s African Exarchate.

    Fr. Nikolai, who serves as rector of the Church of St. John Climacus in Cape Town, celebrated the Sacrament in Tulbagh with Deacon Isaac Sifuba, near the Transfiguration of the Lord Chapel that is under construction.

    All the newly illumined had undergone a catechism course under the guidance of Fr. Nikolai before the Sacrament of Baptism.

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    Source: Orthodox Christianity

  • Third Sunday in Ordinary Time: A new day dawns

    Neh. 8:2-6, 10 / Ps. 19:8-10, 15 / 1 Cor. 12:12-30 / Lk. 1:1-4, 4:14-21

    The meaning of today’s liturgy is subtle and many-layered. We need background to understand what’s happening in today’s First Reading.

    Babylon having been defeated, King Cyrus of Persia decreed that the exiled Jews could return home to Jerusalem. They rebuilt their ruined temple (see Ezra 6:15-17), and under Nehemiah finished rebuilding the city walls (see Nehemiah 6:15).

    The stage was set for the renewal of the covenant and the re-establishment of the Law of Moses as the people’s rule of life. That’s what’s going on in today’s First Reading, as Ezra reads and interprets (see Nehemiah 8:8) the Law and the people respond with a great “Amen!”

    Israel, as we sing in today’s Psalm, is rededicating itself to God and his Law. The scene seems like the Isaiah prophecy that Jesus reads from in today’s Gospel. Read all of Isaiah 61.

    The “glad tidings” Isaiah brings include these promises: the liberation of prisoners (61:1); the rebuilding of Jerusalem, or Zion (61:3-4); see also Isaiah 60:10; the restoration of Israel as a kingdom of priests (61:6; Exodus 19:6); and the forging of an everlasting covenant (61:8; Isaiah 55:3).

    It sounds a lot like the First Reading. Jesus, in turn, declares that Isaiah’s prophecy is fulfilled in him. The Gospel scene, too, recalls the First Reading. Like Ezra, Jesus stands before the people, is handed a scroll, unrolls it, then reads and interprets it (compare Luke 4:16-17, 21 and Nehemiah 8:2-6, 8-10).

    We witness in today’s liturgy the creation of a new people of God. Ezra started reading at dawn of the first day of the Jewish new year (see Leviticus 23:24). Jesus, too, proclaims a “sabbath,” a great year of Jubilee, a deliverance from slavery to sin, a release from the debts we owe to God (see Leviticus 25:10).

    The people greeted Ezra “as one man.” And, as today’s Epistle teaches, in the Spirit the new people of God — the Church — is made “one body” with him.

    The post Third Sunday in Ordinary Time: A new day dawns first appeared on Angelus News.

    Source: Angelus News

  • Trump pardons 23 pro-life activists convicted of FACE Act violations

    On the eve of the national March for Life rally in Washington, President Donald Trump announced Jan. 23 he was issuing pardons for 23 protesters arrested for violating the federal Freedom of Access to Clinics (FACE) Act.

    Trump signed the pardons in the Oval Office.

    “They should not have been prosecuted. Many of them are elderly people,” he told reporters. “This is a great honor to sign this.”

    The Thomas More Society, the Chicago-based public interest law firm, had earlier in January announced it had submitted formal requests to pardon 21 pro-life activists convicted under the FACE Act. They included Joan Bell, Coleman Boyd, Joel Curry, Jonathan Darnel, Eva Edl, Chester Gallagher, William Goodman, Dennis Green, Lauren Handy, Paulette Harlow, John Hinshaw, Heather Idoni, Jean Marshall, Father Fidelis Moscinski, Justin Phillips, Paul Place, Paul Vaughn, Bevelyn Beatty Williams, Calvin Zastrow, Eva Zastrow, and James Zastrow.

    The two other convicted pro-life activists pardoned by Trump are Herb Geraghty of Pennsylvania and Jay Smith of New York.

    Many are still incarcerated. Lauren Handy, a Catholic convicted for her participation in a 2020 abortion clinic blockade in Washington, has been serving the longest sentence: 57 months.

    According to a list maintained by Citizens for a Pro-Life Society, Handy is currently in a federal prison in Florida. Idoni is incarcerated in Florida; Marshall and Goodman in Connecticut; Darnel and Calvin Zastrow in Illinois; Hinshaw in Massachusetts; Geraghty in Pennsylvania; Calvin Zastrow in Illinois; and Williams, who was arrested for protesting outside an abortion clinic in New York City, in Alabama.

    “Today, freedom rings in our great nation,” said Steve Crampton, senior counsel for the Thomas More Society. “The heroic peaceful pro-lifers unjustly imprisoned by Biden’s Justice Department will now be freed and able to return home to their families, eat a family meal, and enjoy the freedom that should have never been taken from them in the first place.”

    Father Fidelis, a member of the Franciscan Fathers of the Renewal, issued his own statement expressing gratitude to President Trump for the pardons.

    “The pardons corrected the injustice of our prosecutions and incarceration but the daily and horrific injustice of abortion continues,” he said. “And it must be stopped.”

    At the same time, the Catholic priest leveled criticism at the president over his position that the states should decide abortion policy.

    “Although it might be politically expedient to say that each state should make its own laws about abortion, this position is morally incoherent,” he said. “We invite President Trump to abandon this incoherence and show himself to be a president of all Americans — born and unborn.”

    Kurt Jensen reports for OSV News from Washington.

    Source: Angelus News