(OSV News) – As the United States indulges in a star-spangled celebration of its 250th birthday, a cornerstone of historical significance that stands out is religious freedom, and unlike for many other nations, it is a unique founding principle of this nation.

“From the beginning, we’ve had this quarrel — that’s why I call it the Founders Quarrel — which is, on the one hand, there was agreement that we should have religious liberty. But what that actually meant — was what?” Linda Przybyszewski, associate professor of history at the University of Notre Dame, told OSV News.

A bald eagle and U.S. flag are seen in an illustration for religious liberty. (OSV News illustration/Lisa Johnston, St. Louis Review)

“They argued about it,” she said of the Founding Fathers, “because so many of them believed that some form of belief in God was necessary to teaching people virtue and morality — since we need virtue and morality in order to be a self-governing republic. The question then became, ‘Who’s going to teach the religion?’ … And I don’t think that has ever gone away.”

The variety of religious traditions in the U.S. also complicated matters.

“At the founding of the United States, we saw a fascinating mix of groups who argued for religious liberty,” explained Przybyszewski. “There were deists — people who believed in God, but had their doubts about Christ — like Thomas Jefferson and James Madison. There were also sort of ‘orthodox’ churches, which were in some cases newer — like the Baptists, or the Presbyterians — and they had been actively persecuted by colonies that had established churches; that is, churches with privileges.”

During the colonial period of the early 1700s, most colonists — about 85% of some 500,000 — lived in colonies with an official state church, typically the Congregational (Calvinist) or Anglican Church.

“This disparate group of people argued very strongly for religious liberty,” Przybyszewski said, “which is why we have in the First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution that Congress shall make no law regarding the establishment of religion or imposing on the free exercise of religion.”

Michael Breidenbach — dean of the Honors College and associate professor of history at Ave Maria University in Ave Maria, Florida — agreed.

“Religious experience for colonial Americans was very varied. There were some colonists who came specifically because they were fleeing religious persecution. There were others who were forced to come to America, in the case of enslaved people and indentured servants,” he shared.

“There were others who were trying to find a better life than what they had in Europe. And most of them were, I would say, a Christian in some description — although there are notable and important exceptions with Jews and Muslims; and of course, those who did not profess the faith, gnostics or atheists,” said Breidenbach.

He noted that most frequently, arguments for religious toleration involved a fair degree of self-interest — meaning those who wished it for themselves were not necessarily committed pluralists.

“Religious toleration,” Breidenbach said, “is a kind of grant from the civil authority that allows for religious nonconformity because that does better for civil peace — and a kind of recognition that conforming people to a religion they do not believe in makes them hypocrites; makes them not true believers; and otherwise creates a lot of dissension in a political community.”

The Maryland Toleration Act of 1649 — written by Cecil Calvert (1605-1675), son of George Calvert (1580-1632), the Catholic founder of the colony of Maryland (later home of the first U.S. diocese) — is typically identified as the first American law specifically referring to “the free exercise” of religion.

It mandated religious tolerance for Trinitarian Christians, stating, “No person or persons shall from henceforth be any ways troubled, molested, or discountenanced for or in respect of his or her religion nor in the free exercise thereof.”

Ironically, it was repealed in 1654 when William Claiborne, who was stridently anti-Catholic, took control of the colonial government. A new law was passed barring Catholics from openly practicing their religion.

The “Great Awakening” of the 1740s — an evangelical revival of Christianity that swept the colonies, ushering in both religious and political change — further fueled debates.

“By the time we get to American Independence,” said Breidenbach, “what changes is that we see a shift in the discourse to the natural rights of someone to freely exercise one’s religion — public worship — according to the dictates of their conscience. And that’s a different commitment because the government can’t abridge those rights,” he added. “They can maybe limit them under certain conditions — but they are natural rights, and so that’s a much more firm protection.”

Catholics, Breidenbach noted, were at the forefront of the commitment for the natural rights of religious liberty.

Archbishop John Carroll of Baltimore (1735-1815) — the first Catholic bishop in the U.S. — wrote publicly on the subject; his brother Daniel Carroll (1730-1796) was a framer of the U.S. Constitution; and their second cousin Charles Carroll (1737-1832) was the only Catholic to sign the Declaration of Independence.

Still, non-Protestants often faced exclusion and outright persecution.

In the 17th century, Massachusetts hanged people for being Quakers; when the Declaration of Independence was signed, nine of the 13 colonies prohibited Catholics and Jews from holding office; in 1838, the governor of Missouri issued Executive Order 44, calling for the “extermination” of the Mormons; and during the 1830s, Protestant mobs burned convents and sacked churches during anti-Catholic riots.

“A lot of American Protestants didn’t even think the Catholic Church was producing people who were going to make good citizens,” explained Przybyszewski. “The Protestant view of Catholics was that this was a backward, superstitious, not really Christian church — which their faith had rejected centuries earlier.”

Even the first Catholic U.S. president, John F. Kennedy (1917-1963), had to convince Protestant-majority America he would not answer to the pope: “I am not the Catholic candidate for president,” Kennedy stressed. “I am the Democratic Party’s candidate for president who happens also to be a Catholic. I do not speak for my church on public matters, and the Church does not speak for me.”

Since May 2020, at least 410 anti-Catholic episodes have occurred throughout the country, the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops notes.

“Incidents,” the USCCB states, “include arson, statues beheaded, limbs cut, smashed, and painted, gravestones defaced with swastikas and anti-Catholic language and American flags next to them burned, and other destruction and vandalism.”

The USCCB itemizes an annual list of religious freedom concerns; the latest edition was released in mid-February.

For 2026, those identified as “critical” are “political and anti-religious violence; unjust terms and conditions on federal grants, and unreliability of government; access to sacraments for ICE detainees and immigration enforcement at houses of worship; school choice and the Federal Scholarship Tax Credit; repeal of provisions that prevent religious organizations from participating in government programs; and further repudiation of gender ideology.”

While present questions of religious liberty may seem discouraging, Breidenbach nonetheless sees a lesson in the revolutionary history the nation is celebrating.

“Catholics in colonial America were presumed dangerous until proven loyal. And to go from being suspected subjects of a king to trusted patriots in a new republic is a remarkable transformation,” he emphasized.

“It’s something that still needs to be retold; it needs to be revitalized,” said Breidenbach. “Because — when we think about questions of religious liberty today — we need to firmly say that, whatever you think about a particular religion, one has to acknowledge that Catholics were founders and framers of this country.”

(OSV News) – Despite a personal appeal from Pope Leo XIV, the Society of St. Pius X went ahead July 1 with the unauthorized consecration of four new bishops at its seminary in Écône, Switzerland, with Mass broadcasted live and thousands of faithful attending.

The pope warned in his letter dated June 29 — the feast of Sts. Peter and Paul — that the move would cause a formal schism and deprive followers of lawful, and in some cases valid, access to the sacraments.

“In this spirit, and filled with Christian affection, I plead with you and ask you with all my heart: please turn back!” the pope said in a letter addressed to Father Davide Pagliarani, superior general of the society, commonly known as the SSPX. The Vatican published the letter June 30.

The crozier of Bishop Bernard Fellay, then superior of the traditionalist Society of St. Pius X, is pictured in a file photo of him ordaining a priest during a ceremony in Econe, Switzerland. Despite Pope Leo XIV urging the current head of SSPX, Father Davide Pagliarani, to halt the unauthorized consecration of new bishops, SSPX proceeded with consecrating four bishops July 1, 2026, in a Mass broadcasted live from Econe and attended by hundreds of faithful. (OSV News photo/Denis Balibouse, Reuters)

“I urge you to consider carefully the spiritual good of the faithful, because the schismatic act you are about to undertake would deprive them of the licit and, in some cases, even valid reception of the Sacraments, which they love and seek for their sanctification,” Pope Leo wrote.

The ceremony kicked off with a lengthy oath in Latin, read by one of the newly consecrated SSPX bishops, who claimed obedience to Peter Apostle, Holy Roman Church and Pope Leo XIV — naming the current pontiff, who, along with his doctrinal chief, Cardinal Victor Manuel Fernández, prefect of the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith, offered to continue dialogue with the SSPX on the condition that the society suspend its decision to consecrate new bishops.

After the SSPX chose not to accept, Cardinal Fernández said the consecration of bishops without a papal mandate would be considered “a schismatic act” and would incur excommunication.

Pope Leo told journalists outside Castel Gandolfo June 17 that the decision to proceed “is their choice.”

In his homily on July 1, Father Pagliarani called the consecration an “exceptional” measure “proportionate to this necessity” and in line with “a duty to keep the faith that the Church has always taught.”

Saying that “some might consider that we are facing a dilemma,” Father Pagliarani said SSPX did not choose “between faith and the Church.”

“We belong to the Church first and foremost through faith, through the complete profession of faith, through the complete profession of the Church’s faith,” he said, noting: “We live in the same house.”

Four priests were consecrated bishops in the July 1 ceremony: Fathers Pascal Schreiber from Switzerland, Michael Goldade from the United States, Michel Poinsinet de Sivry and Marc Hanappier — both from France. Presiding over the Mass was Msgr. Alfonso de Galarreta. Organizers estimated 16,600 adults were present at the ceremony, with many children attending as well.

On June 30, following the pope’s letter, Father Pagliarani appeared undeterred from proceeding with the consecration, pressing Pope Leo to “consider the authenticity of this intention before making a decision concerning the Society of Saint Pius X.”

On July 1 the head of the society stated: “We are accused of not loving the pope,” noting that “it is because we sincerely love the Pope, as Vicar of Christ, as head of the Church, that we no longer want to see the pope humiliated alongside false pastors representing false religions.”

In 1988, St. John Paul II excommunicated the society’s founder, Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre (1905-1991), and four bishops consecrated without papal mandate. Nevertheless, for decades, the Vatican had sought ways to fully reintegrate SSPX members into the life of the Catholic Church.

Talks between the Vatican and the society began under St. John Paul and continued during the pontificates of Popes Benedict XVI and Francis.

Pope Benedict lifted the excommunications of the four bishops in 2009, opening the way for more regular talks.

Father Pagliarani referred to the 1988 excommunications during his homily, asking: “Did those who condemned the fraternity foresee its dissolution?” “Providence had another plan,” he said, suggesting that “God has not abandoned” SSPX and calling it a “sacrifice” that the society is now “considered as rebels.”

“All evils come from sin,” Father Pagliarani added, suggesting that through consecration unauthorized by the successor of Peter, SSPX wanted to “continue preaching the precious Blood of Our Lord, and we want to continue, in a certain way, to pour it out on souls.”

Father Paglarani concluded with his advice for SSPX bishops: “Be as simple as doves and as shrewd as serpents,” explaining that they must act like serpents to “discern, grasp, and capture the duplicity, ambiguity, and cunning that are in the world and in the enemies of the cross.”

“Your worst enemies will not attack you head-on; they will try to make you slip,” he concluded.

(OSV News) – The National Eucharistic Pilgrimage ends July 5 with a closing Mass, procession and celebration in Philadelphia, which will begin with a special video message from Pope Leo XIV.

Pope Leo will speak to “pilgrims gathered in Philadelphia, those participating virtually, and the larger Church in the United States of America, and to viewers around the world as the United States marks the 250th anniversary of its founding,” according to a June 29 announcement from the National Eucharistic Congress Inc., which organizes the national pilgrimage.

“Pope Leo XIV’s message will come at a moment of particular significance for Catholics in the United States,” according to the statement. “The Holy Father will offer a word of spiritual closeness, peace, unity, and hope, inviting the faithful to look to Christ in the Eucharist as the source of communion and renewal.”

Pilgrims process during the 2026 National Eucharistic Pilgrimage in Fall River, Mass., June 30, 2026. (OSV News photo/courtesy John Paul Flynn)

The pope’s message will be shared at the opening of the 2026 pilgrimage’s final Mass at the Cathedral Basilica of Sts. Peter and Paul, scheduled for 11 a.m., with Philadelphia Archbishop Nelson J. Pérez presiding.

After the Mass, pilgrims will process with the Eucharist for about 2 miles to the National Shrine of St. John Neumann at St. Peter the Apostle Church, where St. John Neumann — the fourth bishop of Philadelphia and a champion of Catholic education — is entombed. Benediction at the church will be followed by a reception and celebration on the shrine grounds concluding this year’s pilgrimage.

As the pilgrimage entered its final week, a “perpetual pilgrim” traveling this year’s full East Coast route reflected on how the experience is now familiar, yet remains fresh.

Quoting St. Augustine’s famous axiom praising God as “beauty ever ancient, ever new,” Sharon Phillips, a pilgrim and youth minister in the Archdiocese of Seattle, said, “These words of St. Augustine’s prayer to God are heavy on my mind as we approach the final week of this Eucharistic Pilgrimage.”

“Here in week five, much of the exciting novelty has shifted into a daily familiarity,” she wrote in a June 28 blog post for OSV News. “I remember my first moments in the van and how surreal it was having Our Lord in the tabernacle before us; then I think how just today it was second nature to genuflect as I exited the van. At this point in pilgrimage, I’m encountering Jesus in the ancient, as I see his steady and grounding Presence that has been there from the start.”

Yet, she wrote, “Even with the familiarity that we’ve developed, I’m relieved by the reminder that every moment is new in the Lord, and He has graces for this final week of pilgrimage that are new and different from the things that have passed so far. I still can encounter that wonder at being so close to Jesus in the van, and I can still renew my commitment to be a pilgrim seeking to be closer in every moment.”

After a weekend in the Archdiocese of Boston June 26-28, Phillips and her eight fellow perpetual pilgrims began the final week of the 2026 National Eucharistic Pilgrimage in the Diocese of Fall River, Massachusetts, June 29-30 and the Diocese of Providence, Rhode Island, June 30-July 2.

The pilgrims are scheduled to spend July 2-5 in the Philadelphia Archdiocese, where events include a day of service July 3, and continuous Eucharistic adoration from the evening of July 2 to the afternoon of July 4 at the Cathedral Basilica.

The National Eucharistic Pilgrimage launched in 2024 ahead of that year’s National Eucharistic Congress with four routes converging in Indianapolis. It continued last year with a route through the American Southwest.

This year’s six-week route along the East Coast began May 24 in St. Augustine, Florida. In the weeks since, the pilgrims have traveled along the East Coast through Georgia, South Carolina, North Carolina, Virginia, the District of Columbia, Maryland, Delaware, New Jersey, New York, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Maine and Rhode Island.

The route’s perpetual pilgrims, all young adults, have accompanied the Eucharist throughout the journey, stopping for Mass, adoration and other events at parishes and religious institutions, as well as public sites and memorials, many of which have highlighted the United States’ Catholic history as the nation prepares to mark its 250th anniversary.

Pilgrimage stops in the Fall River Diocese included a June 29 procession, Mass and Eucharistic adoration in New Bedford, Massachusetts, at Our Lady of Mount Carmel, a parish which serves Portuguese-speaking Catholics.

During a multilingual Mass that evening marking the solemnity of Sts. Peter and Paul, the parish’s pastor Father Christopher Peschel preached about the meaning of “freedom,” which he tied to the upcoming anniversary of the signing of the Declaration of Independence, marking the birthday of the United States.

“We recall a revolution that started just a few dozen miles to our north with a couple boxes of tea being tossed from a ship named Dartmouth, sailed and owned by a prominent family from here in New Bedford,” he said during the livestreamed Mass.

“We know a war broke out, revolutionary war. Battles ensued that hit close to home, even here in the old place called Bedford Village. It was completely burned to the ground by a fire so intense that they could see the flames 20 miles away in Newport, Rhode Island,” he said.

“Yet even those imperfect revolutionaries knew that their united cause was worth fighting for, worth living for, worth dying for. And in their own way, they set the world ablaze to live out a freedom and a liberty endowed by the Creator, God, such as this world had never seen before.

“God is the source of freedom. God is the source of liberty,” he said. “So it makes sense then that the Son of God, in the flesh, would bring that same freedom in the form of salvation … to all who find new life in him through baptism and who sustain that same life through frequent reception of the sacraments, particularly of reconciliation and the holy Eucharist.”

Father Peschel pointed to that day’s saints, Peter and Paul, who experienced imprisonment together in Rome, but who “used their liberty to bear witness even to the point of their own martyrdom.”

“This freedom is not some kind of freedom to be indifferent,” he said, “but a freedom for excellence, for holiness, to live for Jesus Christ.”

WASHINGTON (OSV News) – The U.S. Supreme Court struck down President Donald Trump’s executive order limiting birthright citizenship on June 30, finding the order violated the 14th Amendment.

A cornerstone of his efforts to restrict immigration, the ruling comes as a loss for Trump, who even attended oral arguments in the case, Trump v. Barbara, in person, marking the first time a sitting president has done so, according to records from the high court and the nonprofit Supreme Court Historical Society.

Writing for the majority, Chief Justice John Roberts wrote, “Citizenship, then and now, was the right to have rights – to freely participate in our political community.”

An intern runs outside the U.S. Supreme Court in Washington June 30, 2026, to deliver the court’s ruling on birthright citizenship to the media. The nation’s highest court upheld a broad conception of birthright citizenship, rejecting President Donald Trump’s executive order declaring that children born to parents who are in the United States illegally or temporarily are not American citizens. (OSV News photo/Cheney Orr, Reuters)

Citing comments made by Sen. Lyman Trumbull, a proponent of the Civil Rights Act of 1866, which led to the 14th Amendment, Roberts wrote, “The Framers of the Fourteenth Amendment extended that promise to ‘every free-born person in this land.’ We keep that promise today.”

The case concerned an executive order signed by Trump within hours of returning to the Oval Office on Jan. 20, 2025, that sought to change the longstanding legal interpretation of the 14th Amendment, which states, “All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside.”

Trump’s order, part of his administration’s broader efforts to restrict immigration, sought to end birthright citizenship for children born in the U.S. to parents who either lack permanent legal status or are temporary visa holders. The order said that after 30 days from the executive order’s date, only children born to at least one U.S. citizen or lawful permanent resident parent would automatically acquire citizenship. It was promptly challenged in court.

Previously, the Supreme Court limited the ability of federal judges to issue nationwide injunctions against the order while litigation over it proceeded, but did not directly address the merits of the order itself.

The Trump administration previously argued in defense of the order that the phrase “subject to the jurisdiction thereof” makes the president’s order lawful, despite longstanding legal interpretation that children born in the U.S. are granted citizenship with only narrow exceptions.

But Roberts wrote, “The word ‘jurisdiction’ was hardly unknown to the drafters and ratifiers of the Fourteenth Amendment. Congress chose to use an established legal term and the Clause must be interpreted in that light.”

Roberts was joined in his opinion by Justices Amy Coney Barrett, Sonia Sotomayor, Elena Kagan and Ketanji Brown Jackson. Justice Brett Kavanaugh filed an opinion that concurred in the judgment but dissented in part. Justices Samuel Alito, Clarence Thomas and Neil Gorsuch dissented.

In his own opinion, Kavanaugh wrote that he disagrees with the court’s finding that the order violates the 14th Amendment, instead arguing that it is unlawful because it ran afoul of a federal statute governing birthright citizenship under the 14th Amendment, which specifies particular circumstances under which citizenship is granted at birth in accordance with that amendment.

“Congress could — consistent with the Fourteenth Amendment — amend §1401(a) or otherwise enact new legislation establishing exceptions to birthright citizenship for children born to foreign citizens unlawfully or temporarily in the country,” he said. “But Congress has not yet done so.”

Writing for the minority, Thomas argued the majority’s ruling “adds to the sad history of the Fourteenth Amendment, which was designed and understood to secure equal rights for the freed blacks but has instead been repurposed for political projects that the Reconstruction Congress did not support.”

Trump, in a post on his social media website Truth Social, argued, “The Supreme Court upheld Birthright Citizenship, which is too bad for our Country, but we can easily make it up in Congress through Legislation, with the support of the President, that has now been determined during this process.”

“No long and unwieldy Constitutional Amendment is necessary! Congress should start TODAY to work on ending expensive and unfair to our Country, Birthright Citizenship. They will have my Complete and Total Support!” he argued.

However, it was not immediately clear what the path forward for such legislation would be in Congress, as such a proposal would need to gain enough support to meet the Senate’s 60-vote filibuster threshold in order to reach Trump’s desk.

Ashley Feasley, the legal expert in residence at the Immigration Law and Policy Initiative at The Catholic University of America Columbus School of Law, told OSV News, “Today’s opinion is a victory for immigrant children born in the United States.”

Roberts’ opinion, she said, “while focused on Constitutional analysis and history and tradition, aligns with the bishops, who noted in their amicus brief on the case, the alignment of birthright citizenship with Church teaching as it treats ‘birth within a community as a sufficient and objective basis for political belonging.'”

J. Kevin Appleby, senior fellow for policy and communications at the Center for Migration Studies of New York and the former director of migration policy for the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, told OSV News, “This decision shows that, when push comes to shove, the Constitution retains its authority and still guides our 250-year-old republic. It also sends a message to the administration that to change the Constitution you must go through a constitutional amendment process, not just use a pen.”

“The executive order that was struck down would have returned us to a two-tiered society, with one group being stateless and having no rights in our democracy,” he said. “The justices rightly did not take the nation back to that era.”

Catholic social teaching on immigration involves three interrelated principles: the right of persons to migrate in order to sustain their lives and those of their families, the right of a country to regulate its borders and control immigration, and a nation’s duty to regulate its borders with justice and mercy.

Anna Gallagher, executive director of the Catholic Legal Immigration Network, also known as CLINIC, said in a statement, “We are relieved and grateful that the Supreme Court has upheld this right that is so important for our identity as a nation and for safeguarding justice and human dignity.”

“In our amicus brief, we explained how the values of Catholic social teaching, the particular realities of undocumented immigration in the United States, and our nation’s legal history make upholding the tradition of birthright citizenship the most just outcome of this case,” she said. “We are glad to receive a decision that will bring relief to immigrant families and our network. This is a win for immigrants, and a win for justice.”

The U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops and CLINIC previously submitted a friend-of-the-court brief in the case, arguing that ending the practice of birthright citizenship would weaken families and risk leaving children stateless, thereby making them targets for violence, trafficking and exploitation.

“The principle of citizenship by birth is firmly rooted in Western legal tradition, enshrined in the Fourteenth Amendment, and reaffirmed by this Court’s precedent,” it said. “It is equally grounded in Church teachings, which affirms the inherent dignity of every human person, especially the innocent child.”

Appleby told OSV News, “I think the Church’s voice made a difference here.”

“This is a victory for human dignity and for human life,” he said, adding the ruling is one that could be celebrated by “Catholics of all political views.”

(OSV News) – For Americans reflecting on the nation’s history during its 250th birthday, the word “pioneer” might conjure up images of settlers’ covered wagons trundling into the wilderness; buckskin-clad explorers mapping lands unseen by European eyes; or homesteaders eking out a lonely and challenging existence in an unforgiving terrain.

It’s rarer, however, to immediately think of the priests who were also among them as the United States expanded ever westward.

But they are there, embedded in American history – and their memory isn’t simply consigned to dusty archives; they are celebrated as local heroes, with one even in the first stages of potential sainthood.

The Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception is seen in Kansas City, Mo., Nov. 6, 2025. (OSV News photo/Patrick Stoops)

“They really did not think Catholicism could ever take root here,” Zachary Daughtrey, archivist for the Diocese of Kansas City-St. Joseph in Missouri, told OSV News. “But when Father Donnelly came, he came with a strength. He came with a will — and the ability to be tenacious in making sure Catholicism succeeded.”

Often referred to as “The Builder,” Father Bernard Donnelly (1810-1880) was born in Kilnacreeva, County Cavan, Ireland, trained as an engineer, and immigrated to the U.S. in the late 1830s. He first found work as a teacher, but then enrolled in the seminary. In 1845, he was ordained and assigned to a parish in Independence, Missouri.

“There was such a lack of priests in the area,” said Daughtrey. “As someone who could have come here and been so down that he was posted to the absolute end of American civilization at the time, he just takes it all on the chin — and he’s ready to go to work.”

Father Donnelly described his horseback mission trips in the diocesan newspaper — The Catholic Banner — as six-week journeys taking him away from home to cover more than 30 miles a day, reaching Catholic families living maybe 20 miles apart.

The tenaciousness Daughtrey refers to soon earned Father Donnelly the moniker “The Pioneer Priest,” and also saw him acting as a construction foreman of sorts — recruiting hundreds of Irish immigrants to literally carve Kansas City, Missouri, out of the tall limestone bluffs once surrounding it. The Irish laborers naturally brought their religion with them — and so a Catholic community was established, and grew.

“The Builder” erected churches, too.

“He was very instrumental in building the cathedral,” Daughtrey shared, referring to the golden-domed Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception. “He owned a brickyard in downtown Kansas City, and the bricks that were used to build the cathedral came from Father Donnelly’s brickyard.”

“I just don’t think there would have been the successes of the Catholic Church in the area,” concluded Daughtrey, “had it not been for Father Donnelly coming here.”

In Minnesota, Father Valentine Sommereisen (1829-1897) is not only thought of as a pioneer priest — there’s an elegant historical marker that says so. Inscribed “Pioneer Missionary Priest” with an inset picture of the determined-looking pastor, it stands in front of St. Joseph Church, a small log and field-surrounded structure completed in 1861. St. Joseph’s was the first Catholic church in Brown County, and it was Father Sommereisen who celebrated its first Mass.

Indeed, Father Sommereisen was a priest of firsts: He was the first resident Catholic priest in three large areas of the American West, including southwestern Minnesota, the Dakota Territory and western Kansas. Born in Rouffach, Alsace, France, he and several other theology students followed Father Augustin Ravoux to Minnesota in 1854. Father Sommereisen was ordained in 1856, and from his first assignment in Mankato, Minnesota, he ministered to 36 communities in 14 counties.

“Father Valentine came to this area 150 years ago, in October of 1876,” Father Reggie Urban, a retired priest in the Diocese of Dodge City, Kansas, told OSV News. “And when he did so, this whole region — from the Rocky Mountains to Montana and down to Oklahoma, and then all the way to the Missouri River and the Kansas City area — was called by the Catholic Church ‘The Apostolic Vicariate of Indian Territory East of the Rockies.’ There were no dioceses; no parishes.”

Able to speak Sioux, the priest in 1862 baptized 33 of the 38 Dakota Sioux who were hanged in Mankato during the largest mass execution in U.S. history, following the Dakota War. He later accompanied the three-month Yellowstone Expedition of 1873, whose security was ensured by Gen. George Custer’s 7th Calvary as the Northern Pacific Railroad survey team traversed the Dakota and Montana territories.

Thirteen years after his ordination, Father Sommereisen had about 5,000 people under his care; some 250 of whom had been baptized within one year. Father Urban is known to joke that he has “never baptized that many people in one year, nor in my 29 years as a priest.”

Father Urban also has a personal interest in Father Valentine’s history.

In 1876 Father Sommereisen was appointed pastor at Hays, Kansas — with the care of six nearby Volga German settlements and their parishes, and various railroad towns. “Volga Germans” are ethnic Germans who migrated to Russia in the 1700s and later immigrated to Kansas in the 1870s.

“My ancestors came from Russia; part of the Volga migration. And one of these parishes,” said Father Urban, “is my ancestral parish.”

In the Diocese of Duluth, Minnesota, Catholics know precisely who is meant when anyone refers to “The Patriarch of Duluth” — it’s Msgr. Joseph Buh (1833-1922), another pioneer priest whose honorary title is inscribed on his tomb at the Cathedral of Our Lady of the Rosary.

Born in modern-day Zadobje, Slovenia, he was ordained in 1858, and left for New York as a missionary in 1864.

“He came primarily to work with Native Americans,” Father Richard Kunst, pastor of St. James Parish in Duluth, told OSV News. “And as Slovenians in particular came to Northeastern Minnesota, he worked with them as well — but he was very much a missionary priest for everybody.”

The Ojibwe (Chippewa) people called him by two names: “Masinaigans,” meaning “little book” — a reference to the breviary and diary that always accompanied him — and “meshidong,” or “long beard,” in tribute to Msgr. Buh’s impressive facial hair.

“When you hear stories about some of these missionary priests, Msgr. Buh certainly had the most extreme circumstances he had to go through just to minister to people,” Father Kunst said. “There were stories of him traipsing through blizzards at 30-40 below overnight, just to go and anoint somebody — so he had to fight that, just to bring the Gospel and the sacraments to the people.”

Msgr. Buh, pronounced “Boo,” eventually established 57 parishes, and became vicar general of the Diocese of Duluth.

“He had very large territory he was pastorally responsible for — and prior to modern transportation, he had a horse and buggy and not very good roads,” continued Father Kunst. “Once trains were introduced here, he got rid of the horse and buggy and went by train. It was much more efficient for him — but none of that was easy by today’s standards.”

“It always just amazes me,” Father Kunst reflected, “to think of a handful of priests in some remote area having to cover hundreds of miles. I don’t know if I would have been called to that sort of lifestyle back then.”

Father Kunst, who grew up hearing about Msgr. Buh’s exploits, and his bishop, Daniel J. Felton, were among the first to promote Msgr. Buh’s sainthood cause.

“We’re waiting from the Holy See to get the approval back,” said Father Kunst, diocesan postulator. “That’s when we would say that the cause is formally introduced, and he’ll automatically get the title ‘Servant of God.’ But the exploration aspect of this has been going on for about 2.5 years.”?

On June 10, the U.S. bishops voted in support of the Duluth Diocese advancing the cause of Msgr. Buh at their 2026 spring plenary assembly in Orlando, Florida.

Since the 1940s, second-class relics have circulated, said Father Kunst, noting that the Sisters of St. Scholastica Monastery had holy cards made with bits of cloth from one of his shirts. A second-class relic is a possession of a saint or would-be saint; a first-class relic is a physical body, such as bone, hair, blood or flesh.

“Even though there was no formal cause, it was just the idea of the sanctity — of what he brought to northeastern Minnesota — in his missionary journeys. He was also buried in a special casket that was intended to be exhumed at a later date. They just knew — this priest is going to have some sort of cause for canonization.”

“There’s a real consciousness in our diocese as to who Msgr. Buh was,” concluded Father Kunst. “He’s legendary.”

VATICAN CITY (OSV News) – On the feast of Sts. Peter and Paul, Pope Leo XIV personally placed the pallium on the shoulders of 35 metropolitan archbishops, urging them to follow the example of the patron saints of Rome in being “builders of unity” and “servants of the truth in charity.”

“Let us pray to Saints Peter and Paul that they may sustain us on our journey of communion in the footsteps of the Savior,” the pope said in his homily in St. Peter’s Basilica June 29.

Sts. Peter and Paul, who were both martyred in Rome, are venerated as the patron saints of the Eternal City, which marks the solemnity with fireworks, flowers, and much celebration.

Pope Leo XIV presents the pallium to New Orleans Archbishop James F. Checchio in St. Peter’s Basilica at the Vatican June 29, 2026, on the feast of Sts. Peter and Paul. During Mass the pope gave 35 metropolitan archbishops the woolen pallium as a sign of their communion with him and their pastoral responsibility as shepherds. (OSV News photo/Simone Risoluti, Vatican Media)

The Via della Conciliazione, the broad avenue leading to St. Peter’s Square, was decorated with colorful handcrafted floral carpets in honor of the feast, while inside the basilica the centuries-old bronze statue of St. Peter was adorned with vestments and a papal tiara.

But the heart of the city’s celebration was the Mass with the 267th successor of Peter at the main altar of the basilica, built over the tomb of St. Peter and filled with cardinals and bishops for the occasion.

Pope Leo presented the woolen bands to archbishops from across the globe, including newly appointed archbishops of Kraków, Calcutta, Cape Town, Cebu, Brisbane and Lahore.

Four American archbishops were among them: Archbishop Ronald A. Hicks of New York, Archbishop James F. Checchio of New Orleans, Archbishop James R. Golka of Denver and Archbishop Mark S. Rivituso of Mobile, Alabama.

The pallium — a 3-inch-wide woolen band adorned with crosses, with 14-inch strips hanging down the front and back — is a liturgical vestment symbolizing unity with the pope and service to the faithful. Metropolitan archbishops wear it when celebrating Mass within their ecclesiastical province.

“These bands of white wool adorned with crosses indeed express the commitment of every Shepherd — and also of every Christian — to take upon their shoulders the brothers and sisters entrusted to them, like so many lambs of the Lord’s flock,” the pope said.

In presenting the palliums, Pope Leo XIV revived a tradition originally established by St. John Paul II in 1983 of personally placing the vestment on each archbishop’s shoulders. Pope Francis had in 2015 returned the practice to local nuncios presiding over the imposition of the pallium in each archbishop’s home archdiocese.

In his homily, Pope Leo drew on the symbols traditionally associated with the two apostles, keys for St. Peter, and a sword and book for St. Paul, to illustrate what he called the Church’s path to authentic unity.

“A key does not break down doors; rather, it opens and closes them by finding the proper levers within,” the pope said.

“In the same way, communion within the Church is not built by clinging rigidly to one’s own position, but by seeking, in all hearts, points of encounter in the Truth,” he added.

Reflecting on St. Paul, Pope Leo said the apostle “allowed himself to be transformed by the power of God’s word, which rescued him from the way of violence and led him onto the path of love.”

The Mass was attended by some of the 178 cardinals who gathered in Rome for an extraordinary consistory June 26-27, during which they discussed the pope’s recent encyclical “Magnifica Humanitas” and the implementation process of the Synod of Bishops on synodality.

Also present was a delegation from the Orthodox Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople, who joined Pope Leo at the conclusion of Mass in praying at the tomb of St. Peter in the crypt beneath the basilica’s main altar.

“Dear friends, it is important for us today to look to these two Saints — Peter and Paul — to understand how we, in turn, can be apostles and builders of unity, and generous servants of the truth in charity,” Pope Leo said.

“Peter’s example is an invitation to every Christian to become a builder of unity, placing God at the center of one’s life and drawing close to one’s brothers and sisters, attentive to their circumstances and needs,” he said. ” In this way, we learn to live with one another in charity, so that the message might be fully proclaimed.”

PHILADELPHIA (OSV News) – Catholic leaders are warning the Supreme Court’s decision allowing the Trump administration to deport hundreds of thousands of Haitians and thousands of Syrians currently under protected status in the U.S. will have dire consequences — including for the U.S. itself.

At least two bishops have called on Congress to extend the protections given the ongoing grave crises in both nations.

Gracieuse Jean speaks to a reporter in the Little Haiti neighborhood of Miami, Florida, U.S., July 8, 2021. That week, Haitian President Jovenel Moise was shot dead by gunmen in his private residence overnight, sparking fears of a further descent into chaos in the impoverished Caribbean nation. (OSV News photo/Shannon Stapleton, Reuters)

“Revoking the legal status of hundreds of thousands of people residing in our country creates a moral crisis when returning to their country of origin is not a safe or reasonable option,” said Bishop Brendan J. Cahill of Victoria, Texas, chairman of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops’ Committee on Migration, in a June 26 statement.

On June 25, the nation’s top court halted federal court rulings that had kept the administration from ending the Temporary Protected Status program for nationals from Haiti and Syria, saying federal law largely prevents the court from reviewing the earlier moves to scrap the TPS designations for those countries.

“If we are truly to affirm the God-given dignity of every human person, we as a nation cannot turn a blind eye to such an injustice and the impossible choices it will create for families and communities,” said Bishop Cahill.

Created by Congress as part of the Immigration Act of 1990, TPS provides deportation protections for those from Homeland Security-designated countries experiencing ongoing crises, such as war and environmental disasters. As of March 31, 2025, the last date for which publicly available data exists, there were approximately 1.3 million people with TPS living in the United States.

More than 330,000 Haitians and some 6,100 Syrians in the U.S. had TPS protection as of 2025. Both nations have experienced long-running conflict, instability, disaster and disease.

“Even if the Administration determines TPS is no longer warranted, deferred enforced departure remains a tool available to the President, and we urge him to exercise right judgement in this way,” said Bishop Cahill. “Forcibly sending families to dire conditions is a legacy all leaders should seek to avoid. To that end, my brother bishops and I also continue to call upon Congress to act — to meet this moment with the moral fortitude that is so desperately needed.”

Haitians face the possibility of being returned to a country “on the brink,” one that for decades has “endured one calamity after another,” said Archbishop Thomas G. Wenski of Miami, whose archdiocese is home to an extensive Haitian and Haitian-American community.

Hours after the Supreme Court decision was announced, Archbishop Wenski held a June 25 press conference, livestreamed via the Archdiocese of Miami’s Radio Paz, stating that “it would be an act of abject cruelty for the United States to send families back” to the “dangerous and unsafe conditions” that prevail in Haiti.

He called on Congress to give Haitians “at least a reprieve of three more years” by extending TPS — which he admitted was “an imperfect tool” — rather than “pulling the floor out from under families without any workable alternative.”

“The mass deportation of 350,000 men and women and their children to a country in dire straits is not a workable alternative,” stressed Archbishop Wenski.

He cited “widespread gang violence and kidnapping, a cholera epidemic, spreading food insecurity” and “the lack of functioning state institutions.”

“The situation in Haiti is very, very critical,” said Haitian native Father Eugène Almonor, an Oblate of Mary Immaculate and chaplain of the Archdiocese of Philadelphia’s Haitian Catholic Community.

Father Almonor, now a U.S. citizen who serves at St. William Parish in Philadelphia, told OSV News June 25 that asking someone “to return to Haiti is exposing your life” to danger.

He himself has been unable to travel to visit family in Haiti for some time.

Father Almonor, whose community is grappling with the impact of the Supreme Court decision, said Haitians who have lived in the U.S. “10, 15, 20 years” would be “lost” returning to a land that has plunged even more deeply into crisis since they last knew it.

“We don’t know where we would go,” he said.

Both he and Archbishop Wenski observed that Haitians under TPS in the U.S. — many of whom are Catholic — have become part of the nation’s fabric, making significant contributions to their communities and to the nation’s economy.

“The Haitians in this country are not on the dole,” said Archbishop Wenski. “They are hard workers filling jobs that, if it were not for them, would go unfilled.”

He stressed that the “sudden expulsion of Haitian TPS holders would have potentially a devastating effect on our nation’s economy,” pointing to health care facilities in his region.

The archbishop also noted that politicians in Indiana and Ohio — places where “Haitians were falsely accused of eating people’s pets,” a reference to an unsubstantiated rumor advanced by Vice President JD Vance and several others — have also noted “losing the Haitians now would hurt the local economy.”

Above all, said Father Almonor, “it is a question of humanity.”

“In the United States, we say, ‘In God we trust,'” he said. “But our faith in God is a faith made to love others, to support others — especially the vulnerable people.”

(OSV News) – The archbishop of Caracas called for prayers and solidarity after back-to-back earthquakes struck Venezuela, killing at least 188 people and injuring hundreds more.

“We ask God that we may all face this together, finding comfort in God, and in solidarity and charity,” Archbishop Raúl Biord Castillo said in a video posted on Instagram June 25.

According to The Associated Press, the twin earthquakes, which struck in the evening June 24, measured 7.2 and 7.5 magnitude and were the strongest to hit Venezuela in more than a century.

Juan Carlos Gomez, a firefighter from Caracas, looks for his sister, Katiuska Hernandez, and nephew Brett Roude, amid the rubble of a building in La Guaira, Venezuela, June 25, 2026, following 7.2 and 7.5 magnitude earthquakes that rocked the country June 24. Venezuelans searched for survivors beneath collapsed buildings June 25, and rescue teams raced to northern areas hit hard by the twin quakes that officials say killed nearly 200 people and left hundreds trapped. More were feared dead. (OSV News photo/Maxwell Briceno, Reuters)

By late afternoon June 25, news reports said that more than 1,500 people were injured and another 200 were trapped in rubble.

Social media was flooded with images of the chaos and destruction that ensued, including a video showing terrified residents outside of a church that was swaying as the earthquake rocked the area.

As a massive search and rescue effort was underway and the full scale of the disaster began to emerge, Pope Leo XIV sent an initial emergency donation of 100,000 euros (US$115,000) through the Dicastery for the Service of Charity, Vatican News reported.

The Holy See said the aid, coordinated with the apostolic nuncio to Venezuela, Archbishop Alberto Ortega Martín, and Archbishop Biord “is only a first step, with further assistance to follow in response to the needs identified by the local Church.”

Archbishop Biord toured several churches in the capital following the devastating earthquakes. Standing in the rubble of San José de Ñaraulí Church, the archbishop said several churches in the archdiocese suffered damage, including the Cathedral of Caracas.

Despite the circumstances, Archbishop Biord said that what was important was the feeling of unity among people helping victims and those who have lost their homes.

“Our hearts are with the deceased — we pray for their eternal rest — and with those injured who are being rescued, as well as all the people who have lost loved ones. (This earthquake) was a very powerful natural phenomenon,” he said.

The archbishop of Caracas prayed that the people of Venezuela would find “comfort in God, and in solidarity and charity.”

“Amidst all of this — Christian and Catholic alike — we must all form a great network of solidarity to help those brothers and sisters who are suffering material losses,” he said. “We are deeply pained by the damage to our artistic heritage, but that can be recovered over time. But human life is what is most important.”

Several messages of support to Catholics in the country were published, including from the Mexican bishops’ conference.

In a tweet posted on X June 25, the Mexican bishops said they joined in prayer for the people of Venezuela, and asked God to “grant consolation to the afflicted, strength to those who serve, and swift recovery to the affected communities.”

“As a pilgrim Church in Latin America, we make our own the pain of our Venezuelan brothers and sisters and entrust them to the maternal protection of Our Lady of Coromoto,” the bishops said, referring to the patroness of Venezuela.

Spanish Archbishop Luis Argüello of Valladolid, president of the Spanish bishops’ conference, published a letter June 25 on behalf of the country’s bishops expressing their “deepest fraternal closeness in these moments of great sorrow.”

“We join you in prayer for the eternal rest of the deceased. We implore divine comfort for their families and a swift recovery for the hundreds of injured and displaced people who have lost their homes and livelihoods,” Archbishop Argüello wrote in the letter, which was addressed to Bishop Jesús González de Zárate, president of the Venezuelan bishops’ conference.

“We also pray that the Lord will strengthen and enlighten the authorities, emergency teams, healthcare workers, and volunteers who are working tirelessly in rescue and relief efforts,” he added.

The U.S. Catholic bishops also expressed their solidarity and concern for Venezuelans amid the disaster.

“As rescue efforts are underway, I urge the international community to mobilize in support of the Venezuelan people, and to send the necessary humanitarian assistance to alleviate their suffering,” said Bishop A. Elias Zaidan, chairman of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops’ Committee on International Justice and Peace.

He noted that “Catholic Relief Services, the international relief agency of the Church in the United States, and its partner Caritas Venezuela, are already responding and assessing needs at this early stage.”

“We understand the U.S. government is readying an initial response and appreciate their partnership in responding to this natural disaster,” said Bishop Zaidan, who heads the St. Louis-based Maronite Eparchy of Our Lady of Lebanon of Los Angeles.

He added, “Let us all join in prayer that Our Lady of Coromoto, patroness of Venezuela, will comfort and protect her children and that compassionate international assistance will arrive swiftly.”

U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio, in a post on X, said: “The United States extends our deepest condolences to the people of Venezuela following the devastating earthquakes. Our hearts are with all those who have lost loved ones, those injured, and the courageous rescue workers working tirelessly in the aftermath.”

Rubio said the State Department “is immediately deploying search and rescue teams, medical resources, and humanitarian assistance to Venezuela.”

In Florida, Deacon Gustavo Adolfo Roversi, a Miami businessman and newly ordained member of the local clergy, is among the many Venezuelans living in the United States anxiously awaiting more information on the quakes’ impact on communities in their home country.

“As a matter of fact my wife happens to be (there now) — she is fine, thank God,” Deacon Roversi told the Florida Catholic, the news outlet of the Miami Archdiocese. “I have a family member, a first cousin, who is still unaccounted for. We pray it is because the phone system is down.”

A native of Valencia, Venezuela, which is among the many cities and towns also impacted by the earthquakes, Deacon Roversi went to college at the University of Kansas in the 1980s before returning to South America to help run the family paper products manufacturing business. They later expanded the business to Florida in the late 1990s

“I know that there are fatalities, but still unsure about the numbers,” the deacon added. “So far it is in the hundreds. I understand Colombia just sent rescue crews.”

 

June 29, 2026 

His Excellency, Bishop Joseph C. Bambera, announces the following appointments:

PASTORS:

Reverend David P. Cappelloni, from Pastor, Our Lady of Mount Carmel Parish, Dunmore, and Saints Anthony and Rocco Parish, Dunmore, to Pastor, newly consolidated parish, Saint John Paul II Parish, Dunmore, effective July 1, 2026.  Father Cappelloni will continue to serve as Director of Continuing Formation for Clergy.

Reverend Joseph P. Elston, V.F., from Pastor, Our Lady of the Eucharist Parish, Saint John the Evangelist Parish, and Saint Joseph Marello Parish, all located in Pittston, to Pastor, newly consolidated parish, Communion of Saints Parish, Pittston, effective July 1, 2026. Father Elston will continue to serve as Dean of the Pittston Deanery. 

Reverend Michael J. Kloton, from Pastor, Our Lady of the Immaculate Conception Parish, Freeland, and Administrator pro tem, Saint Patrick Parish, White Haven, to Pastor, newly consolidated parish, Our Lady of the Immaculate Conception Parish, Freeland, effective July 1, 2026. Father Kloton will continue to serve as Pastor, Good Shepherd Parish, Drums.

Reverend Edgar Ramirez, FSSP, from ministry within the Priestly Fraternity of Saint Peter, to Pastor, Saint Michael Parish, Scranton, effective July 1, 2026.

SACRAMENTAL MINISTER:

Reverend Peter J. O’Rourke, from Sacramental Minister, Saint Patrick Parish, White Haven, effective July 1, 2026.

 PAROCHIAL VICARS:

Reverend Anthony Dorsa, FSSP, from Pastor, Saint Michael Parish, Scranton, to Parochial Vicar, Saint Michael Parish, Scranton, effective July 1, 2026. Father Dorsa will continue as the Director of Fundraising Operations for the Priestly Fraternity of St Peter.

Reverend Thomas J. Dzwonczyk, S.T.L., from Parochial Vicar, Our Lady of Mt. Carmel Parish, Dunmore, and Saints Anthony and Rocco Parish, Dunmore, to Parochial Vicar, newly consolidated parish, Saint John Paul II Parish, Dunmore, effective July 1, 2026.

Reverend Matthew Kane, FSSP, from Parochial Vicar, Saint Michael Parish, Scranton, to ministry within the Priestly Fraternity of Saint Peter, effective July 1, 2026.

Reverend Jackson Pinhero, O.S.J., from Parochial Vicar, Our Lady of the Eucharist Parish, Saint John the Evangelist Parish, and Saint Joseph Marello Parish, all located in Pittston, to Parochial Vicar, newly consolidated parish, Communion of Saints Parish, Pittston, effective July 1, 2026.

Reverend Kenneth M. Seegar, to Senior Priest, newly consolidated parish, Our Lady of the Immaculate Conception Parish, Freeland, effective July 1, 2026. Father Seegar will continue to serve as Senior Priest, Good Shepherd Parish, Drums.

NEWLY ORDAINED:

Reverend Jan Carlo Perez, to Parochial Vicar, Our Lady Queen of Peace Parish, Brodheadsville, effective July 15, 2026.

DEACONS: 

Deacon Andrew A. Fazio, from diaconal ministry, Our Lady of Mt. Carmel Parish and Saints Anthony and Rocco Parish, Dunmore, to newly consolidated parish, Saint John Paul II Parish, Dunmore, effective July 1, 2026.

Deacon David E. Marx, from diaconal ministry, Our Lady of the Eucharist Parish, Saint John the Evangelist Parish, and Saint Joseph Marello Parish, all located in Pittston, to diaconal ministry, newly consolidated parish, Communion of Saints Parish, Pittston, effective July 1, 2026.

Deacon James M. Rebarchick, to diaconal Ministry, newly consolidated parish, Our Lady of the Immaculate Conception Parish, Freeland, effective July 1, 2026. Deacon Rebarchick will continue to serve as Deacon, Good Shepherd Parish, Drums.

 

SCRANTON – The Scranton Catholic Charismatic Conference will be held on July 31 and August 1 & 2, at the University of Scranton.

National and International speakers will be sharing the Word of God.

Contemporary music ministry from Baltimore will be joining us.

Mass is celebrated daily; Adoration and a service of prayer will be held on Saturday night.

More information and full weekend registrations are available at ccrscranton.org and day registrations are available all weekend at the John Long Center on campus.

Meals are also available for purchase on campus.

Bishop Bambera will be celebrating Mass on Sunday at 1:30 pm.

Call the CCR office (570-344-2214) for additional information.

All are welcome!