The mere act of lifting the dispensation from the Sunday Mass obligation as the pandemic eases won't be enough to revive attendance, and some dioceses and Catholics are actively working to bring people back.
Catholic immigration advocates are urging Congress and President Joe Biden to speed up legislation to protect immigrants after a federal judge ruled July 16 to end a program that prevents the deportation of thousands of immigrants brought into the U.S. illegally as children.
The Australian Catholic Anti-Slavery Network's Compendium of Modern Slavery Statements 2020 has been uploaded to the National Public Register, effectively making the document a model for businesses and organizations.
Los Angeles Archbishop José Gomez, president of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, encouraged his brother bishops "to work with care, patience, justice and charity" as "these new norms are implemented ... (and) as together we foster a eucharistic renewal in our nation."
Pope Francis offered prayers and expressed his closeness with the people of Germany after severe flooding in the western part of the country claimed the lives of at least 100 people.
A Vatican prosecutor requested that Fr. Gabriele Martinelli, who is accused of sexually abusing a younger student at the St. Pius X Pre-Seminary, be sentenced to six years in prison if convicted.
The Vatican's financial watchdog agency said that in 2020 more financial transactions were flagged as suspicious by Vatican offices, but after investigation it did not have to suspend any transactions or freeze any accounts.
The Cuban bishops' conference called on the island's government and protesters to "listen to each other" and avoid violence as the country reels from demonstrations sparked by food shortages, power outages and worsening economic conditions.
Immigrant advocates, including Catholic organizations, launched a campaign July 13 to provide legal aid those who may need it, in case Congress, under the Biden administration, approves some type of reform.
U.S. theologians and human rights experts on Cuba worried that any repeat of the widespread protests in Cuba on July 11 may be met with a swift, violent set of state-sponsored reactions.
The Buffalo Diocese said July 13 it has been notified of an allegation of abuse made against now-retired Auxiliary Bishop Edward Grosz by an individual who claims he was abused as a child in 1990 by the bishop.
Four Cuban American bishops called on the international community to provide humanitarian aid to the people of Cuba and expressed solidarity with them following protests that erupted on the island nation starting July 11.
A new PRRI report examined the U.S. religious landscape, and declared that "the most substantial cultural and political divides are between white Christians and Christians of color."
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement announced July 9 it would not detain, arrest or take into custody pregnant or nursing migrants for violating immigration laws except in exceptional circumstances.
The Christian Liberation Movement in Cuba has called on people to continue to pressure communist authorities to hold a general election. The country has seen demonstrations in its major cities joined by thousands of people to protest the unprecedented scarcity of essentials and the rising death toll caused by COVID-19.
Cardinal Laurent Monsengwo Pasinya, retired archbishop of Kinshasa, died July 11 near Paris where he had been rushed for medical care. Monsengwo was one of the original members of Pope Francis' Council of Cardinals.