Pope Leo XIV extolled the work of the Knights of Columbus in a prerecorded message for the Catholic fraternal organization’s 143rd Supreme Convention.
President Donald Trump’s administration may be walking back an earlier plan that would have required insurance companies to provide coverage for in vitro fertilization.
The proposed regulatory change, submitted by the Department of Veterans Affairs on Aug. 1, must undergo a 30-day public comment period before it can be adopted.
Theologians, historians, priests, and other Catholic scholars extol the contributions to theology, philosophy, and education of the Church’s newest doctor, St. John Henry Newman.
A former county clerk in Kentucky who made headlines in 2015 for refusing to issue marriage licenses to same-sex couples is again asking the Supreme Court to hear her case.
The Department of Homeland Security in January rescinded previous guidelines that had prevented ICE agents from conducting immigration arrests at churches.
U.S. President Donald Trump’s administration has issued new guidance to safeguard the right of federal employees to express their religion in the workplace.
The One Big Beautiful Bill Act included a one-year freeze on some abortion facilities receiving Medicaid reimbursements for non-abortive services.
More than two dozen Planned Parenthood facilities are shutting down after new federal rules prevent the organization from being reimbursed by Medicaid and Medicare.
A federal appeals court ruled that Oregon likely violated an adoptive Christian mother’s First Amendment rights by demanding she affirm gender ideology.
Hospital systems and individual hospitals in several states have announced changes in how they treat children who believe they are the opposite sex.
According to the report, the Richmond FBI investigated the priest’s background, monitored his travel plans, and looked into his credit card information.
On July 21, 1925 — a century ago today — substitute teacher John T. Scopes was found guilty of violating a state ban on teaching evolution in schools.
The USCCB is asking a federal district court to block the government from enforcing any portion of an abortion “accommodation” rule against them.
Archbishop Thomas Wenski argued that the U.S. “faces labor shortages in many industries” and “removing immigrant workers will only exacerbate these shortages.”
In 2025, lawmakers in several states introduced resolutions that urged the Supreme Court to overturn the 2015 ruling in Obergefell v. Hodges.
A circuit court blocked a West Virginia agency from awarding a $5 million grant to St. Joseph the Worker, an Ohio-based Catholic trade college.
USCCB Director of Public Affairs Chieko Noguchi released a statement to announce that the Church will not endorse political candidates, even if the tax code allows it.
The Founding Freedoms Law Center, which represented two Christian counselors in court, called the agreement a “major victory."
The court order partially halts a provision in the One Big Beautiful Bill Act that would have cut off Medicaid reimbursements for organizations that perform abortions.