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‘Pride Mass’ takes place in Washington, D.C., despite calls for cardinal to intervene

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‘Pride Mass’ takes place in Washington, D.C., despite calls for cardinal to intervene


The Mass took place despite calls for Gregory to cancel it, which gained considerable traction online.

A Catholic convert who struggles with same-sex attraction named Anna Katherine Howell, 31, led the call to stop the event.

According to Howell, “’Pride’ events sponsored and/or attended by Catholics are contrary to Catholic teaching, give scandal, and actually do harm to faithful, chaste Catholics with same-sex attraction who do not wish to celebrate or be identified by their worst impulses or past sins.”

Far from being loving, Howell told CNA that Pride Masses, which have been scheduled to take place in Pittsburgh, D.C., New York City, and Chicago this June, present a grave threat to both the Church and those who struggle with same-sex attraction.

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What same-sex attracted individuals need from the Church, Howell said, is “charity and clarity.”

“To affirm, turn a blind eye to, and certainly to celebrate evil is evil. We cannot be unclear or mushy about the fact that homosexual acts are inherently gravely sinful,” Howell said. 

“We have to be very clear that we love all human beings, that all human beings are called to Christ, to his Church,” Howell stated. “But from that love, we must then be exceptionally clear about God’s call to same-sex attracted people, which is just like his call to everyone, which is chastity, which is holiness, which is a life as a Catholic where we’re devoted to God, ordered toward flourishing, and ultimately ordered toward a full experience of God in the beatific vision.”

Though Howell said she estimated hundreds of others joined her call for Gregory to cancel the Mass, she said she never received a response. 

Neither Gregory nor the Archdiocese of Washington has issued any statement regarding the pride Mass.

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The archdiocese has not replied to CNA’s request for comment.

A similar event advertised as a “Pride Mass” at Pittsburgh’s Duquesne University on June 11 was canceled after the diocese’s bishop, David Zubik, disavowed the event in a letter sent to priests, deacons, and seminarians.

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“As [a] Church, we all have the responsibility to love those who have same-sex attraction. But at the same time, the Church cannot support behavior that goes against God’s law,” Zubik wrote, concluding that “given all that has transpired surrounding this event, I am asking that this gathering be canceled.”

Kevin Hayes, president of Catholics for Change in Our Church, one of the groups organizing the Pittsburgh event, decried the bishop’s letter, telling CNA his group “was sad, hurt, disappointed, and upset the Mass was canceled by Bishop Zubik.”

“While we understand there may have been some threats, we think it would have been more powerful to stand up in love and support having the Mass,” Hayes said.





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Washington

DeMatha’s Chase Lopez roars back as Stags secure WCAC track title

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DeMatha’s Chase Lopez roars back as Stags secure WCAC track title


DeMatha’s Chase Lopez has plenty of confidence when he’s within 25 meters of the lead entering the final lap. So when he fell just short of a comeback Friday, he and his coaches were surprised. But Lopez adjusted, notching come-from-behind wins — and setting meet records — in the 800 and 1,600 meters Saturday.



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Durand School students dance the night away at prom in Washington Township

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Durand School students dance the night away at prom in Washington Township


WASHINGTON TOWNSHIP, N.J. (CBS) — Students danced the night away at the Durand School prom on Friday night.

“We have been talking about this event for weeks now,” Durand School Principal Jennifer Amoroso said.

The special night at The Supper Club in Washington Township was filled with sparkles and snazzy suits.

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“We have quite a few dancers in here. We love to dance at Durand,” Amoroso said.

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One of them was Hayden Rossi, who said a 90s boy band inspired his look for the night.

“I look like the one from the Backstreet Boys, ‘I Want It That Way,’” Rossi said.

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Durand serves students with autism, learning and developmental disabilities. The students who attended the prom also got a full day of glam.

“We had haircuts. We had updos and then the students get to dress up and have that neurotypical event that they’re not used to having,” Amoroso said.

DJ Nick also had the whole room dancing and when it comes to song choice, he said he reads the room.

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“Depends on the crowd,” DJ Nick said.

Elizabeth Utvik said there’s nothing like watching her daughter smile.

“It is like nothing that you can honestly imagine. Not only that she gets to have a prom, but also that I get to be here,” Utvik said.

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“She got an updo in school, which she promptly took right out obviously. And the group home that my daughter lives in, they decorated it like you wouldn’t believe. They had a limo because they wanted a full prom experience,” Utvik said. 

While the students danced the night away, it was also a night to remember for their families, teachers and staffers.

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“It’s a whole family experience and they get to come out and they get to dance, they get to have amazing food and they get to have the best night ever. And look at the way they’re all dressed, they are having the best night of their lives,” said Rae Pastore, director of marketing and development.

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Durand said this is their second prom and since it was such a success, they are planning to have it year after year.

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China makes some of the hottest new EVs. Most aren’t sold in the U.S.

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China makes some of the hottest new EVs. Most aren’t sold in the U.S.


Chinese-made electric vehicles aren’t widely available yet in the United States — and may never be after the Biden administration moved to quadruple import tariffs on them, to 100 percent.

President Biden said the move was necessary to protect American workers and businesses after years of “unfair trade practices” by China that give the nation a dominant role in global manufacturing.



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