Calgary pastor Derek Reimer was ordered to write an apology letter after protesting at the drag queen story hour but said to be sorry means you admit you're wrong.

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"hoc facite in meam commemorationem." Lucas 22:19
Calgary pastor Derek Reimer was ordered to write an apology letter after protesting at the drag queen story hour but said to be sorry means you admit you're wrong.

From Multiclassing Cleric @lukei4655 on Twitter:
“Folk, stop using passive language in the Confessional. You didn’t ‘fall into’ a sin. You chose it. ‘Struggling with’ something is not the same as choosing it. Only what you choose is a sin. Own the wrong and then cast it at the foot of the Cross.”
When people tell me they’re afraid of dying without absolution, my next question is, “Why weren’t you afraid of dying between the time you committed the sin, which is the reason why we need absolution in the first place, and getting absolution in sacramental confession?”
When we have begun to believe the lie that sin is only “something that happens to us” we can begin to also believe the lie that absolution is something that can happen to us without renouncing the sin we’ve confessed by a firm purpose of amendment borne out through steadfastly avoiding the near occasions of that sin in future.

By Catholics for Catholics
“Pope Leo XIV’s message of hope, compassion, unity, and peace resonates with Illinoisans of all faiths and traditions,” Illinois Governor JB Pritzker wrote just a few weeks ago after meeting with the Chicago-born pope at the Vatican. Now Pritzker has selected December 12, the Feast of Our Lady of Guadalupe, to sign an assisted suicide bill into law.
Against the objections of disability rights groups and religious leaders, Governor Pritzker is signing SB 1950, or the “End-of-Life Options for Terminally Ill Patients Act,” into law. The bill legalizes assisted suicide and allows patients to self-administer life-ending medication with the review of two physicians and two witnesses. In the Senate, which voted 30-27 to pass the bill, every “yes” vote came from a Democrat and eight Democrats joined the remaining 19 Republicans to vote against the measure.

Kerala state Law Minister P. Rajeeve and Revenue Minister K. Rajan offer lemon juice to protest leader Benny Joseph on Nov. 30 to formally end a relay hunger strike on its 414th day after a state court temporarily restored land rights that were stripped nearly five years ago after a Muslim charitable body laid claim to their coastal village. (Photo: supplied)
The dispute escalated after the Revenue Department, in January 2022, stopped accepting land tax payments, citing the Waqf Board’s claim.
The board claimed some 163 hectares (404 acres) of land in the village was waqf, property gifted for charity, which under Islamic Sharia law is a permanent dedication that cannot be further gifted, inherited, sold or otherwise alienated.
“One hundred of the 265 students and staff members kidnapped on November 21, 2025, at St. Mary's School in Papiri, Nigeria, have been released after more than two weeks in the hands of their captors, reports @acs_italia. 165 remain prisoners.”
Source: @matteomatzuzzi on Twitter
The afternoon that 15-year-old Bryce Tate was sextorted started off as a perfectly normal Thursday.
The Cross Lanes, W. Va., sophomore came home from the gym on Nov. 6, scarfed down a plate of tacos prepared by his mom, then went outside to shoot hoops. At 4:37 p.m., he received a text message from a strange number.
Three hours later, Bryce was found in his dad’s man cave — dead from a self-inflicted gunshot wound.i
“They say it’s suicide, but in my book it is 100% murder,” Bryce’s father, Adam Tate, told The Post. “They’re godless demons, in my opinion. Just cowards, awful individuals, worse than criminals.”
According to his dad, Bryce was apparently the latest victim of a vicious sextortion scheme targeting teen boys — one that law enforcement says is surging.
A representative for the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children told The Post the group tracked over 33,000 reports of child sextortion in 2024 alone — with nearly that number reported in the first six months of this year.
Online scammers scour public social media profiles to learn about a teen, then pose as a flirtatious peer.
“They acted like a local 17-year-old girl. They knew which gym he worked out at, they knew a couple of his best friends and name-dropped them. They knew he played basketball for Nitro High School,” Adam said. “They built his trust to where he believed that this was truly somebody in this area.”
The Post is told that the photos Bryce received were not AI-generated but most likely of a real girl who was another victim.
Scammers then ask for illicit photos in return and, once they have them, extort the victim for money by threatening to show the pics to family and friends.
More: https://x.com/marshablackburn/status/1998506793769529859?s=46&t=IydJ-X8H6c0NM044nYKQ0w
Priestly fraternity and lay support are of vital importance. How can we do better?

When Toby — not his real name — approached the altar during his ordination Mass roughly a decade ago, he was understandably nervous — perhaps much more so than the average ordinand.
Despite growing up Catholic, loving his faith, and enjoying constant encouragement throughout his seminary experience, Toby had nevertheless been harboring serious doubts about whether he could truly say “Yes” to priesthood. But he says expectations from family, supporters and the seminary itself created a situation where he felt it impossible to step back from ordination.
Though he immediately felt deeply insecure in the priesthood, Toby, on the advice of an older priest, decided to take his best swing at parish ministry.
“By Christmas, I was on the edge of a nervous breakdown,” Toby recalled.
“I was trying to do something wholeheartedly and properly and conscientiously, and my heart wasn’t there. Especially, saying Mass became very painful. It was this experience of this chasm between what I was doing and where I was [mentally].”
Toby requested laicization just months after his ordination day. He told the Register he had always harbored a strong attraction to marriage; he’s happily married today.
To be sure, Toby spent significantly less time ministering as a priest than most ordained men. But the phenomenon of men leaving the priesthood in short order — for reasons that have nothing to do with misconduct or scandal — are more common than you might think.
More: https://www.ncregister.com/news/why-are-priests-leaving-ministry-burnout-isolation