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A far-right, unofficial Catholic media website has agreed to pay $500,000 to a New Hampshire priest who sued for defamation over a 2019 article that it now disavows. The apology by Church Militant ...
The Church Militant site and its sleek newscasts have drawn a loyal following with a mix of fiercely right-wing politics and radically conservative Catholicism in which many of America’s bishops ...
The Church Militant is not a Church apostolate according to a June 2020 press statement by the Archdiocese of Detroit: [9] "During the late afternoon hours of June 11, 2020, the Archdiocese of Detroit was made aware that Church Militant, an organization located in southeast Michigan, published racist and derogatory language in reference to the Archbishop of Washington D.C., Wilton D. Gregory.
In 2011 the Catholic News Agency reported that St. Michael's Media was accepting donations, despite not being having been registered as a nonprofit since 2009. [11] Church Militant rejected the archdiocese's claims of disobedience and published an article detailing the apostolate's relationship with the archdiocese and the origins of the notice.
Jul. 5—CONCORD — A federal judge has allowed a high-ranking Catholic priest in New Hampshire to add a canon lawyer from Wisconsin to his defamation case against a right-wing Catholic website.
Allan Dos Santos converted to Roman Catholicism from a Baptist Protestant denomination, having become a seminarian at the Maria Mater Ecclesiae Seminary in Brazil. After graduating, in the 2000s, he joined the Priestly Fraternity of Saint Peter, having served this group in the United States, where he worked as a journalist for the Catholic news portal Church Militant, based in the State of ...
Harry R. Jackson Jr. (February 4, 1953 – November 9, 2020) was an American Christian pastor, Pentecostal bishop, and author who served as the senior pastor at Hope Christian Church in Beltsville, Maryland, and served as the presiding bishop of the International Communion of Evangelical Churches.
In 1977, a group of SSPX priests and laypeople led by Monsignor François Ducaud-Bourget entered the parish Church of Saint Nicolas du Chardonnet in central Paris and celebrated Mass. They subsequently refused to leave, and the church remains in the possession of the SSPX to this day.