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  • US Catholic bishops vote to officially prohibit gender transition treatment at Catholic hospitals

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    U.S. Catholic bishops voted on Wednesday to officially declare a ban on gender transition treatment for transgender patients at Catholic hospitals.

    The bishops, gathered in a Baltimore hotel ballroom, overwhelmingly approved revisions to their directives for the thousands of Catholic health care institutions and providers in the country, formalizing a yearslong process for the U.S. church to address transgender treatment options.

    Bishops will have autonomy in putting the new directives into law for their dioceses.

    More than one in seven patients in the U.S. are treated each day at Catholic hospitals, according to the Catholic Health Association. In some areas, Catholic hospitals are the only medical centers available.

    APPEALS COURT ALLOWS ARKANSAS’ FIRST-IN-THE-NATION BAN ON GENDER TRANSITION CARE FOR MINORS TO BE ENFORCED

    Rev. Michael J.K. Fuller, Archbishop Timothy Broglio and Archbishop William Lori of Baltimore conduct the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops plenary assembly in Baltimore, Tuesday, Nov. 11, 2025. (AP)

    Most Catholic health care institutions have not offered gender transition treatment, including hormonal, psychological and surgical treatments.

    “With regard to the gender ideology, I think it’s very important the church makes a strong statement here,” Bishop Robert Barron of Minnesota’s Winona-Rochester diocese said during the public discussion of the revised directives.

    The Catholic Health Association thanked the bishops for incorporating much of its feedback into the new directives.

    “Catholic providers will continue to welcome those who seek medical care from us and identify as transgender,” the organization said in a statement. “We will continue to treat these individuals with dignity and respect, which is consistent with Catholic social teaching and our moral obligation to serve everyone, particularly those who are marginalized.”

    The new directives incorporate earlier documents on gender identity from the Vatican last year and the U.S. bishops the year before.

    In the 2023 doctrinal note titled “Moral Limits to the Technological Manipulation of the Human Body,” the bishops stated that “Catholic health care services must not perform interventions, whether surgical or chemical, that aim to transform the sexual characteristics of a human body into those of the opposite sex, or take part in the development of such procedures.”

    But some parishes and priests welcome transgender Catholics, while others are less accepting.

    SUPREME COURT TO DECIDE IF FAITH-BASED COUNSELING ON GENDER IDENTITY IS PROTECTED SPEECH

    Bishop Robert Barron

    Bishop Robert Barron of Minnesota’s Winona-Rochester diocese said it was “very important” the church make a strong statement on gender identity. (Getty Images)

    “Catholic teaching upholds the invaluable dignity of every human life, and for many trans people, gender-affirming care is what makes life livable,” said Michael Sennett, a transgender man who is active in his Massachusetts parish and serves on the board of New Ways Ministry, which advocates for LGBTQ+ inclusion in the Catholic Church.

    New Ways Ministry arranged a meeting last year with the late Pope Francis to discuss gender transition treatment.

    The group’s executive director, Francis DeBernardo, said that for many transgender Catholics he has spoken to, “the transition process was not just a biological necessity, but a spiritual imperative,” adding: “That if they were going to be living as authentic people in the way that they believe God made them, then transition becomes a necessary thing.”

    Also on Wednesday, as U.S. Catholic bishops were discussing gender identity, the heads of several progressive religious denominations issued a statement in support of transgender people.

    “During a time when our country is placing their lives under increasingly serious threat, there is a disgraceful misconception that all people of faith do not affirm the full spectrum of gender – a great many of us do. Let it be known instead that our beloveds are created in the image of God – Holy and whole,” reads the statement from the 10 signers, including the heads of the Unitarian Universalist Association, the Episcopal Church, the Union for Reform Judaism and the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.).

    In addition to the Catholic bishops’ discussion on gender identity, they overwhelmingly approved a “special message” condemning the Trump administration’s immigration agenda.

    Catholic leaders have criticized the president’s mass deportation agenda, as fear of immigration raids has slashed Mass attendance at some parishes.

    The federal government earlier this year reversed a Biden administration directive for immigration agents not to carry out enforcement operations at sensitive areas such as churches and hospitals.

    Intersex and trans pride flags

    Most Catholic health care institutions have not offered gender transition treatment, including hormonal, psychological and surgical treatments. (Mike Kemp/In Pictures via Getty Images))

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    “We are disturbed when we see among our people a climate of fear and anxiety around questions of profiling and immigration enforcement,” the bishops’ statement on Wednesday reads. “We are saddened by the state of contemporary debate and the vilification of immigrants. We are concerned about the conditions in detention centers and the lack of access to pastoral care.”

    Several bishops also stood up to speak in favor of the statement during the final afternoon discussion.

    Chicago Cardinal Blase Cupich even recommended stronger language around mass deportation, and his fellow bishops agreed.

    “That seems to be the central issue we are facing with our people at this time,” he said.

    The updated text now affirms that U.S. Catholic bishops “oppose the indiscriminate mass deportation of people.”

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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  • Erika Kirk delivers raw, faith-filled tribute to late husband at Ole Miss: ‘I slept on his side of the bed’

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    Erika Kirk walked onto the stage at the University of Mississippi (Ole Miss) Wednesday night to a packed house for her first Turning Point USA campus appearance since the murder of her husband, Charlie Kirk.

    “It’s hard not to cry after watching,” she said of the video tribute that played before she took the microphone. “I haven’t seen that… that video since that day happened.”

    “Being on campus right now for me is a spiritual reclaiming of territory,” she said. “There is a lot of symbolism in today. It’s Wednesday, seven weeks. And the more that I am coming to grips with the permanency of this nightmare, the more that I am starting to realize and witness that the enemy, he doesn’t want you.”

    He wants your territory. He wants your influence. And I could just hear Charlie in my heart. I could hear him say, ‘Go reclaim that territory, babe. Go — the battles that God’s love conquers.’ And that’s why I’m here today,” she added.

    TURNING POINT USA ELECTS ERIKA KIRK AS NEW CEO, CHAIR OF THE BOARD FOLLOWING CHARLIE KIRK’S ASSASSINATION

    Erika Kirk speaks during a “This Is the Turning Point” campus tour event at the University of Mississippi, in Oxford, Miss., Wednesday. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert)

    Erika thanked the students who filled the arena, many wearing ‘Freedom’ T-shirts like the one she wore at the podium. “You have no idea how helpful it is to have all of you in my life, because you help me feel even more deeply connected to my husband,” she told them.

    She recalled how Charlie made a point at every Turning Point USA event to stop and talk with student leaders. “He would ask you what your name is, what you’re studying, what issues are going on on campus,” she said. “He wanted you to know he was investing in you: into your chapter, into your school. That was a pulse point for him.”

    “Earn your voice,” she urged. “You are the courageous generation. That’s what you are. All of you, Gen Z, you are the courageous generation. Make him proud.”

    WHO IS ERIKA KIRK?: WHAT TO KNOW ABOUT THE LATE CHARLIE KIRK’S WIDOW FROM THEIR LOVE STORY TO HIS LEGACY

    Erika Kirk speaks at Ole Miss TPUSA event

    Erika Kirk, Charlie Kirk’s widow, speaks during a Turning Point USA event where Vice President JD Vance also spoke at the University of Mississippi, in Oxford, Miss., Wednesday. (Jonathan Ernst/Pool/AFP via Getty Images)

    “I lost my friend. I lost my best friend,” she said. “If you’re nervous about standing up for the truth, the murder of my husband puts into perspective all those fears. My husband never went with the flow. He believed the harder path was always the right one, because comfort doesn’t change the world.”

    She shared for the first time with the audience present that for weeks after Charlie’s murder she avoided their bedroom at home.

    “It took me a while to even just make it back into our bedroom,” she said. “I used to sprint from the opening door into the bathroom and sprint out. I was not ready to walk into our bedroom yet, and when I was finally able to sleep in our bed for the first time, I slept on his side of the bed.”

    ERIKA KIRK SAYS LATE HUSBAND’S DEATH SPARKED ‘REVIVAL’ AT ARIZONA MEMORIAL 

    Students in line to ask Vice President JD Vance questions during Ole Miss TPUSA event

    Attendees listen as Vice President JD Vance speaks during a “This Is the Turning Point” campus tour event at Ole Miss, in Oxford, Miss., Wednesday. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert)

    From that spot, she said, she finally saw what Charlie saw every morning, the framed words on the wall: “They will be known by the boldness of their faith.”

    “He saw that every single morning he woke up,” Erika said. “I didn’t, because I was on the other side, facing the window. But from his side, that’s what he saw first.”

    On his desk, she added, were three questions Charlie had written out and asked himself each day: “What is something I can do for someone today? What is something I can do to add value to the world today? How can I honor God today?”

    “Those were his action points for courage,” Erika said. “Ask yourself those questions every day, and I promise you, you will get courage. What death amplifies even more is that you only get one life. So live like it matters.”

    Love your family fearlessly. Love your spouse fearlessly. Love this country,” she said. “Defend her and serve our God. And don’t think that it’s someone else’s role to do it. You do it. You do it.” The audience broke into applause.

    “This moment can either be your breaking point or your wake-up call,” she said. “Essentially, your turning point.”

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    She then introduced Vice President JD Vance, a friend of her late husband, calling him someone who “understands the fight that we’re up against and can articulate that in a way that transcends race and background.”

    “There will never be another Charlie,” she said, “but I know he’d be proud to see us here tonight.”

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