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Browsing News Entries

Browsing News Entries

Excommunicated Poor Clares leave convent ahead of court-ordered eviction (Pillar)

Excommunicated Poor Clares have left their monastery in Belorado, Spain, ahead of their court-ordered eviction.

In 2024, the nuns signed a manifesto denouncing all of the popes since 1958 as heretics. They were subsequently declared excommunicated by the archbishop of Burgos.

Five nuns who did not sign the manifesto were transferred to other monasteries; they were between 86 and 100 years of age. Two of the signatories subsequently left the monastery and were reconciled with the Church.

Belgian religious leaders lament Iran war (Église catholique à Bruxelle)

The president of the Belgian Bishops’ Conference joined Orthodox, Protestant, Jewish, Muslim, and Buddhist leaders in lamenting the Iran war.

“Our thoughts are with all the innocent victims,” the religious leaders said in their March 10 statement. “Every human life deserves protection. Every human being deserves peace, no matter where they live in the world. We call on all parties to put an immediate end to the violence and to resolutely commit themselves to dialogue and respect for international law.”

“We refuse to allow this conflict to fracture our society,” they continued. “This war must not be imported into our country. It is up to us to face them up to them and to preserve what makes our country strong: a democratic coexistence based on respect for convictions.”

The leader of “organized secularism” in Belgium joined the religious leaders in their appeal.

Nuncio, bishops attend slain Maronite priest's funeral Mass (CWN)

The apostolic nuncio to Lebanon joined two other prelates at the funeral Mass of Father Pierre el-Raï.

Liège bishop expresses 'profound solidarity' with Jewish community following synagogue blast (Cathobel)

The bishop of Liège, Belgium, expressed “profound solidarity” with the local Jewish community following a March 9 explosion near the synagogue there.

Bishop Jean-Pierre Delville said that “synagogues, churches, mosques and all spaces of prayer must always remain places of contemplation, peace and security for those who gather there.”

The conflict in the Middle East must “in no way disturb the fraternal relations that exist between citizens of all convictions in our country,” he added. “Jews, Christians and Muslims are heirs to the same spiritual tradition that calls us to peace, respect and love of neighbor.”

Leading Australian prelate calls for peace in Middle East (Australian Catholic Bishops Conference )

The president of the Australian Catholic Bishops Conference called for peace in the Middle East.

“The Australian Catholic Bishops Conference joins Pope Leo XIV and many world leaders in expressing deep alarm at the escalating violence now engulfing the Middle East,” said Archbishop Timothy Costelloe, S.D.B., the conference’s president. “The loss of life and the fear and uncertainty experienced by ordinary people and the destabilization of an already fragile region weigh heavily on our hearts.”

He added:

Above all, we pray for the innocent: for those already killed, for the injured and traumatized, for families separated or displaced and for communities living in fear. We pray too for leaders at every level: that their decisions be grounded in respect for human dignity, the common good and solidarity with the suffering.

We ask all people of faith and goodwill in Australia to join us in praying for peace and the healing of a region that has suffered too much for too long.

Arson attacks target two Irish churches (Irish Catholic)

An arsonist (or arsonists) set fire to two Catholic churches in County Westmeath, Ireland, on March 6.

Quick action prevented the fires at St. James’ Church in Kilbeggan and St. Michael’s Parish Church in Castletown Geoghegan from spreading throughout the buildings.

Cardinal Parolin: Love young people and invest time in them (Vatican News)

Cardinal Pietro Parolin, the Secretary of State of His Holiness, spoke of the importance of loving young people and investing them in them.

“Someone should love them freely” and introduce them to “a God who does not demand perfection, but loves and values us beyond what we achieve,” Cardinal Parolin said at a conference in Sacrofano, Italy, on March 10.

The prelate spoke about young people of the West who are isolated on their phones and fear having children because they view them as a burden; young people of Africa who fall prey to extremists when they lack educational and work opportunities; and young migrants who are not integrated into their new societies.

Cardinal Mathieu meets with Pope following evacuation from Tehran (OSV News)

Pope Leo XIV received Cardinal Dominique Mathieu, O.F.M. Conv., on March 11.

The Belgian priest was appointed the Latin-rite archbishop of Tehran-Ispahan, Iran, in 2021 and created a cardinal in 2024. He left Iran with Italian embassy staff and arrived in Rome on March 8.

Vatican study center launches global alliance for ecological conversion (Vatican News (Italian))

The Laudato Si’ Higher Educational Center, led by Cardinal Fabio Baggio, launched a global alliance for ecological conversion at a March 9-10 conference at Borgo Laudato Si’ in Castel Gandolfo.

At the conference, co-sponsored by the University of Notre Dame, “we had about 90 representatives from 60 universities around the world, many of them Catholic,” said Cardinal Baggio. Under the alliance, his center will “commit to producing more research and disseminating awareness about the ecological conversion.”

“This enthusiasm, obviously, must now be shaped into clear objectives through group work that will continue after this conference,” he added. “We want to initiate a collaborative process between the various research centers and institutions.”

Laudato Si’ is the name of Pope Francis’s second encyclical, issued in 2015 and devoted to care for our common home.

Pontifical Academy for Life launches Scientists for Peace (Dicastery for Promoting Integral Human Development)

The Pontifical Academy for Life, in collaboration with the Dicastery for Promoting Integral Human Development, has launched Scientists for Peace, the dicastery announced on March 11.

“At a time when the language of war and the unleashing of violence are taking on a tragic global significance, which also limits scientific research, scientists and academics are called upon to speak out for peace and to commit themselves to finding ways of reconciling and resolving conflicts, starting from the daily practice of their research,” the dicastery stated in its announcement.