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Browsing News Entries

Browsing News Entries

Nicaraguan regime bans ordinations in four dioceses (The Tablet)

The regime of Nicaraguan strongman Daniel Ortega has banned ordinations to the priesthood and diaconate in four of the nation’s nine dioceses.

The bishops of the four affected dioceses—Jinotega, Siuna, Matagalpa, and Estelí—are all in exile.

In Iceland, priest under police investigation for remarks on homosexuality (Zenit)

The chancellor of the Diocese of Reykjavík, Iceland, is under police investigation for remarks that he made about homosexuality.

Msgr. Jakob Rolland said on a radio program that “some individuals with same-sex attraction seek spiritual guidance within the Church, including those who wish to change aspects of their lives,” ZENIT News reported. “He emphasized that the Church does not engage in what are commonly termed ‘conversion therapies,’ but offers pastoral accompaniment through prayer, sacramental life, and personal dialogue.”

Police are investigating whether Msgr. Rolland’s remarks violate a 2023 law that criminalizes attempts to alter sexual orientation. Violators face up to three years in prison.

Pontifical commission president emphasizes importance of listening to abuse survivors (Vatican News)

As the Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors concluded its spring meeting, its president emphasized the importance of listening to survivors of sexual abuse.

Archbishop Thibault Verny of Chambéry, France, spoke of the “need for attentive listening” to abuse survivors, as well as “humility and shared responsibility” in assisting dioceses around the world.

US bishops back commission on Indian boarding schools (USCCB)

In letters to members of House of Representatives and the Senate, the chairmen of four committees and subcommittees of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops lent their support to Truth and Healing Commission on Indian Boarding School Policies Act.

“The forced removal of children from their tribal lands and communities as part of federal boarding school policies was a moral failure that disregarded the unique culture and dignity of Indigenous peoples,” the bishops wrote. “Accounts from this era illustrate lasting trauma among those who were involuntarily brought to these schools.”

“As we continue to encourage greater access to and understanding of this painful history, the Catholic Church in the United States remains committed to transparency, to listening, and to humility,” the bishops added. “We remain dedicated to working with Native communities, government actors, and other religious traditions in efforts to bring about authentic healing and reconciliation.”

Leading Nigerian bishop issues goodwill message to Muslims (Nigeria Catholic Network)

The president of the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of Nigeria issued a goodwill message to Muslims for Eid al-Fitr, the festival that marks the end of Ramadan.

“Your discipline in fasting, prayer, and almsgiving stands as a compelling witness to faith, self-restraint, and devotion to God, offering a timely and much-needed example in a world often marked by excess, distraction, and division,” Archbishop Matthew Man-Oso Ndagoso of Kaduna wrote in his March 20 message.

Vatican launches campaign to encourage divestment from mining industries (AP)

The undersecretary of the Dicastery for Integral Human Development announced a campaign to encourage divestment from the mining industry.

“In many regions of the world, the expansion of the mining industry has generated profound social tensions and severe environmental impacts,” Cardinal Fabio Baggio, C.S., said at a press conference on March 20.

“We know that minerals are essential for numerous aspects of contemporary life,” he added. “However, we also know that, all too often, their extraction has been carried out without listening to local communities, without respecting the rights of indigenous peoples, and without regard for the limits of the ecosystems that sustain life.”

Vatican diplomat decries 'selective termination' of unborn children with Down syndrome (Holy See Mission)

Speaking at an event commemorating World Down Syndrome Day, a Vatican diplomat said that “discriminatory and eugenic practices linked to prenatal screening and the selective termination of pregnancies targeting babies diagnosed with Down syndrome must be firmly rejected.”

Archbishop Ettore Balestrero, apostolic nuncio and Permanent Observer to the United Nations and other international organizations in Geneva, Switzerland, said that “persons with Down syndrome are more than a diagnosis, more than a condition, and certainly more than the limits others may imagine.”

“All of them, like all of us, possess the same inherent dignity and sacred value, intentionally and lovingly imprinted by the Creator from the very first moment of conception,” he added. “Consequently, like everyone else, they hold the same fundamental rights.”

New president of Amazon ecclesial conference vows to promote Pope Francis's vision (Vatican News)

Cardinal Leonardo Steiner, O.F.M., of Manaus, Brazil, was elected to a four-year term as president of the Ecclesial Conference of the Amazon (CEAMA) at the body’s sixth general assembly.

Cardinal Steiner vowed “to give continuity to that dream of Pope Francis to go to the Churches of the Amazonia and to be an ecclesial Church. We want to carry forward that dream of Pope Francis, implementing especially the four dreams he addressed to us in Querida Amazonia,” the 2020 apostolic exhortation on the Amazon.

CEAMA is an ecclesial conference (rather than an episcopal conference), and non-bishops hold significant leadership roles. Accordingly, one of CEAMA’s four new vice presidents is a priest from Peru; one is an indigenous layman from Bolivia; one is a laywoman from Guyana; and one is a religious sister from Cardinal Steiner’s archdiocese.

Papal preacher devotes third Lenten sermon to evangelization (CWN)

Father Roberto Pasolini, the Preacher of the Papal Household, devoted his third weekly Lenten sermon to “The Mission: Proclaiming the Gospel to Every Creature” (full text, video).

Cardinal Parolin sees three 'defining traits' in Pope Leo's pontificate (L'Osservatore Romano (Italian))

Cardinal Pietro Parolin, the Secretary of State of His Holiness, said that he sees three “defining traits that are currently shaping” Pope Leo’s “style of governance.”

Speaking in the Chamber of Deputies of the Italian Parliament on the occasion of the presentation of a new book on the Pope, Cardinal Parolin listed the traits as “disarmed and disarming peace,” “unity in the Church,” and the Pope’s synodal style of listening.

Commenting on the Church’s unity, Cardinal Parolin said:

In Augustine’s time, it was the Donatists who caused division within the Church, for they considered themselves superior to others—the only ones who had remained faithful to the Gospel.

Today, different reasons drive many to divide the ecclesial body. On one side are those who, in the name of indiscriminate openness, risk compromising Tradition and reducing the Church to the ways of the world; on the other are those who, in the name of Tradition, reject all progress, reviving the image of a besieged fortress that pits the Church against the world.