Lord we pray "Help me to continually increase parish vitality and reflect the presence of Christ in the world."

Browsing News Entries

Browsing News Entries

In the world's prolonged Lent, the Lord prepares his Easter, Pope preaches as Monaco visit ends (CWN)

Pope Leo XIV celebrated an outdoor Mass this afternoon in Monaco’s Stade Louis II (video) and preached that “in the world’s prolonged Lent, when evil rages and idolatry makes hearts indifferent, the Lord prepares his Easter.”

Bishop Wilmer to lead Germany's largest diocese (Vatican Press Office)

Pope Leo XIV appointed Bishop Heinrich Wilmer, S.C.J., as bishop of Münster, Germany’s most populous diocese.

A proponent of changes to Catholic teaching on sexual morality, Bishop Wilmer was once rumored to be under serious consideration for appointment as prefect of the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith. He was elected chairman of the German Bishops’ Conference last month.

The appointment of the Münster bishop is governed by the Prussian Concordat (1929). The Pillar explained:

Under the concordat, members of the cathedral chapter compile a list of candidates that is submitted to the Vatican via the nuncio. After the Vatican sends back a list of three names, the cathedral chapter’s 16 voting members choose the next Bishop of Münster.

Full Text: Mother Angelica’s 10th Anniversary Mass

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Imitate the faith, charity of St. Devota and St. Carlo Acutis, Pope tells Monaco's young people (CWN)

Pope Leo encouraged Monaco’s young people to look to St. Devota and St. Carlo Acutis as examples of faith and charity.

Mar. 28 Saturday of the Fifth Week of Lent, Weekday

The curtain is about to go up on the tumultuous events of Holy Week. This Mass reminds us of the meaning of those events. The plan to kill Jesus is approved and justified. It means the birth of a New Covenant, the New Testament. And in a sense we are there. --The Vatican II Weekday Missal

In Holy Week, Life’s Indignities Reveal Our Eternal Dignity

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Welcoming New Catholics

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Vandals set fire to Louisiana chapel (KNOE-TV)

Vandals stole items from, and set fire to, St. John Chapel in Columbia, Louisiana.

“Initial assessments indicate that portions of the church were desecrated in the incident,” the Diocese of Alexandria said in a statement. “Local authorities have confirmed that suspects have been identified and arrested in connection with the crime.”

The United States Conference of Catholic Bishops has documented over 400 acts of vandalism, arson, and other destruction at parishes and other Catholic sites in the United States since 2020. A tracker at CatholicVote.org lists additional attacks.

Cardinal Coccopalmerio: Synodality entails shared governance, not simply collaboration (Vatican News (Italian))

Discussing his new book on synodality, the retired president of the Pontifical Council (now Dicastery) for Legislative Texts said that synodality consists not simply in collaboration between the clergy and the laity, but in shared governance.

Cardinal Francesco Coccopalmerio told Vatican News that just as it is unthinkable for a priest to leave his congregation and celebrate Mass alone in a crypt chapel, it should also be unthinkable for a parish priest to govern apart from the laity.

Synodality, he said, “consists in gathering, engaging in dialogue, discerning, and deciding upon the good of the Church—for instance, the good of a specific parish. These four activities, carried out jointly by pastors and the faithful, find their institutional home within structures of synodality—for example, in the case of a parish, within the parish pastoral council.”

Papal preacher devotes final Lenten sermon to freedom, sister death (CWN)

Father Roberto Pasolini, the Preacher of the Papal Household, devoted his fourth and final weekly Lenten sermon to “the freedom of God’s children: perfect joy and death as a sister” (full text, video).