United States

U.S. bishops issue updated texts on the political responsibility of Catholics

In the new introductory note to the document "Forming Consciences for Faithful Citizenship," on the political responsibility of Catholics, the U.S. bishops state that their task in this area is to help the laity form their consciences, but not to tell them who to vote for.

Gonzalo Meza-November 17, 2023-Reading time: 2 minutes

On November 16, the plenary assembly of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB). Over the course of four days, the bishops discussed topics that will set the guidelines for the country's pastoral action in the coming years, among them: the Synod of Bishops (2021-2024), the Eucharistic Renaissance initiative and its national congress in 2024 in Indiana. Also, in view of the 2024 election year, the prelates also approved a new introductory note and various materials on the political responsibility of Catholics. Next year, the U.S. will elect a president, renew the entire House of Representatives, as well as 37 of the 100 U.S. senators.

In the new introductory note to the document "Forming Consciences for Faithful Citizenship," on the political responsibility of Catholics, the North American bishops affirm that their task in this area is to help the laity form their consciences, but not to tell them for whom to vote: "In these often complex matters, it is the responsibility of the laity to form their consciences and to grow in the virtue of prudence in order to approach the various issues with the mind of Christ," they clarify.

They further state that it is the responsibility of all to learn and deepen their knowledge of the teachings of the Church and tradition, to refer to reliable sources and on that basis to make wise decisions about candidates and government actions. The teachings of the Church, the text indicates, offer a vision of hope, justice and mercy.

In the document, the bishops recognize that the electoral seasons in the country represent a time of anxiety and trial because "the electoral rhetoric is increasingly aggressive, seeking to motivate hatred and division. Demonizing the other can win votes. For many American Catholics the abortion represents the only issue that defines their support for one party or another.

In light of this, the U.S. bishops point out that while the threat of abortion is "our preeminent priority" because it attacks the most vulnerable, there are also other serious threats to the life and dignity of the human person, including: euthanasia, gun violence, terrorism, the death penalty and human trafficking, the redefinition of marriage and gender, the deprivation of justice for the poor, the suffering of migrants and refugees, wars, famines, racism and the environment. "All these issues also threaten the dignity of the human person," the bishops specify.

In addition to this new introduction, this fall assembly approved a video on the political responsibility of Catholics, as well as a series of formative materials to be published in the parish bulletins of the country and disseminated in other media of the dioceses. The texts address five themes related to elections and politics, among them: "the role of the Church in public life", "the dignity of the human person", "the common good", "solidarity" and "subsidiarity".

The video features the bishops exhorting lay Catholics to behave in public and political life like the Good Samaritan, to be responsible citizens informed and formed according to the mind of Christ, so that "leaving behind all bitterness, passion and anger they can vote as faithful citizens." The document "Forming Consciences for Faithful Citizenship" was first published in 2007 and is updated every four years, prior to each presidential election. The updated 2023 text will be posted on the USCCB website in the coming weeks.

Culture

Enrique García MáiquezThe following is a quote: "Laughing at the jokes of Providence is already praying".

The poet and essayist will open the eleventh edition of the St. Josemaría Symposium in Jaén on Friday, November 17, with a talk on "St. Josemaría, Witness to the Power of Friendship.

Maria José Atienza-November 17, 2023-Reading time: 3 minutes

Enrique García Máiquez is a native of Murcia, where he was born in 1969, but it is in Puerto de Santa María (Cádiz) where he writes to life. Recently awarded with the I Essay Award Sapientia CordisGarcía Máiquez, a married father of two children, will deliver the inaugural lecture of the 11th edition of CEU Ediciones. St. Josemaría Symposium which will be held on November 17 and 18 at the Palacio de Congresos de Jaén.

Under the title "The Power of Friendship", this symposium will reflect, during these days, on the nature of friendship, its necessity for life or the different friendships of people, and people with God.

García Máiquez, a renowned poet and essayist, is also a contributor to various media and, in his writings, his mastery of language and fine humor are elegantly intertwined. For him, friendship in St. Josemaría is one of the key characteristics of the founder of the Opus Dei.

His lecture will speak about St. Josemaría as a witness What episodes in the life of St. Josemaría stand out as key to his relationship with his friends? 

-He was very impressed by the diversity and variety of his friends. He never invited some of his closest friends to join the Work, because his fatherhood was one thing and his friendship another. He was deeply concerned about everyone.

It is striking that his friends spoke of the time he dedicated to them, although he was, naturally, a man with very little time and a great urgency for souls. It is also very nice and natural that some of his friendships were family friendships, such as with the Cremades or the Giménez Arnau family. The children, as it usually happens, inherited the friendship of their fathers with the Father.

St. Josemaría encouraged us to speak of God to our friends and to speak to God about our friends. Do we too often forget to keep a balance between these two legs for some reason? That is to say, are we either the nags who only give you spiritual advice or the "quiet ones" who pray a lot and speak little?

-Of course! Balance is always the most difficult thing to maintain, largely because there is only one balanced posture while the angles of deviation are very numerous and surround us from all sides.

In this particular case, it is comforting that, as God always hears us, he also participates (two who meet in his name) in conversations with friends.

"Neither plasta nor mute" is a great motto, thank you very much.

In his book, The Grace of Christ Should we joke more with God, as we do with our friends? Is it difficult for us to take this step from humor to love?  

-Isabel Sánchez Romero, who will close the symposium, has seen this very well. In a recent interview she said that St. Josemaría's way of being was like that of Jesus Christ: "friendly and fun-loving. 

When I read the Gospels looking for traces of Jesus' humor I was surprised at how much he liked to tease his disciples: he pretends to walk by, laughs up a storm, sends them on slightly outlandish errands, tells them to take the coin out of the mouth of the first fish they catch, etc.

Also in the prayer he asks them very jokingly "who do you say that I am", to laugh at the nonsense. It is continuous. In the same way, Providence, even if we are not very attentive, plays with us. To laugh at their jokes is already to pray.

Does today's society suffer from lack of friendship (bene - volentis) true? 

-I will say in my lecture at the symposium that friendship as proposed to us by St. Josemaría is very countercultural, very contra mundumprecisely because it is the true one, which demands time, attention, excess in dedication and sacrifice. 

As in all other dimensions of postmodern life, we are accustomed to the disposable friend, to the consumerism of friendship, to the Facebook "friend" or similar. And that -which is fine in its own way- is not friendship.

History is full of "saintly" friends: from Philip and Bartholomew, to St. Ignatius of Loyola and St. Francis Xavier, St. Clare and St. Francis, or St. Josemaría and Blessed Alvaro. Is true friendship the path to sanctification?

Saint Josemaría Escrivá and Blessed Alvaro del Portillo

-A beautiful observation. True friendship, as Aristotle and Plato, also friends, saw, demands virtuous people who want the good of their friend above even their own. 

Christianity has not come to change this, but to elevate it, as it always does with natural things. In two ways. One way: it is logical that those who share the love of God have more to share together than those who do not love him. And back: we friends enjoy introducing each other. A friend of ours who is a friend of God will not be slow to introduce us to him with the lively hope that we will soon become close.

Experiences

CARF Foundation's Social Action Board, all for priests

Throughout the year, the Social Action Board of CARF works to raise funds to pay for the scholarships of seminarians through flea markets, sewing and making the textiles for the well-known backpacks of sacred vessels.

Maria José Atienza-November 17, 2023-Reading time: 2 minutes

They are one of the "legs" of the CARF Foundation and, thanks to them, because their reality is feminine by far, there are hundreds of young priests who, in addition to receiving a scholarship for their theological and philosophical formation, have a help such as the backpack of sacred vessels and, above all, the prayer of all of them.

The work of the CARF Foundation in the promotion and encouragement of priestly vocations, in particular, its support for the formation of seminarians, priests or religious to study in Rome or Pamplona. 

In addition to the CARF Foundation's own work, there is the CARF's Social Action BoardThe "Sacred Vessels": a group of people who, throughout the year, work to raise funds to pay for scholarships for seminarians and more "material" issues such as the preparation of the already known "backpacks or briefcases of sacred vessels" in which they carry everything necessary to impart the sacraments: Eucharist, anointing of the sick or confession, in a dignified manner and in any remote part of the world. 

The origins of the Board of Trustees

Two women, Rosana Diez Canseco and Carmen Ortega, are the presidents of this board of trustees, which, according to Ortega, "channels the CARF Foundation's volunteers". CARF's Board of Trustees for Social Action was created almost at the same time as the foundation itself.

Some of the first people who began, then, to help with the formation of priests through the CARF Foundation, The group started up various initiatives to raise other income for the scholarships. "It started very small," says Carmen Ortega, who continues, "later, more people joined and, at present, we have a stable group of about 30 people." 

What does CARF's Social Action Board do?

Fundamentally, the volunteering that it channels is centered on groups of activities that, throughout the course, prepare both the Solidarity Market and the textile elements necessary for the backpack of sacred vessels.

"There is a group in charge of making the sacred linens and the albs for the priests' backpacks," explains Carmen Ortega. "These backpacks are given to the senior scholarship students before they return to their countries, and they are not only expensive but also personalized: the albs they contain are made to measure by this sewing group, so that they fit well and look dignified. They are very grateful and always write to us, when they return to their countries, telling us how much this backpack helps them in their work". 

The Solidarity Market

In addition to this, the Solidarity Market is another of the Patronage's highlights. For this market, another group of volunteers makes knitted baby clothes, while another group collects donations of furniture, decorative objects, etc. They classify them, price them and store them until the market.

The last group of volunteers is in charge of restoring and giving new life to some of these pieces of furniture that "with imagination, a nice paint job and small restorations are very successful among young people".

The annual flea market takes place over several days and raises funds for the formation of seminarians, diocesan priests, religious men and women from all over the world. This year, the market will be held in the halls of the parish of St. Louis de los Franceses in Madrid from November 17 to 21 from 11:00 to 21:00.

Above all, the Patronato prays for priestly vocations and supports their promotion and formation. "Praying for and helping priests motivates many people," notes Carmen Ortega, "plus they also pray for us, so, in reality, we win." 

The Vatican

U.S. Hispanic priests meet with the Pope

Pope Francis met with the National Association of Hispanic Priests of the United States on the morning of Nov. 16.

Paloma López Campos-November 16, 2023-Reading time: 2 minutes

– Supernatural National Association of Hispanic Priests The United States is holding a convention in Rome from November 14 to 17. The congress, entitled "In Dialogue with Peter", included an audience with Pope Francis on the 16th.

During the meeting, the Holy Father delivered an address in which he spoke about the openness of the Church, the National Eucharistic Congress and the need to lean on Christ.

At the beginning of his speech, Francis said that "the Church is a house with open doors, to which all come from East to West to sit at the table that the Lord has prepared for us. For this reason, the Pope warned against the danger of "ecclesiastical exquisiteness". He encouraged those present to focus on what is essential, on Jesus, whom "must be sought in Scripture and in the Gospel, in silent adoration".

The Pontiff also took the opportunity to mention the National Eucharistic Congress. Drawing inspiration from the two models chosen as patrons, the Pope highlighted St. Manuel Gonzalez. Following the example of this priest, Francis urged those present not to abandon neither those who suffer nor the Lord in the Tabernacle.

Serving in faith

The Pope encouraged priests to recover "the call of Jesus to serve," to always be at the disposal of others, without closing the door on them. He concluded his speech by inviting those present not to put "their trust only in great ideas, nor in well-designed pastoral proposals".

Francis affirmed that he is terrified "when they come with all the pastoral programs". On the contrary, what he asked of priests is that they abandon themselves "in the One who has called them to give themselves, and asks them only for fidelity and constancy, with the certainty that it is He who brings their work to completion and will make their efforts bear good fruit."

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Culture

Alfonso Bullón de Mendoza: "Today there is a Catholicism that sees the need to be more committed".

The president of the Catholic Association of Propagandists receives Omnes on the occasion of the XXV Catholics and Public Life Congress to be held in Madrid between November 17 and 19, 2023.

Maria José Atienza-November 16, 2023-Reading time: 4 minutes

Alfonso Bullón de Mendoza (Madrid, 1963) has chaired, since 2018, the Catholic Association of Propagandists and is president of the San Pablo CEU University Foundation. Twenty-five years ago, Bullón de Mendoza directed the first congress Catholics and Public Life which this year celebrates a quarter of a century. The congress has managed to position itself, in this time, as a meeting point of Spanish Catholicism and has dealt with topics such as political correctness, freedom, Christian commitment or the faith of young people. 

The XXV Congress Catholics and Public Life brings together in Madrid between November 17 and 19, 2023 speakers such as Malek Twal, ambassador of the League of Arab States in Spain, Professor of Philosophy and member of the Royal Academy of Moral and Political Sciences, Juan Arana or Sebastian Schuff, president of the Global Center for Human Rights. 

Bullón de Mendoza receives Omnes just a few hours before the start of the twenty-fifth congress of Catholics and Public Life and that it is still as necessary and current as it was a quarter of a century ago. 

The congress Catholics and Public Life has been 25 years since 1999. In this quarter of a century, how has the social physiognomy changed? 

-I think it is evident that there has been a great change in these 25 years, that there has been an evident situation of regression of Catholicism and the influence of Catholicism within the Spanish society, but also in the last few years there is a clearer and more forceful outflow of Catholics than before. There is a desire to show that here we are and we are proud to be Catholics and we have a faith to propose. 

In Spain we are currently living in times that are, to say the least, convulsive. Is Catholic commitment present?

-I believe that today there is a Catholicism that sees the need to commit itself more and more and this is emerging in different areas. We have realities such as Effetá, or Hakuna through music. There is a desire to transmit the Gospel and we are looking for ways that are adequate to the times we live in. 

This loss of social relevance has led to a greater awareness of the personal commitment of the Christian, so perhaps it is not so bad?

-We are facing something that happens. The problem is to consider that Catholicism is a personal religion and not a proposal for the world. In this sense, we see various conceptions of the subject, for example, Dreher's Benedictine option, little less than living in isolation, in small ghettos trying to survive what is happening outside. But we Propagandists are Paulines, and the Pauline option is just the opposite: it is the option of spreading the Gospel.

I believe that it is an option that is gaining strength and we must be aware that Catholicism is not born with the idea that each person will carry it in isolation and not communicate it to the world. 

In these 25 years, has the Catholic Association of Propagandists also changed? 

-I believe that the Catholic Association of Propagandists remains the same: an association of Catholics, men and women, with a vocation to public life and who seek to have the means of formation and the means to spread their faith. 

In history, there are always a "happy few" who change the course, are these congresses of Catholics and Public Life a sample of those "happy few"?

-I hope there will be many more (he laughs). I believe that today there are many Church initiatives, many groups that are very active in different fields and that the whole of all this is what can allow a revival of Catholicism in its social presence in Spain. 

Freedom, life, culture, the role of faith in young people, Europe as a concept.... Catholics and Public Life What legacy are these congresses leaving behind? 

-I think it has served to raise problems that may arise at some point in society and what should be the response given to them from the Catholic sphere.

The congress Catholics and Public LifeThe aim has always been to be a forum where people can come and say, "How can we Catholics react to this problem? 

Do Catholics have a moral duty to their country? 

-We have a duty to the society in which we live. In that sense, we must be aware of the problems of our society and try to find ways to respond to them. 

Catholics and Public Life was born and developed in Spain, but it has crossed our borders in places like Puerto Rico or Chile. In the end, are the problems raised universal? 

-Of course. There were countries in Latin America that saw that what was proposed in Catholics and Public Life was appropriate to their own reality and wanted to replicate it, also within the university world.

What are the guidelines for this XXV Catholics and Public Life Congress? 

-This year, we have 2 lines in the congress. On the one hand, we wanted to commemorate the First Catholics and Public Life Congress 25 years ago, and on the other hand, the Congress itself. With regard to the first one, we have counted on the Cardinal Rouco who officiated at the Mass at the I Congress and with Jaime Mayor Oreja who was the one who, at the time, gave the inaugural lecture, then, as Minister of the Interior. 

As far as evangelization itself is concerned, this congress has sought to address a series of situations in different realities. One of the cases, for example, is the ambassador of the Arab League who tells us about the situation of Christians in that environment and who is a Catholic. 

On the other hand, we have the CEO of Mary's meals who recently received the Princess of Asturias award and who will tell us what they are doing in this NGO. 

This year there is a children's congress. There are those who are concerned that "no Catholics are coming out of Catholic schools". Is this children's congress a seed to tackle this issue? 

-I believe that Catholic schools have an obligation to transmit, to propose the faith because that is the reason why they were created.

It is true that there may have been times or realities that, also as a consequence of the lack of vocations, have caused the message of some schools to become diluted, but I also believe that now most Catholic schools are aware of their role and try to fulfill it.

What is the future of the congress Catholics and Public Life?

-I believe that they have a buoyant future because we will continue with this initiative that we think has had good results over time and we want it to continue because it has been consolidated as a meeting point for Spanish Catholicism.

It is already known that once a year we have this Congress, in which different topics are addressed, different points of view are offered and a dialogue is held. 

Against the current

To educate one's children in freedom is to go against the current, because authentic freedom does not consist in doing what one wants to do at any given moment, but what is convenient for one to do in order to get closer to God.

November 16, 2023-Reading time: 4 minutes

"If your friends jump off a bridge, will you jump off too?" was one of the old phrases of a mother worried about the bad habits of an impressionable child. Today it is parents and grandparents who push their children and grandchildren off a bridge so that they are no different. What has happened to us?

It is of little or no use to cite data linking the use of cell phones with an increase in suicides and self-harm by adolescents, of little or no use to explain how the inappropriate use of these devices is behind the growing numbers of addiction to pornography or gambling, bullying, self-perception problems or sexual abuse. There will always be some specialist around who will downplay the risks and claim that children need to be socialized and have freedom. The mention of this last term immediately causes even the most responsible parents to compromise with the most suspicious habits and customs, lest they be labeled as authoritarian. 

So, under the banner of this supposed freedom, we have generous parents and grandparents lavishing love on their grandchildren and buying them for their communion a latest generation 5G padlock with a 30 megapixel camera and a 5,000 microampere battery, lest they run out in the middle of the day. I say "padlock" because these devices are designed as such, to imprison our freedom and tie us the more hours the better to the universe of services they offer us. 

Many of the best mathematicians, psychologists, neuroscientists and engineers in the world (in the free world and in the totalitarian dictatorships that give our children the apps that limit theirs) work night and day to achieve more addictive applications, more suitable to override our ability to decide, because their business is our time in front of the screens. 

When I see a gang of pre-adolescents on the street, all with their cell phones in their hands, hardly talking to each other, I can't help but remember that scene that I'm sure you've seen in some documentary, of the herds of wildebeest crossing the crocodile-infested Mara River. Being, as wildebeests are, gregarious animals, every year the crocodiles just have to wait quietly for the leader of the herd to enter the river to feast, because all the others will come behind in single file, without hesitation. Maybe one of the youngsters in that gang had no need to enter the river through that ford, maybe he could have waited for some time yet, maybe he could have looked for another area with less hungry carnivores, but he is forced to pass by everyone because he is less afraid of the crocodile than he is of getting out of the herd. One of the most terrible scenes of the documentary is when one of the wildebeest calves is caught by the snout between the jaws of one of the huge reptiles before the resigned gaze of his mother who flees trying to save herself and not to lose the rhythm of the group. 

Returning to the human world, there are already many parents who are waking up and who can no longer stand to watch, like a mother wildebeest, how others eat up their children. Groups of parents have emerged who are encouraging each other to restrict the use of cell phones by their children until an age when they can be the ones to dominate the device and not vice versa, as has been the case up to now. These are not particularly religious or ideological groups. They are groups, we could say, that are simply trying to recover common sense.

The Christian faith has always been a help for parents when it comes to not losing that common sense that protects those who exercise it from strange influences or passing fashions. The Gospel has universal guidelines that serve for families of all times and cultures, and knowing that they are loved by God has traditionally given parents a plus, since they do not have to seek the protection of social recognition, but are able to live against the tide and without fear.

To educate children in freedom is to go against the current, because true freedom does not consist of doing what one wants to do at any given moment, but what is convenient for one to get closer to God, who is the source of human happiness. And God, unfortunately, is not among the topics most recommended by influencers. This is the reason why many Christian families are affected by the phenomenon of worldliness, which consists in living like everyone else, like those who have no hope.

Pope Francis said that "worldliness is probably the worst thing that can happen to the Christian community" and, warning about the dangers of doing what everyone else is doing, he affirmed that "it is hard to go against the current, it is hard to free oneself from the conditioning of common thought, it is hard to be set aside by those who 'follow the fashion'", and he invites us to ask ourselves: "What am I afraid of? Of not having what I like? Of not reaching the goals that society imposes? Of the judgment of others? Or rather, of not pleasing the Lord and not putting his Gospel in the first place?

A good string of questions to ask ourselves today as we contemplate how the crocodiles on duty continue to lie in wait for a new herd of tender adolescent wildebeest that have already asked to cross the river for Christmas.

The authorAntonio Moreno

Journalist. Graduate in Communication Sciences and Bachelor in Religious Sciences. He works in the Diocesan Delegation of Media in Malaga. His numerous "threads" on Twitter about faith and daily life have a great popularity.

Gospel

Developing talents. Thirty-third Sunday in Ordinary Time (A)

Joseph Evans comments on the readings of the XXXIII Sunday in Ordinary Time and Luis Herrera offers a brief video homily.

Joseph Evans-November 16, 2023-Reading time: 2 minutes

It is customary that, in the readings at Sunday Mass, there is a link between the first reading and the Gospel. But the link between today's first reading and the Gospel is not obvious at first glance, and when it is found, it is of exquisite beauty. For the first reading is about the qualities of a good wife, while the Gospel is Our Lord's famous parable of the talents. 

Therefore, what the Church is telling us in establishing this relationship is that an example par excellence of the realization of one's talents, and indeed of self-fulfillment in general, is found in the woman who chooses to devote her energies and abilities to the care of the home. 

Any man with a good wife knows how much family life is enriched by the feminine genius of a mother in her own home. In an age when the frequent message is that it is demeaning for a woman to stay at home, the Church wants to help us see that a special way for a woman to express and develop her talents is by building family life. The woman of the first reading "exceeds pearls in value". Work hard, "he looks for the wool and linen and works them with the dexterity of his hands... he stretches out his arms to the poor man". 

Although not mentioned in the abridged version we hear at Mass, the biblical texts tell us that this woman is a kind of businesswoman, managing the household servants, making sure everyone in the household is well fed and well clothed, locating a good field and buying it, selling clothes and goods... and much more. "It is clothed in strength and dignity.". Speak with wisdom and kindness. "Her children stand up and call her blessed"and her husband praises her. If this is not fulfilling one's talents, I don't know what is. 

Of course, a woman may also choose to put her talents to use outside the home (or may have to do so to supplement the family economy), and society is increasingly blessed by the many ways in which women contribute their extraordinary gifts to the world of work. But the lesson we can learn from today's readings is that developing one's talents is more subtle than we think. We tend to think of talent development in terms of becoming proficient at some visible task such as playing a musical instrument or cultivating a technical skill. But perhaps we also need to develop talents such as empathy, listening or even the ability to suffer. Talents that need to be worked on and do not always come naturally to us. 

We men also need to develop our talent for the home. What a great talent it is to be a good husband and father, and God will ask us what we have consciously and intentionally done to cultivate this talent. Perhaps we could start working on the talent of playing with children or dealing better with our awkward teenagers.

Homily on the readings of the 33rd Sunday in Ordinary Time (A)

The priest Luis Herrera Campo offers its nanomiliaA short one-minute reflection for these Sunday readings.

The Vatican

Freemasonry is incompatible with the Catholic Church, reminds the Vatican

In view of the concern expressed in the Philippines about the large number of faithful in the dioceses who belong to Masonic lodges, the Dicastery for the Faith has issued a brief note recalling the incompatibility between Catholicism and Freemasonry.

Paloma López Campos-November 15, 2023-Reading time: 2 minutes

The Dicastery for the Faith has published the reply sent to the bishops of the following countries Philippines concerned about the increase of Freemasonry members in the country. The Philippine episcopate asked the Vatican for suggestions on how to deal pastorally with the situation.

Many faithful in the dioceses of the country are enrolled in Masonic lodges and consider that there is no opposition between Catholic doctrine and membership in Freemasonry. The Vatican Dicastery wants to cooperate with the Philippine Bishops' Conference to initiate a pastoral and doctrinal strategy to put an end to the confusion.

In the brief response from the Vatican, the first thing they mention is the document published by the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith in 1983. In the statement, signed by the then Cardinal Ratzinger, it was recalled that membership in Masonic lodges is forbidden by the Catholic Church. In addition, the document pointed out that "the faithful who belong to Masonic associations are in a state of grave sin and cannot approach Holy Communion".

On the other hand, the Dicastery for the Faith encourages the Philippine Bishops' Conference to develop a catechesis in all parishes in the country to explain that membership in Masonic lodges is irreconcilable with the Catholic faith.

Incompatibility between Freemasonry and the Catholic Faith

Now, why are one and the other incompatible? In 1985, "L'Osservatore Romano" published an article in clarification on this subject. One of the points expressed by the Church at that time is that "it is not possible for a Christian to live his relationship with God in a double modality, that is, diversifying it into a humanitarian-supraconfessional form and an internal-Christian one".

The great number of symbols that fill the Masonic ideology, such as the "Great Architect", the "masons" or the "profane", distances the Catholic from the Christian fraternity. On the other hand, "the relativizing force" contained in the ideology of the Masons can lead to confusion with the concept of Truth expressed by the Catholic Church.

The Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith further warned of the danger of all this. The "distortion of the fundamental structure of the act of faith is usually carried out smoothly and without one being aware of it". As a result, adherence to the Catholic faith "becomes mere membership of an institution considered as a particular expressive form, alongside other expressive forms, more or less possible and also valid, of man's orientation towards the eternal".

For all these reasons, the Catholic Church strongly condemns membership in Freemasonry and considers it "her duty to make known the authentic thought of the Church in this regard and to warn against a membership that is incompatible with the Catholic faith".

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The Vatican

"Humanity awaits a word of joyful hope," Francis encourages

With the announcement to the shepherds of the birth of Jesus in Bethlehem, and the call to discover that humanity awaits a word of hope with joy, in the rhythm of these last weeks of the liturgical year, Pope Francis has begun the conclusion of this time of catechesis in 2023 on the passion to evangelize.

Francisco Otamendi-November 15, 2023-Reading time: 2 minutes

On the day on which the Church commemorates St. Albert the Great, universal scholar, Dominican and Doctor of the Church, the Holy Father Francis has announced who wishes to summarize this cycle on apostolic zeal in four points, inspired by the apostolic exhortation "Evangelii gaudium", which celebrates its tenth anniversary this month. 

The first point, which we look at today, refers to the attitude on which the substance of the evangelizing gesture depends: joy. And for this he meditated on the words that the angel addresses to the shepherds, the announcement of "great joy" (Lk 2:10). 

"And what is the reason for this great joy: good news, a surprise, a beautiful event? Much more, a person: Jesus! He is God made man who loves us always, who gave his life for us and who desires to give us eternal life! He is our Gospel, the source of a joy that does not pass away! The question, dear brothers and sisters, is therefore not whether to proclaim it, but how to proclaim it, and this 'how' is joy".

"For this reason," the Pope stressed, "an unhappy, sad, dissatisfied or, worse still, resentful and resentful Christian is not credible. It is essential to be vigilant about our feelings. Especially in those contexts in which the Church no longer enjoys certain social recognition, there is a risk of adopting attitudes of discouragement or revenge, and this is not good. In evangelization, it is the gratuity that comes from a fullness that works, not the pressure that comes from a lack".

"The credible and authoritative witness is recognized by his happy and meek soul, by the serene and gentle trait that comes from having met Jesus, by the sincere passion with which he offers to all what he has received without merit," he said.

Civilization of disbelief 

In his catechesis, Pope Francis drew on the episode of the disciples of Emmaus to whom the Lord appeared, and pointed out that "like the two at Emmaus, we return to daily life with the impulse of one who has found a treasure. And we discover that humanity abounds with brothers and sisters who are waiting for a word of hope. Yes, the Gospel is also awaited today: mankind of all times needs it, even the civilization of programmed unbelief and institutionalized secularity; moreover, especially society, which leaves the spaces of religious meaning deserted. This is the favorable moment for the proclamation of Jesus". 

Praying for Ukraine, Holy Land, Sudan

The Pope recalled that the last weeks of the liturgical year invite us to a sense of Christian hope. In this perspective, "I invite you to always grasp the meaning and value of daily experiences and also of trials," thinking that "everything contributes to the good of those who love God" (Rom 8:28).

"Let us pray, brothers and sisters, for peace in Ukraine, in Palestine and Israel, in Sudan and wherever there are war". 

"Let us ask the Lord to renew our encounter with him every day, may he make our hearts burn with his word, may the Eucharist give birth in us to the impulse that encouraged the disciples to go out to evangelize the world. May Jesus bless you and the Holy Virgin watch over you," Francis concluded, moments after exhorting the young people to be "courageous protagonists in the environments in which you live, above all to be joyful witnesses of the Gospel, builders of bridges, and never of walls".

The authorFrancisco Otamendi

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The World

Opus Dei prepares its Ordinary General Congress of 2025

The Prelate of Opus Dei has addressed a letter to the faithful of the Work in which he announces the beginning of the work towards the Ordinary General Congress of the personal prelature of the Catholic Church, scheduled for 2025.

Maria José Atienza-November 15, 2023-Reading time: 2 minutes

2024 will be marked by more than one news item and, above all, by intense work within Opus Dei. This is what can be gleaned from the brief message that Monsignor Fernando Ocáriz, prelate of the Opus DeiThe Prelature has sent to the faithful of the Prelature in which it announces that in 2024, in all the regions where Opus Dei works, it will begin the so-called Weeks of work o Regional Assemblies.

These days of study and work, established in the Opus Dei statutes will have as its theme On the way to the Work's centennial. Deepen our charism and renew our desire to serve God, the Church and society. and will be the most specific preparation for the Ordinary General Congress of 2025.

Participation of all

As he did for the Extraordinary General CongressThe meeting was held in April 2023 on the occasion of the change required of Opus Dei by the Holy See in the Motu proprio. Ad Charisma Tuendum, the prelate wanted to encourage all the faithful of the Work to send their ideas and considerations, thus participating in these Weeks of work.

At this point, the prelate emphasized that this participation, of a "synodal" character, could be a moment "to deepen the 'gift of the Spirit received by St. Josemaría' (Ad charisma tuendum), in the beauty of the mission of service to the Church and society and in the desire to accompany many people on the road to heaven".

The prelate added that "it will also be an opportunity to reflect on how to respond to the challenges of the present time in the spirit of Opus Dei and how to prepare for the centennial in each place.

It should be recalled that, on the occasion of the Extraordinary General Congress, thousands of suggestions were made by faithful of the Work and people close to the charism of the Opus DeiThe prelature's central government was informed.

At that time, the prelate himself, in addition to thanking them as a valuable help, emphasized that the suggestions sent at that time "which were not applicable to what the Holy See was now asking for, could be studied during the next Weeks of work and in preparation for the next ordinary General Congress, to be held in 2025". 

Work weeks in Opus Dei

Regional assemblies, or weeks of workare a tool provided for in numbers 162 to 170 of the current Opus Dei statutes.

They are held every 10 years and their purpose is to study the most relevant topics for the formation and apostolic mission of its members, and to take stock of the time elapsed since the previous assembly.

They are a way of working that is especially open to participation since "it allows us to gather the reflections and opinions of all the people of the Work in order to promote the apostolic work in each country and in each historical moment".

The ideas and suggestions of members and individuals who know and value the charism of Opus Dei are collected, systematized and studied for at least three months.

The conclusions of the regional assemblies are sent to the Prelate and, once approved, are a matter for the ordinary government of the circumscription and are of great relevance for the preparation of the ordinary general congresses.

United States

Rector Enrique Salvo celebrates 2 years at San Patricio

In this first interview with Father Enrique Salvo, the rector of St. Patrick's Cathedral in New York, he talks about his work with the more than six million faithful who attend the church.

Jennifer Elizabeth Terranova-November 15, 2023-Reading time: 4 minutes
Father Enrique Salvo, rector of St. Patrick's Cathedral in New York City.

On November 15, two years ago, Father Enrique Salvo became the rector of Saint Patrick’s Cathedral in New York City.

Omnes had a chance to sit down with Rector Salvo, who graciously took time out of his day to discuss what his rectorship has been like for the past two years, and to share the joys of being a rector.

Beautiful Surprises

Father Salvo shared a few surprises about being the rector of Saint Patrick's Cathedral. For one, "...being the rector is surprising itself... and it's been an adventure, a really joyful adventure." 

Father Salvo shared a few surprises about being the rector of Saint Patrick's Cathedral. For one, "...being the rector is surprising itself... and it's been an adventure, a really joyful adventure." Saint Patrick's Cathedral welcomes six million people a year from all over the world, which he was well aware of. And because of the multitude of people who now attend the online Masses and his YouTube devotees who eagerly await his weekly or sometimes bi-weekly channel and the increase in virtual parishioners who tune in, Father Salvo said, "It was beautiful and surprising to realize that the role as rector of Saint Patrick’s Cathedral...would allow having to minister to so many people around the world." In addition, he thinks about the benefits of the outreach. For example, every Sunday, unless there is a short pause, Father Salvo offers educational, inspiring, and motivating content on Saint Patrick's YouTube channel, which also has a Spanish version. It’s no surprise that the channel is gaining traction and growing.

Moreover, he said he recognizes the blessing of seeing so many important and well-known Catholic figures in the Catholic world who come through Saint Patrick's Cathedral, so he aspires to get more interviews with some of them. "We are trying to take advantage of that, in a good way, to be able to host them and interview them" on their upcoming series "Conversations from Saint Patrick's Cathedral," which will involve Father Salvo and prominent Catholic speakers discussing various things. He is focused on bringing people to Christ and is wise to capitalize on the benefits of social media when it comes to evangelizing.

For example, when Sister Briege McKenna and Father Pablo Escriva De Romani spoke at Saint Patrick's Cathedral, it garnered over 75,000 viewers, of which they are aware. Father Mike Schmitz's Mass and talk was an enormous success. "One of our main jobs as priests, as servants of the Church, and as disciples is to preach and to evangelize, and so what a powerful way to evangelize to so many people," said Father Salvo.

The Church is alive

Father Salvo shared what he likes most about being a rector: "In this beautiful and spiritually powerful place that is Saint Patrick's Cathedral, to have the opportunity to be part, and even innovate so many ways to bring the faith to the people." He acknowledges that it can get "busy and overwhelming, but there's never a dull moment; every week is filled with at least one great celebration."

He also spoke of what he calls a consequence that he loves, which is not necessarily specific to his job, but "one beautiful thing that I love is to be able to see the Church at large, and to see how alive it really is."

He said that he has never adopted a negative posture of the state of the Church but understands that "we have to be realistic that it's never as good as it can be when it comes to attendance and excitement for the faith…but right now, I'm the opposite; I've always been positive, but now even more positive… about the reality about how truly the faith is alive."

Father Salvo shares his sentiments with others and realizes that it might not be the case everywhere and not all parishes may be as well-attended; however, "my reality here at Saint Patrick's Cathedral that is, aside from the six million people that walk through the doors and tune in to everything that we produce, are people from all walks of life, from all age groups, from all races and nationalities, from all types of circumstances…" And most of these people, he noted, come "sincerely to pray, to worship God, to receive the sacraments, and to take part of the celebrations of the Church."

I thank God for the privilege

Anyone who has ever been to Saint Patrick's Cathedral knows it is a sight to behold. Father Salvo spoke of how the visitors are in "awe" of the majestic Cathedral and "are excited to be here." He said, "They come to bring their problems and their issues to the Lord…" One cannot be discouraged after seeing all that, "from the greatest of celebrations of the year to the average day of witnessing the people walking through the doors is inspiring to see..." He happily acknowledges that "For most people, there is still faith, and the importance of the faith," which is not unique to special Masses or events; it's "every single day of the year."

He also spoke of the advantage point of being a rector of what he says is "such a special place, that is Saint Patrick's Cathedral, and it is such a privilege and one that I thank God for." He said, "My conclusion is that the Church is very much alive, which should inspire us to keep on going." He views things from a positive and encouraging lens. He said if we continue to see the bad news, the discouraging numbers that "deflates us."

This is part one of my interview with Rector Enrique Salvo. Look out for part two and three soon.

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United States

Eucharist, synodality and evangelization, themes of the second day of the USCCB plenary meeting

Eucharist, synodality and the various conflicts in the world were some of the topics discussed on the second day of the USCCB plenary meeting.

Gonzalo Meza-November 15, 2023-Reading time: 4 minutes

Eucharist, synodality and the various conflicts in the world were some of the topics discussed on the second day of the plenary meeting of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB).USCCB) on November 14 in Baltimore, Maryland. The formal proceedings were opened with the reading of a message from the bishops to the Holy Father, followed by Cardinal Christophe Pierre, Apostolic Nuncio to the USA and Bishop Timothy P. Broglio, President of the USCCB.

Sadly, as we gather, in AssemblyThe prelates tell the Pope, "the destruction and devastation of war weigh on our hearts. As you have said, we must not forget Ukraine, Palestine and Israel. Let us not forget the many other regions where war continues to rage. As you have often said: 'War is defeat,'" they say in their message to the Holy Father. In their missive, the prelates also refer to the synodal journey: "During the coming year we hope to facilitate prayer and dialogue around the reflections of the synthesis report. Accompanying the faithful on the synodal journey has been a grace for our Church," they say.

About the Synod

After the reading of the message to Pope Francis, Cardinal Christophe Pierre took the floor and focused his speech on the relationship between Eucharist and Synodality. Pierre said, two initiatives have guided our journey: the National Eucharistic Renaissance and the global call to synodality. Alluding to the encounter of two travelers with Jesus on the road to Emmaus (Lk 24:13-35), the nuncio affirmed that the synodal journey is based on encountering, accompanying, listening, discerning and rejoicing in what the Holy Spirit reveals. "Eucharistic rebirth and synodality go hand in hand. Or to put it another way: I believe we will have a true Eucharistic rebirth when we experience the Eucharist as the sacrament of the incarnation of Christ, the Lord walking with us on the way," the cardinal said.

Recalling Pope Francis' homily at the opening Mass of the Synod in Rome, Bishop Pierre said that the synod is not an agenda or an idea but "the way in which we are called to be the Church of God, for the sake of the evangelization of today's world, which is in great need of the Gospel of hope and peace." In this sense, Cardinal Pierre exhorted the North American prelates to be "adventurers for the Lord" so that united harmoniously in diversity, they may bear witness before the people of God.

Archbishop Timothy P. Broglio, Archbishop for the U.S. Military Services, who participated in the Synod in Rome, spoke of his experience during that meeting and noted that many of the aspects that were experienced are already a reality in the United States: "The collegial atmosphere that characterizes these assemblies, the consideration and interaction that characterizes the work of the National Advisory Council, the work of the diocesan pastoral councils, the presbyteral councils, the review boards, the school board and so many other organizations come easily to mind. Let us also think of the committees of this conference. At least in those on which I have served, the interaction between bishops, staff and consultants has been active, healthy and extremely helpful."

On conflicts in the world

In the second part of his introductory address, Bishop Broglio spoke of world conflicts, including Russia's invasion of Ukraine and the war between Israel and Palestine: "We recognize and defend Israel's right to exist and to occupy a place among the nations. At the same time, we know that the Palestinians, even though they are a minority, have the right to a land of their own". Bishop Broglio also mentioned three Catholic associations and groups helping to alleviate the situation in the Holy Land, including the Knights and Ladies of the Holy Sepulchre, the Bethlehem Hospital and the Catholic Near East Welfare Association.

The USCCB president also spoke of the Russian invasion of Ukraine and called it "unjust aggression." The prelate concluded his address by mentioning the various ways in which the North American bishops strive to carry the message of the Gospel. In this task, the prelate thanked the priests who are "at the forefront of these efforts. They are our first collaborators and we depend on their tireless efforts.

Finally, Bishop Broglio mentioned some of the different lay apostolates that contribute to this task of evangelization in the country, among them: NET Ministries, Evangelical Catholic, Formed and the Cursillo de Cristiandad. "On behalf of all the bishops I thank all those who strive to infuse vitality, commitment and renewal to our faith communities, thus reaching the peripheries," he said.

During this second day of public sessions, the bishops also voted to support the cause of beatification and canonization, at the diocesan level, of the Servant of God Isaac Thomas Hecker (1819-1888), founding priest of the Paulist Fathers. The bishops pointed out that Father Hecker "continues to be for our contemporaries a model of the search for God, of the experience of conversion, of heroic dedication in service, of promoting the mission of the Church and of diligence in seeking the guidance of the Holy Spirit". The work of this autumn plenary assembly concludes on November 15.

Culture

Director of the Vatican Pharmacy: "It is a place where the sick are listened to and advice is given".

Binish Mulackal, brother of St. John of God, is the director of the Vatican Pharmacy, an institution that dates back to 1874.

Hernan Sergio Mora-November 15, 2023-Reading time: 4 minutes

The year 2024 will mark the 150th anniversary of the founding of the Vatican PharmacyThe pharmacy is the busiest in the world, with more than 2,000 customers a day. However, thanks to the modernization achieved with robotization and computerization, the pharmacy is able to serve everyone without queuing.

Thanks also to its 23 professional pharmacists who staff the counters with great kindness and dedication and who are part of the pharmacy's staff of almost 70 employees.

As the 150th anniversary of this institution based within the walls of Vatican City State approaches, Omnes was able to interview the pharmacy's director, Brother Binish Mulackal, prior of the Brothers of St. John of God community and a native of Kerala, India.

Brother Binish, tell us a little about how the Vatican Pharmacy came about, if I am not mistaken it was when Pope Pius IX was a "prisoner" in the Vatican, wasn't it?

-After the capture of Rome in 1870, the Vatican sought the autonomy of the Holy Father and, therefore, a pharmaceutical and sanitary service. The State contacted the Fattebenefratelli hospital of the Order of St. John of God in Rome on behalf of Pius IX in 1874, and thus the pharmacy was founded during the so-called "Roman Question", initially as an outpatient clinic.

The pharmacy was founded on March 4, 1874, when in Fattebenefratelli we Hospitallers placed ourselves at the Pope's disposal and the first pharmacists began to serve in the courtyard of St. Damasus, arriving in the morning and returning in the afternoon.

And when were they installed in the Vatican?

-It was in 1890, when they requested the presence of the community within the Vatican City. However, the Pharmacy belongs to the State, to the GovernatoratoWe are obliged to manage it by virtue of an agreement as a Hospitaller Order.

Are you religious? How did you get here, to the Pharmacy?

-Yes, I am a religious of the Order of St. John of God. Many confreres have worked during these 150 years to direct it. In 2007, as part of the renewal of the community, they asked the Province of India to send friars to lead it.

Why a pharmacy inside the Vatican when there are so many in Rome?

-It was born as a service to the people who live in the Vatican State and also for those who come from outside. It is a place where the sick and needy are listened to and advice is given. Today, with the big pharmacy chains, the prices of medicines have become cheaper, so our aim is not necessarily to be affordable, although the economic aspect is important.

When Pope Francis received you at the Apostolic Palace, what did he ask of you?

-In its speechThe Holy Father asked us to give "a supplement of charity", to listen and to listen to all those who come to us. "The sick often need to be listened to. Sometimes it seems boring," he told us, "but the person who speaks feels a caress from God through you.

How many people pass through the pharmacy each day?

-The average is more than a thousand people a day, we have recovered a number of customers similar to what we had before covid. Compared to Italy, the price of medicines is 12% lower, and it varies for other products. There are also cosmetics and perfumes that those who come can buy.

Do you have an online sales service?

-No, we don't have an online service as such, but we have been doing an online service for more than 20 years. remote shipments, also by telephone. What is essential is that the patient always sends us the prescription. And we only send medicines that are not available in Italy. Of course we comply with European EMA and American FDA regulations.

Apart from the Hospitaller Order of St. John of God, who works here?

-We have been working in the health field since 1550, so not only with pharmacies, but also with hospitals and various facilities. Today, a community of us has been living here since 1892, and in this building since 1932, after the Lateran Pacts. Today we are seven confreres here, two of them nurses, who also attend the Holy Father's audiences and visits to Rome. We also cover the night shift at the Pharmacy.

As a mendicant religious order, that is, not living in monastic seclusion, do you have a community life?

-We have all the spiritual activity and it starts with Mass in the morning, and then there is the daily work. Above all, we are religious, we live in community and our mission is to serve the Church.

During the Covid pandemic you played a special role...

-Yes, and a lot of work, starting with the shortage of medical supplies, having to supply the entire state. The Holy See also received several donations and we also had to manage them externally. Even for the vaccines, because we made the arrangements with the pharmaceutical companies. The experience with the vaccine was so positive that we returned to normality.

Is there reason to be proud of providing this service?

-It is enough to think of a single needy person to whom we give the attention he/she needs. We collaborate with the Apostolic Elemosineria. We make donations for Ukraine, Venezuela and many other difficult situations in the world.

There have been several saints in your order, right?

-In addition to the founder, St. Juan de DiosThe other Hospitaller saints raised to the honor of the altars were Riccardo Pampuri, Benedetto Menni and Giovanni Grande. And the Blessed Eustachio Kugler, José Olallo Valdés, as well as the seventy-one martyrs of the Spanish Civil War (Braulio María Corres Díaz de Cerio, Federico Rubio Álvarez and 69 companions).

The authorHernan Sergio Mora

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Initiatives

Auge Accelerator. Impact and sustainability for foundations and NGOs

Laura Venzal is the Executive Director of Booma non-profit accelerator of the third sector, with a Christian vision, located in Quito, Ecuador. Boom was born in 2021 with the aim of strengthening the social sector, especially in the field of foundations and NGOs close to the Church, making it more professional, sustainable and scalable.

Maria José Atienza-November 15, 2023-Reading time: 5 minutes

Several years ago, Laura, along with other partners, noticed a fundamental problem in the social sector in Ecuador: foundations and NGOs that felt isolated and lacked adequate resources to face financial challenges that put them on the brink of bankruptcy.

Venzal points out, in fact, that in Ecuador, there are almost 5,000 NGOs registered with the Ministry of Economic and Social Inclusion (MIES), of which only a third are operational.

What is the fundamental mission of Boom?

-We want to help these organizations overcome the obstacles they face and guide them toward a path of greater impact and sustainability. There are three of us on the board, and one of the directors is a priest who ensures that our proposal has clear Christian roots.

What kind of projects have passed through it? 

-In these two years, 12 social organizations have been involved, most of them foundations, but also some social enterprises. All of them are non-profit organizations. They are organizations created to solve a social problem and most of them operate thanks to donations from private and public entities.

The traditional dependence on external donors leads to great vulnerability: financial instability - difficulty in planning and retaining talent; donor focus - regardless of whether the solution responds to the real needs of the grantee; competition for limited resources - conceiving other foundations as competitors rather than nodes in the same network of support and momentum; and lack of long-term sustainability.

What do they look for when they come to Boom?

-Organizations are looking for a way to be sustainable in the long term. That is, a viable business model that allows them to focus on the problem to be solved and not on the funds to be raised. In this sense, the forms of social and solidarity economy are presented as a solution for some of them. A social enterprise is an organization that seeks to solve a social problem through a market model. 

Solving a need in the market is profitable. It also has many other advantages in terms of real social impact. In the Acceleration Program, we offer foundations the opportunity to build a model of sustainability for their organizations, so that neither their users are structurally dependent on their support nor they are structurally dependent on donors.

This means that organizations will rethink their services with a focus on delivering real value to their users and communities, and then look at who and to what extent they are willing to pay for it.

For example, if the beneficiary population of a product or service is also a customer, even at a discounted price. The thermometer of the goodness of the solution is the user, not the donor. On the other hand, if the beneficiary is also a worker, it achieves the greatest solution to poverty: a source of income. 

In any case, what is most relevant is the change in the perception of both donor and beneficiary of their relationship. The donor becomes a supplier and the beneficiary becomes a client or worker, which places him, de facto and in everyone's mind, in a situation of equality. The provider, the client and the worker all contribute to the exchange. All parties affirm their own capacity.

Therefore, the social enterprise model, explored by the foundations participating in our Acceleration Program, can solve not only the financial problems of NGOs, but also their veiled problems of impact, as revealed in the documentary film Poverty Cureof the Acton Institute.

Breaking out of our cycle of donor dependency may be linked to breaking the mentality of dependence on aid from the communities we work with.

The other day I was listening to this reflection: "It all started to work when we stopped asking 'how can I help you' and asked 'how can I do business with you'".

How is this mentoring done?

We implemented a 10-week Acceleration Program that combines training, workshops, mentoring and personalized accompaniment. We selected 8 social organizations with high impact and scalability potential and helped them transform their value propositions, financial sustainability models and impact measurement systems.

During the program, a space for pause and reflection is created for the management teams of the foundations, something unusual in the day-to-day life of anyone, especially in a sector where the need is endless. 

In addition, they enrich their brainstorming with ideas from mentors with innovative backgrounds in very diverse fields and expand their horizons with constant exposure to new trends, testimonies and tools. We make sure that mentors cover many areas, and one area is the Social Doctrine of the Church.

For our students, it is a new opportunity to see the Church from a different perspective, moving away from a paternalistic role and seeking solutions that, based on a solid foundation, promote social justice, solidarity and the well-being of the people and communities they serve.

Finally, these teams, highly committed to solving social problems and belonging to different organizations, live, share and create together. Spaces are designed so that they can discover the potential to collaborate and complement their services for the benefit of their users.

Don't you think that social organizations are often "unprofessional" and this means that they do not come to fruition over time? 

-The professional world is conceived in the popular imagination as the world of wealth generation for individual and corporate profit. This is changing, in part, thanks to the widespread pursuit of purpose through work. The gap between earning money and contributing to society is being challenged. From the other side, that of contributing altruistically to society, the same question is emerging.

Generating wealth, and doing it well, seems the best way to contribute to social development. This implies meeting a need with a real solution, having income to attract and retain talent, having benefits to serve the poor, and being able to take the solution to other cities, countries and regions.

However, informality in the social sector remains a reality. People endowed with the madness to undertake social work - at the expense of their family finances - are often overwhelmed by a great passion for their fellow man that blinds them to strategic decisions. Unfortunately, good will is not enough to divert the course of complex problems.

In our time, with movements such as the social and solidarity economy, the impact economy or, within the Church, Francisco's economyIn the case of the social sector, we observe how the company tends towards the social sector and the social sector tends towards the business sector. 

Those working in the private sector are increasingly looking for a work purpose that aligns with their life purpose, avoiding their negative impacts and generating positive impacts along their productive chain. In turn, social organizations are increasingly aware that their impact is limited, they must network and adopt the professional and efficient structure of the company and even a productive model.

In our acceleration sessions, we emphasize the fundamental values of human dignity and the need for all of us to contribute in an integral way.

We firmly believe that when we convey the ideal of service, even the most vulnerable can help their peers and contribute to building a more just society. Our mission is to inspire our participants to recognize their potential, contribute their skills and knowledge for the common good, and thus create a positive impact on their communities and the world at large, in line with the principles of the Social Doctrine of the Church.

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The Vatican

The Magisterium of Albino Luciani (Blessed John Paul I) through his library

The personal library that belonged to Blessed John Paul I (1912-1978), born Albino Luciani, pontiff for 33 days between August and September 1978, has been reconstructed and valorized in order to deepen his magisterium.

Giovanni Tridente-November 14, 2023-Reading time: 2 minutes

The personal library that belonged to the Blessed John Paul I (1912-1978), born Albino Luciani, pontiff for 33 days between August and September 1978, has been reconstructed and valorized to deepen in his magisterium, before as Pope, as diocesan pastor in Vittorio Veneto and then Patriarch in Venice.

The Vatican Foundation that bears his name, presided over by Cardinal Secretary of State Piero Parolin, with the vice-presidency entrusted to journalist Stefania Falasca - established by Pope Francis in February 2020 - is in fact organizing for next November 24, at the Pontifical Gregorian University, the conference "The Magisterium of John Paul I in the light of his library".

Literary dimension

The initiative was also the occasion to present the critical edition of the famous syllogium of forty imaginary letters that Albino Luciani wrote in 1976 under the title ".Your Excellencies"edited by vice-president Falasca herself, who comments: "Emblem of Albino Luciani's vast formation and of the close link between the papers and the books of his library, the work also leads to reflect on his particular familiarity with the literary dimension as a connotative canon that characterizes all his oral and written production".

Work office

The rich library of the last Italian pontiff was lived by him "as a working office," explains the Vatican Foundation. Originally composed of some five thousand volumes, "it passed through all the places where he exercised his ministry." A true "corpus in one place and one function" together with the private papers, which arrived at the Vatican the day after his election.

However, after his death, the library was partially dispersed and the most important material is now in the Benedict XVI Diocesan Library of Venice.

The event at the Gregoriana

The event at the Gregoriana will open with greetings from Cardinal Secretary of State Parolin and the Prefect of the Dicastery for Culture and Education, Cardinal José Tolentino de Mendonça. After the projection of a video on the "rediscovered library", the director of the Diocesan Library of the Patriarchate of Venice, Diego Sartorelli, will present the cataloguing work carried out on the books that belonged to Albino Luciani. The subsequent reflections will deal with the theological and spiritual formation of the Italian Pontiff (Mauro Velati) and the pastoral narrative of his writings (Gilberto Marengo).

The second part of the day will be dedicated to the presentation of the critical edition of "Illustrious Gentlemen", with the interventions of the editor Stefania Falasca and the university professor Cristiana Lardo.

The day will conclude with the intervention of another university professor (Tor Vergata), Simone Martuscelli, who will reflect on the usefulness of literature at the "service of Albino Luciani's preaching", tracing a sort of "linguistic strategy" that would later characterize all his teaching.

The authorGiovanni Tridente

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Education

Educating children, right and duty of parents

It is a right and an inescapable duty of parents to be the main actors in the education of their children. An education in freedom that the State must support and help, not replace.

Julio Iñiguez Estremiana-November 14, 2023-Reading time: 6 minutes

It is well known to all that we are living in difficult times to carry out the noble task of educating, which mainly affects parents (mothers and fathers), but which is also the responsibility of teachers -professionals in education, who have dedicated and dedicate much time to train themselves well in order to efficiently develop their vocation- whose main commitment, together with academic instruction, must consist in helping parents in the formation of their children: to make them good people -happy- and of benefit to society. This is a real challenge, from which it was never acceptable to desist, and even less so in our times.

I have dedicated my whole life to education. I am grateful for this privilege, and for this reason -with my mistakes and successes, of which there have been many- I am also proud. Now, aware of the difficulties involved in this essential task -surely greater than those of my time-, I propose to write some articles with the desire to provide guidelines that can help parents and teachers to develop, from childhood to youth, a good family, school and social education.

I would like to clarify from the outset that, logically, everything I can contribute is the fruit of my knowledge and my years of experience, and also that I am a Catholic, so my vision of education is sustained and enriched by the Christian principle of human dignity, and by my faith in God. On the other hand, I ask for the understanding of the non-Spanish readers for referring especially to Spain -what I know best, since I am Spanish-. And without further ado, here goes my first article -starting from the beginning-:

Educating children, right and duty of parents

At present, there are many States in which their rulers try to take away the right of parents to educate their children according to their beliefs and convictions. In Spain, the former Minister of Education and Vocational Training, Isabel Celaá, assured: "We cannot think in any way that children belong to parents", pretending to convince us that the State takes precedence over parents in the education of children. He said it as if he were repeating a truth that has always been accepted by everyone. And it was not a random occurrence, as it was later evidenced in her Education Law, but it was -it was- a power strategy. But NO! Contrary to what the former minister affirmed, it is the parents who receive from God the trust to raise and educate their children: they are the first depositaries of the right and duty to educate. This is what we will try to explain.

Article 27.3 of the Spanish Constitution - our Magna Carta is assumed and respected by a great majority of Spaniards and political groups - clearly recognizes - and protects - this inviolable natural right: "The public authorities guarantee the right of parents to ensure that their children receive the religious and moral education that is in accordance with their own convictions".

It expressly states: the right of parents to choose for their children an education in accordance with their convictions is guaranteed.

This has also been endorsed by the Constitutional Court on thirty occasions in which it has ruled on education since 1981. The most recent -July 2018-, in protection of an Association of Parents of Cantabria who saw the right to educational freedom violated; in this, in a very clear way, it stated that freedom of education is specified in three ways, which refer to the "creation of educational institutions, the right of parents to choose the center and the religious and moral formation they wish for their children, and the right to develop teaching with freedom to those who carry it out".

This same recognition can be found in many recognized experts on the subject. This is the case of Melissa Moschella, professor of Philosophy and researcher at the Catholic University of America -Princeton-, specialized in parental rights: she explains that the authority of parents over their own children is natural and pre-political (it precedes political authority). Consequently, the family is a small sovereign community within the larger political community. In other words, the family "has the right to conduct its internal affairs, free from external coercive interference, with the exception of cases of abuse and neglect".

Also Mariano Calabuig - during his time as president of the Family Forum-he told the magazine Mission that, in addition to the right to educate their children, parents have this duty, and "a duty can never be relinquished". It is non-transferable. For this reason, he stresses that "the State must provide the means to collaborate with parents in the education of their children during school age".

But where does this duty of the State to provide parents with the necessary means for the education of their children come from?

For Philosophy Professor Melissa Moschella, it comes from the biological relationship between the child and its parents, which is the most intimate personal relationship that exists: "Parents are the biological cause [...] of their children, giving them the genetic and biological foundation for existence and identity".

Such obligation - Moschellase goes on to explain - starts from the very moment of conception and extends throughout life, although it is strongest in the period when the child has not reached the maturity to make decisions on its own and is still incapable of surviving on its own. "Human gestation, so to speak, is not completed at nine months, but after physiological gestation there is a long period of psychological, moral and intellectual gestation, until a mature human being develops."

This doctrine is in accord with that of St. Thomas Aquinas: just as before birth the child is "in the womb of the mother," so after birth, but before the use of reason, the child "is under the care of his parents, as if contained in a spiritual womb." And it is also in conformity with Nature. If we think of the mother, who bears the child in her womb, she is naturally responsible for that child, not only for giving it birth to life, but also for giving it love, thus opening the way to its own personality. And in the case of the father, let us not forget, he has the same co-responsibility.

This is how Pope Francis explains it in point 166 of the Apostolic Exhortation Amoris LaetitiaThe gift of a new child, which the Lord entrusts to mom and dad, begins with welcoming, continues with the custody throughout earthly life and has as its final destination the joy of eternal life. A serene gaze towards the ultimate fulfillment of the human person will make parents even more aware of the precious gift entrusted to them".

Therefore, also when the children are already grown up and have embarked on their path of life, the parents will continue to play their role of father and mother. Even if your help is limited to praying for them, even if it may seem little, it is already a lot.

The responsibility of the State that we have been dealing with is also included in the Catechism of the Catholic Church [n. 1910], "it is incumbent upon the State to defend and promote the common good of civil society, citizens and intermediate institutions". 

And promoting the good of the individual - in this case, that of the children - will require the public authorities to offer parents the help they need to fulfill their responsibilities.

Parents exercise the right to educate, not only in the form of natural influence, for which the notion of right is not necessary, but in the choice of teachers or schools, when these are instituted, for the education of their children.

Eduard Spranger, German philosopher and psychologist, explains it as follows: "Historically, the right of parents to education is immemorial. It constitutes a Roman legal motive, a Christian ethical motive, which is common to Catholicism and Protestantism, and finally also a modern philosophical motive of natural law.

Surely," Moschella explains, "in many ways other people could care for children as well or even better than their biological parents, even if they are the ones who can naturally give the child "their own love. Moreover, when that love is lacking, it can "harm the child". For this reason, the responsibility of the parents in the education of their children can only be obviated when they do not have the necessary competence, that is to say, if there are serious reasons that make it advisable to give them up for adoption. In this case, when the child reaches maturity, he/she will be able to understand that the decision to give him/her up for adoption was not a rejection or abandonment, but a token of the love of his/her biological parents.

From all of the above, Moschella concludes, "When the state requires children to be educated in a way that the parents deem harmful or inappropriate, the state is impeding the fulfillment of parental obligations, thereby violating the integrity of the parents and, potentially, harming the children as well."

It escapes no one's notice that, in our days, affective-sexual education is an aspect of formation in which external and powerful forces seek to intervene unduly. A clear and serious example is found in the advocates of gender ideology, with undesirable consequences, which are on the rise.

Conclusions

The State must help parents in their educational task, but it cannot coerce them by imposing that their children be indoctrinated with ideas that they think may be harmful, since that would go against the parents' responsibility to protect their children and develop an educational project, congruent with their own convictions and beliefs.

There are currently States that seek to take away from parents a right that they have prior to the laws issued by governments and that is stronger than these. The State must recognize fundamental rights -it does not grant them- and ensure their effective protection. This is what was requested by the hundreds of thousands of families in Spain who took to the streets -by car due to the restrictions of the pandemic- to defend their children from the education law that was being processed -the current LOMLOE- and was approved in 2020 without being heard by the former minister or by anyone in her government.

Families should not allow the State or other agents outside of education to unduly interfere in the education of their children, violating the rights of parents and their children.

The authorJulio Iñiguez Estremiana

Physicist. High School Mathematics, Physics and Religion teacher.

United States

U.S. bishops' annual assembly opens with call for peace in Middle East

The Plenary Assembly of the USCCB will be held in Baltimore from November 13-16. For four days, the bishops will meet to discuss relevant topics for the Church in the country, among them the news regarding the Synod of Bishops, the National Eucharistic Congress, as well as the modification of texts related to the political responsibility of Catholics and a new scheme for the indigenous pastoral.

Gonzalo Meza-November 14, 2023-Reading time: 3 minutes

From November 13 to 16, the Plenary Assembly of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB). Over the course of four days, bishops from all over the country gather to discuss issues relevant to the Church in the country, including developments concerning the Synod of Bishops, the National Eucharistic Congress, the Eucharistic Revival initiative, as well as the adaptation and modification of texts related to the political responsibility of Catholics (2024 is an election year in the USA) and a new outline for the indigenous pastoral.

The assembly began on Monday, November 13, with a Mass for peace in the world and in the Middle East. The ceremony took place at the Baltimore Cathedral in Maryland (Basilica of the National Shrine of the Assumption of Mary) and was presided over by Archbishop Timothy P. Broglio, Archbishop of the Archdiocese for the U.S. Military Services and President of the USCCB. In his homily, Archbishop Broglio asked God for the gift of peace in the world and pointed out that the Gospel message of mercy and reconciliation offers the answer to the conflicts we are experiencing: "We see the delicate situation in the Middle East today. We want to defend our elder brothers in faith, denouncing the outbreaks of anti-Semitism. At the same time we recognize the right of the Palestinians to a homeland. The suffering and death of innocents on both sides continues to horrify people of good will," the prelate said.

The USCCB president also spoke of the responsibility of bishops to conduct themselves according to the truth and alluded to the synodal way: "We recognize that we are servants of the truth and we are charged with seeking ways to help those entrusted to our pastoral care to receive that truth, see its logic and embrace the way of life that Christ offers us. We do this in many ways as we work synodically in serving the Church in this part of the world. The faith, Bishop Broglio pointed out, should never be used as a vehicle of protest and whoever does so falls into scandal: "The person who provokes scandal becomes a tempter of his neighbor, damages virtue and integrity and can even lead his brother to spiritual death. He who uses the power he has to lead others to commit evil becomes guilty of scandal and is responsible for the evil he has directly or indirectly encouraged," warned Archbishop Broglio.

Before the celebration of the Holy Mass, the bishops had moments of community prayer, reflection, adoration of the Blessed Sacrament, confession and opportunities for fraternal fellowship.

The public sessions of this assembly will begin on November 14. Cardinal Christophe Pierre, Apostolic Nuncio to the United States, and Bishop Timothy P. Broglio will open the formal work of the sessions with introductory addresses. The meeting agenda includes discussion of the newly created Institute on the Catechism; presentation of reports and updates from the Synod of Bishops, the National Eucharistic Congress, the Eucharistic Revival Initiative and the National Catholic Mental Health Campaign.

At the assembly, the bishops will discuss and vote on a new introductory note with supporting materials to the text on the bishops' teaching on political accountability, entitled "Forming Consciences for Faithful Citizenship." The prelates will also vote on an outline for the development of indigenous pastoral care called "Keeping Christ's Sacred Promise." As in every assembly, new English translations of a series of liturgical texts will be voted on during this session, among them adaptations of the "Liturgy of the Hours" and various sections of the "Ritual of Consecration of Virgins". In the liturgical area, Bishop Steven J. Lopez will lead a discussion on the topic "Use of Technology in the Liturgy".

The meeting will also vote to support both the cause for the beatification and canonization of the Servant of God Isaac Thomas Hecker, founding priest of the Missionary Society of St. Paul the Apostle (known as the "Paulist Fathers"), and the petition of the Bishops' Conference of England and Wales to ask the Holy Father to name St. John Henry Newman as a Doctor of the Church.

Culture

Erik Varden: "No truly edifying word has ever been uttered with contempt."

Varden, Bishop of Trondheim (Norway), was one of the main speakers at Encuentro Madrid and spoke with Omnes about his life and the position of Christianity in a secularized world.

Loreto Rios-November 14, 2023-Reading time: 3 minutes

Erik Varden is a Cistercian monk and Bishop of Trondheim (Norway). Coming from a family of Protestant tradition, his childhood and youth were marked by an absence of faith. However, it was through music, specifically Mahler's Symphony No. 2, Symphony of the Resurrection, that his yearning for transcendence took shape in a search for answers: "I felt a great vulnerability that carried within it a kind of consolation, and that set me on the path to seek that consolation, which I gradually discovered was not something abstract but a concrete person, with a name and a face," Varden commented in Madrid Meeting.

Bishop Varden was one of the main speakers at this event, which was born in 2003 from the Christian experience of people linked to the Catholic movement of Communion and Liberationand that in its twentieth edition has also counted with the presence of the neuropsychiatrist Mariolina Ceriotti, Rodrigo Guerra LópezSecretary of the Pontifical Commission for Latin America, and the poets Pablo Luque and Juan Meseguer. Under the theme "A friendship that weaves history", participants and speakers reflected for three days on experiences of friendship, the surprise of humanity and the search for the good.

Bishop Varden spoke with Omnes about his conversion story and, especially, the attitude of the Catholic in a secularized and cold world with respect to the faith. 

How was your process of conversion and approach to the Catholic Church?

-I was baptized in the Lutheran Church, but my family was not very practicing. My awakening to the faith began with an intimate experience through music, when I was fifteen years old. I came to know the Catholic Church first through literature (as a teenager I was deeply moved by Narcissus and Goldmund, the characters in Hermann Hesse's novel of the same name) and liturgical music - Mozart's masses and Gregorian chant - and then through the study and witness of Catholic friends.

Do you see a growth of Catholicism in Norway?

-There is a discrete growth, mainly through immigration, but also through conversions. Converts do not necessarily come from other denominations; many come from a context of not having had any faith. 

His latest book deals with the subject of chastityWhat do you think you can bring to the world today?

-Throughout the West, we live in a cultural climate that is perplexed by issues of sexuality. We have learned a great deal about this important subject, and we have grown from what we have learned. But the shedding of some complexes has led to the generation of others. There is a tendency to isolate sexuality from other dimensions of our personality. Many experience this part of themselves as conflicted, fragmented: we can think, for example, of the huge number of men and women who suffer from pornography addiction. This is where a re-acquisition of the vocabulary of chastity can be helpful. Chastity properly understood does not mean the denial of sex, but its orderly orientation through integration. To be chaste is to be whole, and who does not want to be and feel more integrated?

In the first chapter, you mention that art also heals and restores, through the effect of catharsis. Do you believe that art can bring us closer to God? 

-I know from experience that art can play a crucial role in evangelization, that is, in awakening hope. Being able to present the faith in an analytical way is necessary; but art - be it music, painting or literature - can open up a further dimension, speak mysteriously of the ineffable. Incidentally, this is an important aspect of the work of my compatriot Jon Fosse, winner of this year's Nobel Prize for Literature. A convert to Catholicism, he uses his art to expose the mystery of faith, to the point that some commentators have described him as a mystical writer.

In today's world, where Christian doctrine seems to offend in many areas, how can truth and charity be combined in an effective way?

-Always speaking the truth in charity, and exercising charity in truth. Our effort to present the faith must be marked by charity, bearing witness to the grace we have received. Otherwise, it will have no credibility. No truly edifying word has ever been uttered with contempt.

The World

Synodal Committee formed in Germany 

Despite the Vatican's prohibition, a Synodal Committee has been established in Germany for the purpose of organizing a Synodal Council. It will make its decisions by a two-thirds majority, eliminating the bishops' veto.

José M. García Pelegrín-November 13, 2023-Reading time: 4 minutes

On November 11, in Essen, Germany, the so-called "Synodal Committee of the Catholic Church in Germany"The committee has unanimously approved its statutes and rules of procedure. According to a press release issued Saturday, this committee "will meet periodically until 2026 to further develop the synodality of the Church." 

Prohibition of Rome

The three-year duration is established in order to prepare a "Synodal Council" to extend the work done during the "Synodal Council".Synodal Path"carried out between 2019 and 2023. However, the establishment of this "Synodal Council" was explicitly banned by the Cardinal Secretary of State and the cardinal prefects of the dicasteries for the Doctrine of the Faith and for Bishops, with the express approval of Pope Francis, and communicated in a letter dated January 16, 2023: "Neither the Synodal Path, neither a body appointed by him, nor a national bishops' conference" are authorized to create such a body. This is because such a council would be "a new governing structure of the Church in Germany, which (...) seems to place itself above the authority of the Bishops' Conference and to replace it de facto."

Despite this prohibition, 19 of the 27 titular bishops of the German dioceses participated in the constitutive meeting, together with 27 representatives of the Central Committee of German Catholics (ZdK) and 20 other persons elected by the assembly of the German Catholic Church (ZdK). Synodal Path. According to the press release, all of them "jointly discuss the future of the Church".

A remarkable aspect of the discussed statutes was highlighted by Irme Stetter-Karp, President of the ZdK, at the end of the meeting: "I am pleased that the committee has agreed, among other things, to make future decisions with a two-thirds majority of all members present. This implies a major step forward in promoting synodality." In addition, this means the elimination of the veto power that bishops had in the assemblies of the Synodal Way, where decisions required the support of two-thirds of the bishops present.

Further steps

However, for the statutes to become effective, they still need to be approved by the organizers of the Synodal Way, i.e., the German Bishops' Conference (DBK) and the ZdK. There seems to be no doubt that the ZdK will approve them; however, it remains to be seen how they will be treated within the DBK, considering that eight of the bishops have not participated in this constitutive meeting of the Synodal Committee.

At the end of the meeting, Msgr. Georg BätzingDBK President, expressed optimism: "The Synod Committee has gained momentum. I am grateful to have entered a new phase. I am therefore pleased to take up words from the World Synod: 'Church on the move', a sentiment we experienced in Rome and now also in Essen. The decisions on the statutes and rules of procedure are a clear indication that we have learned and practiced synodality, with its fundamental requirement: mutual trust." 

At the beginning of the meeting, Irme Stetter-Karp emphasized that the Synodal Way in Germany is closely linked to the universal Church: "Pope Francis encourages us to stand firm on our word. We are making progress with perseverance. He added: "The consultations in Rome have made clear the need for concrete and visible changes in the Church." Bishop Bätzing emphasized the connection between the universal Synod and the German Synodal Way: "Synodality must be strengthened and concretized as a 'modus vivendi et operandi' for the whole Church. Only from this perspective can the Synodal Way of the Church in Germany be seen as a genuine effort to develop precisely the synodality that is so important for the whole Church in the 21st century."

Lack of clarity

It is striking, however, that although representatives of the Way - or now the Synodal Committee - continually refer to the encouragement of the universal Synod and the Pope to continue, they do not adopt the clear words of the Pontiff on synodality: "We are not here to conduct a parliamentary meeting or a reform plan," Francis said at the beginning of the General Congregation of the Synod in early October. Nevertheless, the Synodal Committee follows the same pattern as the Synodal Way: with votes on proposals and amendments, and, of course, with a "reform plan."

The President of the ZdK expressly referred to this by excluding the "format" of the universal Synod: "We do not consider it appropriate to limit ourselves to listening for one week, and then another". Irme Stetter-Karp does not believe that "we need to learn anything from the Universal Synod in terms of working methods".

Opposition of theologians and lay people

In mid-week, the initiative "New Beginnings" (Neuer Anfang), a group of theologians and lay people who support reform projects in the Catholic Church, concerned about the direction of the Synodal Way, issued a note of protest against the Synodal Committee, stating that it "could fragment the Catholic Church in Germany and endanger unity with the Pope and the universal Church." According to the initiative, the renewal of the Church "cannot consist in creating a Church in the German way".

It describes the creation of the Synodal Committee as a "scandalous and illegitimate act in every respect" that seeks to usurp power over the Church. In the note it expresses its protest "against the presumption of this group to speak in the name of all Catholics in Germany."

Quoting the President of the ZdK, who pointed out that the goal is to find a "permanent form in which bishops and laity, that is, the ministry and the people of God together, not only consult each other, but also make decisions," they indicate that this would reduce, and even destroy, the apostolic office of leadership of the bishops. Only the bishops, advised by the faithful, have the authority to lead the Church, concludes the "New Beginnings" note.

The constitutive meeting of the "Synodal Committee" was held behind closed doors. However, according to Irme Stetter-Karp, it was agreed in its rules of procedure that, in general, the meetings will be open to the press in the future. "This will create a transparency that I consider crucial," she said. 

The Vatican

Pope encourages "apostolate" of smiles

Rome Reports-November 13, 2023-Reading time: < 1 minute
rome reports88

In an audience held with members of the Catholic Charismatic Renewal International Service, known as CHARIS, Pope Francis encouraged them to smile, as doing so will help them in their mission.

CHARIS is a group focused on baptism, Christian unity and service to the poor. It was created just five years ago by the Dicastery for the Laity, Family and Life.


AhNow you can enjoy a 20% discount on your subscription to Rome Reports Premiumthe international news agency specializing in the activities of the Pope and the Vatican.
Photo Gallery

The 7 main churches of Rome

This map, dating from about 1575, shows the seven main churches of Rome that have been the object of pilgrimage for centuries.

Maria José Atienza-November 13, 2023-Reading time: < 1 minute
Education

Alfonso AguilóWe must transform polarization into collaboration".

"What is urgent is to make better educational policies and what is often done is to politicize education, something quite different. We have to transform polarization into collaboration," Alfonso Aguiló, president of the Spanish Confederation of Education Centers (CECE), told Omnes after the 50th Congress in the Balearic Islands.

Francisco Otamendi-November 13, 2023-Reading time: 5 minutes

Education in today's Spain cannot be understood without Alfonso Aguiló, chairman of CECEwhich groups a third of Spanish private and subsidized education, as it cannot be understood without Catholic Schools. Both have been on the platform since 2020. More pluralin defense of educational plurality, together with other confederations, parents' associations, etc.

Hundreds of schools and vocational training centers from all over Spain have reflected in early November on burning issues in education, in the Balearic Islands, under the slogan "The School we want: training to transform", in a meeting held in the Balearic Islands. Congress which brought together more than 400 professionals from private and subsidized education.

We discussed some of them with Alfonso Aguiló, Civil Engineer (1983) and PADE from IESE Business School (2008), eleven years as director of the Tajamar school  (Madrid), and current president of the Arenales Educational Networkwhich integrates more than 30 schools in Spain, Portugal, Germany, the United States and other countries.

Since 2015 Aguiló has been the national president of CECE, and in this capacity he grants Omnes this interview, which he prepared on his return from Barcelona. In it he states, among other things, that "it would be advisable to prune the LOMLOE of various aspects that respond to ideological resabios alien to the good of education", and that "a plural society needs a plural educational system".

You chair CECE and the Arenales Educational Network, but you also advise educational institutions in 35 countries in Europe, America and Asia. Are you optimistic about the development of education in the world?

- Education is the synthesis that each generation makes of its culture in order to transmit it to the next generation. And this legacy is necessarily a plural legacy. And that plurality in turn makes it easier for society to be plural, which is normally quite positive. When there is plurality, the best experiences gain ground over the worst, and the system improves naturally, learning from each other. I believe that the freedom to teach, as well as the dynamics that facilitate the sharing of experiences and the generation of collaborative cultures, help significantly to improve the whole.

How do you see the evolution of education in Europe and Spain? In the conclusions of the Congress, they talk, for example, about the need for a constructive debate to improve education.

- Good performance in education is not an easy matter to measure. Each culture, and each family, focuses more on some points and less on others. This encourages, among other things, education to be quite pluralistic, and that is positive. But if we look at PISA, for example, or other studies that measure the most common indicators, Spain as a whole has an education system with overall results similar to those of the countries around us. And as for Europe, globally it is above, although there are countries, especially in Asia, that obtain much better academic results.

When the Spanish Ministry of Education took over from the current incumbent in 2021, you told a media outlet: "We want a good relationship and to help develop a law that we don't like, to make sure it doesn't get worse". 

- It is clear that if a law is already in force and there is no political will to change it, efforts must be focused on ensuring that its developments reduce the negative consequences that this law may produce.

Last year we asked the pedagogue Gregorio Luri about aspects of the Education Law (LOMLOE) that he would reorient, and he said: "I would bring everything back on track. I think a return to sanity is absolutely urgent". How do you see it?

- It seems to me that what is urgent is to make better educational policies and what is often done is to politicize education, which is something quite different. The LOMLOE should be pruned of several aspects that respond to ideological resabios that are alien to the good of education, and that have been incorporated by political pressures that should not be in the debate of the improvement of our educational system. For example, it is easy to detect that the law shows hostility towards subsidized education, towards special education, towards transparency in the evaluation of centers, towards the choice of center, etc.

On the obstacle to the freedom of choice of center, the same pedagogue responded: "If all the stores in Madrid sold exactly the same thing, autonomy would not be necessary. If each store sells different products, I want to be able to choose where I want to shop...". Would you add or specify anything?

- It is almost obvious. A plural society needs a plural educational system. This requires, above all, two things. The first is that there should be private education financed with public funds, because otherwise only public schools would be free and only the rich would have access to this plural school. The second is that there must be freedom to choose or change schools within this plurality, because if there is a plural offer but I am not allowed to choose, this plurality is a chimera.

What has this 50th Congress contributed to the challenge of educating today? In addition, there are topics such as neuroscience or artificial intelligence that are in full effervescence. Anthropological issues, the identity of man, etc., are also on the agenda.

- Schools must focus their purpose and mission on training each person well so that they can make the most of their talents and thus contribute to transforming and improving the society in which we live. To do this, we need educational policies that make it easier for schools to become better every day. We have reaffirmed CECE's commitment to work collaboratively with all the actors in the educational world, starting with those who draft and those who apply legal regulations, with that clear purpose in mind. We must transform polarization into collaboration, thinking more about improving education and less about party interests.

"A good private and charter school also makes public education better," you said. Can you elaborate a bit on this idea? In the conclusions, you are in favor of excellent public education, but this should not hinder the work of the subsidized schools, you say.

- We always say it, to make it clear that we want to get out of this perverse dynamic of confronting those who do not have to be confronted. All of us who work in education should want all schools to do well, not only ours or ours. That is why we want an excellent public education, and that is why we insist that the improvement of public education is not achieved by hindering the work of the subsidized schools, but by working so that all education is better every day, without antagonisms.

On the economic side, many parents, at least in environments I know, want options other than the public one, because of their convictions or for whatever reasons, and they cannot, or the effort they have to make almost exceeds their capacities. Any comments?

- After World War II, there was a wide-ranging debate that led to the declaration of so-called second-generation human rights. Ways were sought to avoid in the future the terrible experiences of the various totalitarianisms. Among these rights, the idea was clarified that the right to education could not only be quantitative, i.e., that it was not enough to guarantee a school place for each student, but that it should be a qualitative right, i.e., the right to have a school place in accordance with one's religious, philosophical and pedagogical convictions. This right is vital to avoid the risk of public authorities using education as a system of mass indoctrination of the population.

And how has this right been implemented?

- This led to the need to finance private education, so that anyone can have access to the schools they consider most appropriate to their personal preferences. And that is why there is subsidized education in Spain, and there are different solutions in the vast majority of developed countries. And the existence of these schools financed with public money is due to this right to a plural education, not because the public authorities cannot provide schooling to the entire population: they could do it perfectly well, but it would lead us to an asphyxiating uniformity, typical of totalitarian regimes.

The authorFrancisco Otamendi

The Vatican

"The interior life is not improvised," the Pope reminds us.

Pope Francis spoke at the Angelus on November 12 about the Gospel parable of the ten virgins, "which refers to the meaning of one's life."

Paloma López Campos-November 12, 2023-Reading time: 2 minutes

In his Angelus meditation, Pope Francis reflected on the parable of the ten virgins (Matthew 25:1-13) that reads in the Gospel on Sunday, November 12. The Pontiff pointed out at the outset that this passage "refers to the meaning of life itself". Our life, he explained, is a preparation, an active waiting until we are "called to go out to meet the One who loves us most, Jesus!".

Christ's parable of the ten virgins explains the difference between wisdom and foolishness. Francis delved into these two vital attitudes. On the one hand, he noted that "the difference between wisdom and foolishness does not lie in willingness," for all the virgins are waiting for the bridegroom. "Nor does it lie in the promptness with which they arrive at the encounter: they are all there with their lamps."

The Holy Father stressed that the real difference between wisdom and foolishness is "preparation". The oil of the lamps is the symbol of preparation in this parable. "And what is the characteristic of the oil? That it is not seen: it is inside the lamps, it does not attract attention, but without it the lamps give no light."

Taking care of your inner life

Francis wanted to bring this idea down to earth in daily practice, in our present day. "Today we are very attentive to appearances, what matters to us is to take good care of our image and make a good impression on others. But Jesus says that the wisdom of life is in another dimension: in taking care of what is not seen, but which is more important, because it is within us". In short, the essential thing is to take care of the inner life.

The care of the interior life implies "stopping to listen to the heart, to pay attention to thoughts and feelings". The Pope invited to "give space to silence, to be able to listen". He also stressed the importance of leaving technology aside "to look at the light in the eyes of others, in one's own heart, in God's gaze towards us." Finally, he addressed those who have a role within the Church. To them he suggested "not to get caught up in activism, but to dedicate time to the Lord, to listening to his Word, to adoration".

Personal Examination

All this, Francis pointed out, leads us to conclude that "the interior life cannot be improvised". To take care of the heart it is necessary to dedicate "a little time every day, with constancy, as one does for every important thing".

To conclude his meditation, the Pope posed a question for each of us to ask ourselves: "What am I preparing at this moment of my life? Along with all the good projects, Francis invited us to ask ourselves if we are dedicating time "to the care of the heart, to prayer and service to others, to the Lord".

Finally, the Holy Father turned to Holy Mary, so that she "may help us to guard the oil of the interior life".

United States

November, Native American Heritage Month

November marks Native American Heritage Month in the United States, which aims to learn more about Native American culture.

Gonzalo Meza-November 12, 2023-Reading time: 4 minutes

Native American Heritage Month has been celebrated in November since 1990. Its objective is to get closer to the native peoples in the United States to learn about their cultures and recognize their contributions to society. On that occasion, different cultural institutions and museums organize activities, among them the National Gallery, the Library of Congress, the National Archives and mainly the National Museum of the American Indians, which is part of the network of Smithsonian Museums. This precinct houses one of the largest collections of indigenous objects in the world and includes artifacts, photographs, works of art, paintings and sculptures not only from North America but from all over the continent.

In addition, many dioceses organize Masses and times of prayer to commemorate Native American heritage. For example, on November 3, Cardinal Wilton Gregory, Archbishop of Washington, DC, presided at St. Mary of Piscataway Church in Clinton, Maryland at a Mass in honor of Native Americans. In his homily the Cardinal noted, "We celebrate this Native Heritage Month so that our brothers and sisters who claim that precious heritage may rejoice in the great good that Native Americans have done in society and continue to do so."

Tribes in the United States

There are 573 tribal entities in the country, to which 2.5 million American Indians and Alaska Natives belong, living in various parts of the territory. The most populated tribes are the Cherokee, Navajo and Choctaw. Some groups call themselves a "nation" or "people," the latter term being used for tribes that share the same language, inhabit the same region or share cultural traits.  

Throughout history, the relationship of these peoples with the federal government has been complex and conflictive. From the origins of the nation, the U.S. government imposed its authority based on treaties that were not fulfilled or were deceptive. In this way, the natives were dispossessed of a large part of their lands. An example of this is the "Indian Removal Act," passed in 1830, which ordered the expulsion of Indians from the eastern part of the country to the west of the Mississippi River.

One of the tribes that suffered most from this law were the Cherokee. Their forced march westward is known in the history of the country as the "Trail of Tears" because hundreds of Indians died along the way from starvation, disease or exhaustion. Of the 15,000 Cherokees who set out, 4,000 died along the way. Decades later, many of these actions were deplored and declared unconstitutional by the Supreme Court, as in the case of Worcester v. Georgia, which recognized the forced displacement of Indian populations and the dispossession of their ancestral lands. The United States currently applies a policy of cooperation and self-determination, whereby the government recognizes the areas known as "Indian Reservations" as semi-sovereign territories, i.e. with their own laws and forms of self-government. They are not part of any state, although they are within them and therefore are not subject to its laws.

Tribes may enact civil and criminal laws, establish citizenship rules, and authorize activities within their jurisdictions. Limitations are the same as states and are found in the constitution. Some of them are: they do not have the power to issue their own currency, engage in foreign relations or declare war on other countries. There are 326 federal reserves, many are located in the border area between Mexico and the United States. The largest is the Navajo Nation Reservation with 16 million acres, which is located in Arizona, New Mexico and Utah.

The inhabitants of the reserves face numerous challenges, including poverty, unemployment and crime. This is because many are remotely located and lack the resources to establish solid industries or businesses. One widespread exception is casinos, which have been very successful and are a crucial source of revenue for tribes. Several states, such as Texas, prohibit the installation of casinos and therefore many people go to the only gambling centers located on Indian reservations. One of them is the Kickapoo reservation in Eagle Pass, Texas, on the border with Coahuila, Mexico.

Native American Catholics

It is estimated that there are slightly more than 780,000 American Indians and Alaska Natives who profess the Catholic faith in the country. There are 340 parishes made up mainly of indigenous communities. The United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) created the Subcommittee on Native American Affairs, currently chaired by Bishop Chad W. Zielinski of Ulm, to manage and assist in the pastoral care of this sector of the population. 

 Native American Catholics possess profound values that have enriched the Church and its communities. The first of these is their spirituality. In recent years, the church has increased the number of its saints and blessed with the canonization of Kateri Tekakwitha (1656, New York-1680 Quebec), called the "Native American".Mohawk Lily"and with the beatification process of the Servant of God Nicholas W. Black Elk, the "Black Elk" (1863-1950) of the Oglala Sioux tribe. Kateri Tekakwitha is the patroness of Native Americans. She was canonized in 2012. The "Black Elk" was baptized as an adult in 1907 and in the second part of his life traveled to different Indian reservations to teach and preach the faith.

While the lives of these exemplary role models have shaped Native American spirituality, these cultures also possess other values that enrich the rest of American culture. One of these is that of restorative justice. Through their struggles, primarily in American courts, Native peoples have asserted their rights, especially the use and sovereignty of their lands. Two other vital principles in Native American cultures are the family, centered on marriage, and community life in the parish. Their traditions, languages and customs are spread - in parish communities or missions - along with the proclamation of the Gospel and the celebration of the sacraments.

"Native cultures and the Gospel are not two competing ideas, but merge as seen in the lives of so many Native Americans. With a deeper understanding of the communities belonging to the Native American Catholic Church we will be able to better link the faith and cultures that guide Catholic ministry to Native Americans being a great gift to Christ and his Church" (USCCB, 2019. "Two rivers," Report on American Catholic culture and ministry).

Culture

The hermit San Millán and the cradle of the Spanish language

November 12 is the feast day of San Millán, a saint from the 5th-6th century A.D. who gave his name to the Rioja town of San Millán de la Cogolla. His history is also linked to the beginnings of the Spanish language.

Loreto Rios-November 12, 2023-Reading time: 3 minutes

San Millán was born in Berceo (now a town in La Rioja) in 473 AD. At that time, in the Iberian Peninsula, already Christianized, the Hispano-Romans and the newly arrived Visigoths coexisted. At that time, Euric reigned, although the long life of San Millán spanned 10 reigns, since he lived 101 years, from 473 to 574.

Shepherd in Berceo

From a hispanoroman and peasant family, he was a shepherd until he was 20 years old. From then on, he decided to embrace religious life and left Berceo to study with the anchorite Saint Felices de Bilibio. Subsequently, he became a hermit and returned to his native region, retiring to some caves that are now located in the town of San Millán de la Cogolla (a town that did not exist at that time and that was formed because many people went to settle there because of the saint).

Saint Millán, hermit

With a reputation for holiness due to his miracles, he soon had followers who formed a community in the nearby caves, both men and women, for example St. Citonato, St. Sophronius, St. Oria (Gonzalo de Berceo wrote the poem "Life of St. Oria") and St. Potamia, who today gives her name to one of the streets of the village.

Tombs of the Infantes de Lara at Suso

Due to the increase of followers, a Visigothic church was built next to the caves, which was later enlarged during the Mozarabic period. This church was polychrome, but in the year 1002 Almanzor set fire to it and today only some small remains of that decoration are preserved. From the original church, you can still see a Visigothic altar from the 6th century, the oldest one preserved in the Peninsula and in most of the West.

First traces of Spanish

The current Monastery of Suso, in San Millán de la Cogolla, is built in the caves where Saint Millán lived. Inhabited by highly educated monks, the famous Glosas Emilianenses were written there, the first written testimony of the Spanish language, clarifications to the Latin text that an anonymous monk copyist wrote in Romance on the right margin of the codex. Some Basque words also appear in these glosses.

When he died in 574, Saint Millán was buried in Suso, and his remains remained there until 1053, when King García decided to transfer him to the recently founded Santa María La Real de Nájera. However, according to tradition, the oxen transporting the funeral cart collapsed when they reached the valley, and there was no way to move them forward. This was interpreted by the king as a sign that the body of the saint should not leave the valley, and the Monastery of Yuso was built, where the remains of San Millán are preserved to this day. Both monasteries have been declared World Heritage Site.

Due to the transfer, a commemorative cenotaph of black alabaster was made in the Monastery of Suso in the 12th century, in which several figures are represented, among them St. Braulio, bishop of Zaragoza and first biographer of San Millán.

Gonzalo de Berceo

The Monastery of Suso became an important cultural center. In the 12th century, a boy named Gonzalo, born, like St. Millán, in Berceo, went there to be educated. This would be Gonzalo de Berceo, the first poet of known name who wrote his works in Romance instead of Latin. This is why this place is known as the "cradle" of the Spanish language.

In Suso also rest the remains (except for the heads) of the Seven Infantes de Lara, along with those of their ayo, Don Nuño.

The so-called "Cueva de Cuaresma" (Lenten Cave), where Saint Millán used to retire during Lent to fast and do penance, is also preserved. In the cave you can also see the tombs of noblemen who wanted to be buried near the saint. In another area of the small monastery are kept the bones of pilgrims of yesteryear that have been found in the valley.

Suso Monastery

Suso and Yuso

Today the Monastery of Suso does not house monks or hermits: the small building has remained on the top of the mountain as an architectural, historical, cultural and religious relic. However, in the monastery of Yuso still lives a community of Augustinian monks who preserve the religious cult of the place.

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The World

His Beatitude Shevchuk: "We must not resign ourselves to war, it is always a tragedy".

Omnes was able to speak with Monsignor Sviatoslav Shevchuk, Major Archbishop of Kiev, after his trip to Brussels where he met with various representatives of the European Union.

Antonino Piccione-November 11, 2023-Reading time: 4 minutes

His Beatitude Sviatoslav ShevchukThe major archbishop of Kiev has been in Brussels, where he arrived to attend the plenary assembly of the Commission of the Bishops' Conferences of the European Union (Comece).

There he also met with the leadership of the European Commission on the day Ursula Von der Leyen announced the first green light for negotiations on the entry of some countries, including Ukraine, into the European Union.

He also met with European Commission representatives Olivér Várhelyi, European Commissioner for Enlargement and Neighborhood Policy of the EU Commission, and Michael Siebert, Executive Director for EU Affairs.

Beatitude, how was the news of the first step towards Ukraine's entry into the European Union received?

Perhaps it is a coincidence, but exactly 10 years ago I came here to Brussels with the heads of Churches and religious organizations gathered in the All-Ukrainian Council. We had come here to declare the will of the Ukrainian people to return to the family of European nations. We brought to the European Summit a document bearing the signatures of the leaders of the Christian Churches and of the Jewish and Muslim communities. Today this text is signed with the blood of the sons and daughters of the Ukrainian people. To defend this European project, the Revolution of Dignity broke out in Ukraine and the Russian invasion of Crimea and Donbass began in 2014.

The root of the military confrontation we are experiencing today stems precisely from the political denial of the identity of a people.

Today I feel that the European Union has finally opened its doors. If this step had been taken 10 years earlier, perhaps so many victims would have been avoided.

Why do you say this?

-Europe is a family of nations. A civilization, not just an economic union. If we had not abandoned ourselves to our own desires, if we had not privileged the economy over the dignity of the human person, if we had let the peoples choose, recognizing them not as the object of negotiation between Europe and Russia, but as the subject of their own future, then, 10 years ago, many lives could have been saved.

So what value do Von der Leyen's words have today?

They are an encouragement, even moral, even psychological.they tell us that all those victims who defended the European identity of our people were not in vain.

Finally someone recognizes who Ukrainians are, why they live and why they die.

Pope Francis greets Ukrainian Archbishop Sviatoslav Shevchuk during a private meeting at the Vatican ©CNS photo/Vatican Media

What does the European Union mean to you?

-The values of the dignity of the person, of human life. It is very clear that the war in Ukraine is not a confrontation between two nations, but between two projects.
On the one hand, there is Russia, which is pursuing a return to a glorious past.

The past of an empire that wants to reconquer Ukraine, its former colony, and bring it back under a dictatorial system. On the other side is the Ukraine that wants to move forward, that looks to the future and does not want to go back.

There is a lot of talk, and rightly so, about the situation in the Middle East and very little about the war in Ukraine. What news is there? We live the tragedy of the Holy Land as our tragedy.

-We are very close to the Israeli people because, like them, the Ukrainian people are denied the very right to exist, and we are very close to the Christians of Palestine and the State of Israel.

It is interesting to note that the conflict in the Holy Land began on October 7 as a result of Hamas terrorist action.

In Ukraine, October was the bloodiest month in the last year.

The Russians slaughtered 1,000 of their own soldiers every day and our Ukrainian prisoners of war were shot en masse. A butchery. The war in Ukraine continues, the risk is that it will become a silenced war, a forgotten war. Just as it happened 10 years ago in the Donbass and Crimea. All this makes it urgent to plan for the future with a diplomatic plan.

There is little peace diplomacy, even here in the European Union. By the way, what is Cardinal Zuppi's mission like? 

-While in Italy to attend the Synod, I was able to visit Bologna and visit the Cardinal. We agreed on one fact: we cannot get used to war, because war is always a tragedy.

However, it is also true that every war ends with a peace agreement. And this peace agreement can already be woven by us today. We have talked a lot about the Ukrainian children kidnapped by the Russians, an issue on which, unfortunately, we have not been able to achieve any results so far.

We must insist, we must continue to seek all possible ways to free these children. Building peace requires the virtue of perseverance in doing good. We must not resign ourselves. War has a vicious and evil logic.

The men who initiate it, then become its slaves. War takes hold of everything and the man who falls victim to it is no longer able to get out of this cage. From a human point of view, the situation may indeed be a cause for despair. But if we look at the Founding Fathers of the European project, Schuman and Adenauer, were not overcome by despair but built Europe out of the rubble of World War II as a European peace project involving all nations. We must follow their example.

The authorAntonino Piccione

Evangelization

Meeting the U.S. Secret Service Chaplain

Mark Arbeen is director of the U.S. Secret Service Chaplain Program. In this interview he talks about his conversion to Catholicism and his work, strongly influenced by the Virgin Mary and St. Michael.

Jennifer Elizabeth Terranova-November 10, 2023-Reading time: 5 minutes

Mary, Our Blessed Mother, always knows what she is doing.

Omnes had a chance to speak to Reverend Mark Arbeen, Chaplain Program Manager to the United States Secret Service. He spoke about his decision to convert to Catholicism, his position, and good old Saint Michael.

Mark Arbeen, Chaplain Program Manager to the United States Secret Service

It was in Mexico City in 2003 at the Basilica of Our Lady of Guadalupe at Mass before his wedding when Mark made a promise to our Blessed Mother.

He was seated not too far from the altar and fell into what his friend described as a "trance." I wasn't breathing, I wasn't moving, I was staring," shared Mark. But recalls uttering the words to Our Blessed Mother, "If she [his soon-to-be wife] becomes pregnant, I'll become Catholic." He said he isn't sure exactly what transpired but remembers being "In the presence of Mary."

Mark and his wife would receive the 'good news' that they would be blessed with their first child not too long after their wedding, and Mark converted to Catholicism as he had promised our Blessed Mother that day in Mexico at the Basilica of Our Lady of Guadalupe. This would "solidify" his decision to become Catholic."

Mark would eventually become a Catholic Church deacon, something he had no interest in pursuing. Before his conversion, he had gone to an Episcopal seminary and studied to become a priest, so it was somewhat familiar territory upon entering Catholic ministry.

He joked and said that his wife and colleague decided for him. Mark recalled asking them whether "I have a say in this decision?" He received a clear no and said, "it's a happy wife, happy life, type of thing.

Mark is one of many converts to Catholicism, which he attributes to the struggles in the liturgical Protestant world—Methodists, Lutherans, Episcopalians, and Presbyterians, to name a few. Mark said part of the reason for this is because "we do not have a leader at the top who says yes or no, and the Catholics have a Pope, and he is the final authority, the office of the Pope, which allows for more solid ground to operate, and to worship…and that, with everything that’s been going on in the Protestant world is a blessing to a lot of us." His diocese is part of the Personal Ordinariate of the Chair of St. Peter.

U.S. Secret Service

Around this time, Mark began to work for the Secret Service of the United States. The (USSS) is one of the nation's oldest federal investigative law enforcement agencies and was founded in 1865 as a branch of the U.S. Treasury Department. As it states on its official website:

The Secret Service performs two critical homeland security missions:

Through its protective mission, the Secret Service preserves continuity of government and ensures security at events of national significance by protecting the President and Vice President, their families, visiting heads-of-state/government, and other designated individuals.

In addition, the USSS also investigates threats against the White House, the Vice President's Residence, Foreign Missions, and other designated buildings within the Washington, D.C. area, so it is no wonder that these fine men and women who risk their lives to protect so many have a chaplain on call.

Mark Arbeen's second 'call,' if you will, is to work as the Chaplain Program Manager to the United States Secret Service. The idea for a program arose in 2013 2014 when the USSS began to have significant issues in the press. Moral was down, and a chaplain program seemed like a way to restore things.

Mark was solicited by the agent who was assigned to the task of researching a possible program. He said, at first. "I didn't want to have anything to do with it" but would help "in the "background." When the agent unexpectedly dies, Mark recalls serving at the woman's funeral, and the director of the USS approaches him, saying, "Father." Mark responds to him and says, "I am a deacon, and I am one of you." The director eventually hires Mark, and he begins working toward instituting this well-needed program.

The task took work, especially for new programs within any Department of Homeland Security agency. The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) was the only agency with a program like this, which meant they would be unique with the FBI.

While one does not have to be of any particular denomination or religion, it did work advantageously that Mark was Catholic because about 60 percent of the United States Secret Service is Catholic. But Mark said, "Understanding hierarchy with the other faith groups" is essential. He continued, "Being a former Episcopal, I understood that hierarchy, and being Catholic, I understand hierarchy."

A Day in the Life of the Chaplain Manager to the USSS

It's common for Mark to work and talk with the cardinals, archbishops, the chief rabbi of the United States, and other religious leaders. "It's a bigger role than people thought, "said Mark because he deals with leaders who decide to let one of their ministers become one of the USSS chaplains.

His main job is to manage volunteer chaplains in the United States. He currently has 140 employees, comprising all faiths, about 62, and both genders. He also has a portion who are atheists. But Mark emphasized what is essential is to be able to speak with them "on their terms, not on mine."

Mark noted that his Catholic religion has helped him "because the Catholic faith, especially since Vatican II, is about dialogue." He continued, "And having the ability to dialogue with other faith groups without trying to convert either one of them…[and] understanding where our commonalities are and focusing on that, and not on our differences, that is huge in the Catholic Church, and that's what every one of our bishops, archbishops, the cardinals and the Pope, they have to do this, and that's what I have to do in this job."

He also spoke of the need to receive the Blessed Sacrament, especially at busy times, like, for example, during the meeting of the General Assembly in New York City.

He said that a good percentage of the staff do request Communion on that Sunday, those who are unable to get to Mass, so around 25 to 30 hosts will be distributed to employees who are on the frontlines doing what they are called to do, protect the lives those they are assigned to. Some, however, can attend service.

It is no wonder that the Chaplain Program was implemented. The men and women who risk their lives to ensure the safety of others and their families are under tremendous stress. Mark said they have a "zero failure mission" and "if someone makes a mistake, [and] somebody dies, we can't have that."

Welcome, Saint Michael!

I asked Deacon Mark if he invokes Saint Michael and the archangels' role in the program. He again referred to the diversity of the people he works with and how Saint Michael is revered by not only the Catholics but also the Jews and Muslims. Saint Michael is the Patron Saint of Law Enforcement, which is unsurprising.

Mark said that he feels Saint Michael's presence "every day," but "it is not a pat on the back; I feel his sword on my back, pushing me," that pressure to do more. But he also feels comfort from Saint Michael when standing before a family who just lost somebody." He says Saint Michael's "wings cover."

What he loves most about his role is helping someone through a difficult period in their life. We say in law enforcement chaplaincy, "Our job is to be present to the people when they need us, not when we want to provide it." He said he would never equate himself to a law enforcement agent because "I run to them, but they run into the bullets, and that's a bravery that's sorely misunderstood." My agents will stand in front of the president of the United States of America and take a bullet for them. "It's a bravery that can't be taught."

We concluded the interview, and Deacon Arbeen said, "We have to recognize that Jesus redeems us, and we have to recognize the need for Jesus in the Sacrament and recognize the need for Jesus in our lives."

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Photo Gallery

Indi Gregory: the fight for a life

Indi Gregory has put her right to palliative care back on the table after being denied by a British judge who ordered her to be taken off life support despite the Bambino Gesu in Rome offering to provide it.

Maria José Atienza-November 10, 2023-Reading time: < 1 minute
Culture

Consecration of the new altar of the Berlin Cathedral

Built by Frederick II of Prussia in 1773 for Catholics coming from Silesia, St. Hedwig's Church has undergone several reconstructions, mainly after World War II. In 2018, remodeling work began for the current cathedral.

José M. García Pelegrín-November 10, 2023-Reading time: 5 minutes

On November 1, just 250 years after the first consecration of the church of St. Hedwig (St. Hedwig), the new altar of Berlin's Catholic Cathedral was consecrated. The church was closed for five years to be completely remodeled inside.

The new altar

The new altar has a hemispherical shape, which corresponds to the dome that covers the building. A special feature of this altar is that it is built with "living stones" donated by the faithful from Berlin, other parts of Germany and other countries. However, the remodeling of the cathedral has not yet been completed, so it has been closed to the public again in order to finish the work.

Leo Zogmayer, the Austrian artist responsible for the interior of the cathedral, explained at a press tour on November 1 that the altar was made using the stone casting process: "Donated stones are added to a mixture of sand, gravel and white cement. This mass is poured into a negative mold. Once the mass has hardened and the mold has been demolded, the rough casting still needs to be finished by hand to expose the stones near the surface." The altar weighs about two and a half tons, but it almost seems to float, while conveying a massive presence.

A relic of St. Hedwig of Andechs, patron saint of the church, was embedded in the mensa of the altar during the consecration. The ambo is made of the same stone as the altar; its reduced shape corresponds to the minimalist geometric hemisphere of the altar.

Archbishop Heiner Koch, Archbishop of Berlin, recalled in his homily that "Jesus is the center and measure of the life of humanity. In him we find support and orientation in the challenges of our time, the center and measure of our lives. In the sacrifice of the cross, Jesus unites us with God in time and eternity; he unites heaven and earth and gives us redemption."

On the altar his death is celebrated, not only as a memorial, but as a real presence: here the bread and wine become the body and blood of Christ by the Spirit of God; here he is truly present. "Here what happened on the Cross and in the Upper Room is made present, because He loved His own who were in the world, He loved them to perfection. That is made present here, on this altar when the priest, called by the consecration, pronounces the words of consecration in the name of Jesus, in his authority. Christ is in our midst. The altar maintains communion with heaven: the communion of God, which alone gives peace. And it also maintains communion "with us and among us".

St. Hedwig's Cathedral

Berlin's Catholic cathedral, the Sankt Hedwigs-Kathedrale (St. Hedwig's Cathedral), is located in the center of the city, forming part of the so-called Forum Fridericianuma square planned by the Prussian king Frederick II (1712-1786) at the beginning of the emblematic avenue Unter den LindenThe construction was entrusted to one of the most outstanding German architects of the 18th century, Georg Wenzeslaus von Knobelsdorff, who was also the architect of the church.

The construction of the cathedral began in 1747 and represented the first Catholic church in Berlin since the Reformation. Frederick II decided to dedicate the church to St. Hedwig in honor of the new Catholic inhabitants of Berlin who arrived after the Second Silesian War, which ended in the same year. 

King Frederick II donated the land and suggested the circular shape, inspired by the Roman Pantheon. It has been claimed that initially Frederick II considered dedicating the building to "all the gods" (like the Pantheon), to be used by different religions, following his principle of tolerance. Whether this is true or not, Knobelsdorff maintained the circular shape of the Pantheon.

Construction was hampered by financial difficulties and the Seven Years' War, which delayed completion until November 1773. The dome and pediment frieze were completed in the late 19th century, and in 1886-1887, Max Hasak finished the building, covering the dome with a copper coating and crowning it with a lantern and cross. The interior was decorated in neo-baroque style. In 1927, Pope Pius XI granted the church the title of minor basilica. 

With the creation of the Berlin diocese on August 13, 1930 (until then it was part of the diocese of Breslau, today's Wrocław in Poland), the church of St. Hedwig became the cathedral of the new diocese. In 1930-1932, the interior was remodeled by the Austrian architect Clemens Holzmeister. 

Bernhard Lichtenberg, the brave dean

During the National Socialist period (1993-1945), the dean Bernhard Lichtenberg stood out as an opponent of the regime: after the pogrom, euphemistically called "Night of Broken Glass", which took place on the night of November 9-10, 1938, he prayed publicly for the Jews. The next day, Lichtenberg was imprisoned by the Nazi government and died on his way to the Dachau concentration camp. In 1965 Lichtenberg's remains were brought to the crypt of the cathedral. During renovation work in 2018, his relics were moved to another Berlin church dedicated to the martyrs; they will return to the cathedral crypt when the work is completed.

Berlin Cathedral in 1945 ©Landesdenkmalamt Berlin

In World War II, the cathedral suffered severe damage during an Allied air raid on the night of March 2, 1943, which destroyed the dome and left the interior and crypt completely charred. 

After the division of Berlin after World War II, the cathedral remained in East Berlin. It was restored between 1952 and 1963, by the West German architect Hans Schwippert, who reconfigured the space in an unusual way, creating a circular opening in the church leading to the crypt, where eight chapels were installed. The exterior was reconstructed following the historical model.

The restoration of the cathedral

At the beginning of the 21st century, it was decided to carry out a restoration to renovate the building. In the competition organized in 2013, the project of the Sichau & Walter studio from Fulda, in collaboration with the artist Leo Zogmayer, proposed closing the opening to the crypt, locating the descent into the crypt near the entrance and creating a large space in the upper church with the altar at its center.

This project was controversial, especially among Catholics who had suffered persecution during the communist period and had a strong attachment to the cathedral as remodeled by Hans Schwippert. After years of consultations, protests and studies, Archbishop Heiner Koch of Berlin and the cathedral chapter approved the project; work began in 2018.

Berlin Cathedral today ©Probekreuz Erzbistum

On a visit to the construction site for the press in September 2022, the dean of the cathedral, Tobias Przytarski, emphasized the principle behind the "new" cathedral: in the crypt, the baptismal font occupies the center, above which - in the church - is the altar, two meters in diameter. Just above the altar, in the dome, is the skylight covered by a diaphanous glass that opens to heaven: baptism and the Eucharist lead - "hopefully," Przytarski said with a wink - to heaven. The confessionals are in the lower church.

On the exterior, the most significant change is that the new three-meter-high golden cross will be placed above the tympanum of the portico instead of the dome, which will make it more visible. In addition, the previous heavy bronze doors will be replaced by transparent glass doors, which will provide a luminous transparency and symbolize transparency. Przytarski also mentioned a particularity of the stained glass windows, which are opaque, but contain air bubbles that will show the starry sky of Berlin on the day of Jesus' birth.

After the consecration ceremony of the altar, the cathedral has been closed to the public again, and is expected to reopen before Christmas 2024, when the organ, which was dismantled at the beginning of the works, will also be installed.

ColumnistsFederico Piana

Round tables

If there is one image that can clearly explain the theme of synodality, it is the photograph of the tables of more than 400 participants: the round tables.

November 10, 2023-Reading time: 2 minutes

The Church has rediscovered the joy of walking together. If there is a definition that can best summarize the first session of the XVI General Assembly of the Synod of Bishops, it is this one. And if there is an image that can clearly explain the theme of synodality, it is the picture of the tables of the more than 400 participants: round tables where cardinals sat next to bishops, and bishops and cardinals next to lay men and women, consecrated men and women, young and old.

Apparently, this can be considered a minor detail but, in reality, it represents one of the important keys to understanding the entire synodal session. It is not by chance that Pope Francis himself, during the course of the General Congregations, sat at one of these round tables, bracketing the formality of the hierarchy and emphasizing the relationship of fraternity in membership.

Mutual listening and the sharing of experiences, both personal and ecclesial, are some of the specific features of synodality that favored the new method of work of the round tables, especially when dealing with burning issues: the future of missionary work, the valorization of ordained ministries, the empowerment of all the baptized, the role of women, the reactivation of ecumenism and interreligious dialogue, support for people far from the faith and the poor, the welcome of those who are different, the defense of minors and the vulnerable, and a true understanding of authority.

The participants in the Synod knew how to express their points of view, open their hearts, even disagree at times, but never in opposition. They did this by standing side by side and looking directly into each other's eyes: thanks to these round tables, they were able to build stable friendships and solid relationships that could change the future of the Church.

The authorFederico Piana

 Journalist. He works for Vatican Radio and collaborates with L'Osservatore Romano.

Christians at the heart of public life

Our times demand a handful of magnanimous citizens, authentically free, who ennoble the public space with their good deeds, making it a place of encounter with God and service to humanity.

November 9, 2023-Reading time: 4 minutes

Throughout more than twenty centuries of history, and based on the experience of distinguished Christians, the Church has been developing a doctrine on the social participation of Christians in public life. 

This teaching is currently contained, among many other documents, in the pastoral constitution Gaudium et spes of the Second Vatican Council (esp. nos. 23-32) and the Apostolic Exhortation Christifideles laici of St. John Paul II. The Catechism of the Catholic Church(Nos. 1897-1917) offers a wonderful synthesis of it all. 

The crux of this doctrine can be summarized as follows: every Christian, through the fulfillment of his civic duties, must assume in conscience, with full freedom and personal responsibility, his own social commitment to animate the temporal order in a Christian way, respecting his own laws and autonomy. This willing duty to promote the common good through a voluntary and generous commitment is inherent in the dignity of the human person. 

Among the central issues affecting public life, the Church has always recalled the primacy of the person over society and the State, the preeminence of morality over law and politics; the defense of life from the moment of conception to its natural end, the centrality of the married family, the right and duty to work in dignified conditions; the right to health and education, private property with its social function as a necessity and guarantee of freedom in solidarity; the care of the planet as the common home of humanity, the need to develop a free, solidary and sustainable economic system, the construction of a just and stable peace through the establishment of an international community ordered by law.

A public life marked by secularism

Unfortunately, in the West, public life is far removed from the Christian principles that animated it at its birth and from the moral principles formulated by the natural law and the doctrine of the Church, which we have just outlined. This has been expressed by important thinkers such as Joseph Ratzinger, Charles Taylor, Jean-Luc Marion or Rémi Bragueamong many others. 

Our era has been described as secular, postmodern, post-Christian, post-truth and transhumanist. And all these adjectives are correct, all of which respond to a common denominator: living as if God did not exist and as if human beings had the right to take his place: the homo deus

Our public spaces, especially in some countries such as France, have become completely secularized; religions have been relegated to the private sphere if not to privacy; natural law is seriously questioned and even rejected outright by some Christians (just think of the famous No In the last few years, metaphysical thinking has been replaced by a weak and relativistic thinking, which is considered to be the most appropriate for an open and pluralistic society.

Moral conscience is treated as mere subjective certainty.

Political authority has been detached from any binding moral principle beyond human rights, which are no longer considered as natural requirements, but as products of human consensus, and therefore modifiable and extendable to the protection of acts contrary to nature.

Legal positivism stifles legal systems and suffocates citizens. 

The matrimonial family has become one of the many options within an offer that is already knocking on the door of polygamy as another mode of family unity. The abortion has been established as a right, yes, in a legal abortion!

The right to education is being trampled on by the public authorities, who use it as an instrument of social indoctrination. 

A discourse of political correctness has become widespread, restricting freedom of expression and imposing ways of speaking and behaving even in the most liberal academic spheres. There is constant pressure to live together according to ideological uniformity. 

Truth is considered a factory product that is produced in the laboratories of powerful people who only seek to dominate the world at any price. In the debate of many modern and advanced democracies, the denial of truth coexists with the dictatorship of the majorities.

The result is the so-called cancellation culture that has gone so far as to validate revenge as a political weapon. Populism is rampant in the public space. Meanwhile, religious practice has fallen alarmingly.

Moreover, the physical persecution that Christians are suffering in the world is similar to that suffered by our brothers and sisters in the faith during the Roman imperial era. The annual report presented by the organization Open Doors notes that the total number of Christians killed in 2022 was 5,621 and the total number of churches attacked under different levels of violence reached 2,110.

Christians committed to the truth

Thus, transforming public life today requires not only great ideas, but also and above all great people, exemplary and courageous Christians who are recognized in parliaments and public forums for their unwavering commitment to the truth, for their deep respect for all people regardless of the ideas they defend, for their ability to forgive seventy times seven, for their strong commitment to the poor and most needy and for their outright rejection of any form of political corruption. 

Our times demand a handful of magnanimous citizens, authentically free, who ennoble the public space with their good deeds, making it a place of encounter with God and service to humanity.

The authorRafael Domingo Oslé

Professor and holder of the Álvaro d'Ors Chair
ICS. University of Navarra.

Integral ecology

Dr. Leal: "It is cheaper to end a patient's life than to accompany him".

The lack of palliative care in many countries "is due to a lack of interest on the part of public administrations. A management that, under a materialistic conception of the human being, prioritizes numbers over people," Dr. Francisco Leal (Hagen, Germany), director of the Pain Unit at the Clínica Universidad de Navarra in Madrid, who is taking part in a conference on "Notions of medicine for priests," tells Omnes.

Francisco Otamendi-November 9, 2023-Reading time: 3 minutes

Dr. Francisco Leal's topic at the conference on "Notions of medicine for priests" is pain and suffering, and the solutions provided by medicine. Although he specifies that "pain is beneficial in principle", because "it is produced by a state of alarm when a harm or danger is detected, and it protects us, it makes us react to the harm".

The doctor has no doubts about the efficacy of palliative care. "In Spain we have some of the best professionals in the world and, unfortunately, very little administrative and political support". He recognizes the crudeness of what he says, but considers that, following "an ideological bias that comes from supranational bodies and that does not consider the value of life", there are those who think that "it is cheaper to end a patient's life than to accompany him or her as he or she deserves".

The "Notions of Medicine for Priests" seminars will be held on Saturdays, October 21, November 11 (therapeutic incarceration) and December 2 (pathologies that can affect conjugal life) at the University of Navarra Clinic in Madrid.

Dr. Leal is a specialist in Anesthesiology, Resuscitation and Pain Management. He has received training in neuroscience from the Harvard University and in TRD (pain reprocessing therapy). He is also currently a professor at the Universities of Cadiz and Navarra. 

Suffering and pain: What are they, how do they occur, can they be avoided or fairly alleviated?

-They are two experiences that are often closely related. One can lead to the other and vice versa. Pain is a sensory and emotional experience associated (or similar to that associated) with actual or potential harm. Suffering is an emotional and mental response to pain or experiences. In addition to an emotional component, a spiritual component may be added. 

Pain is beneficial in principle. It is produced by a state of alarm when a damage or danger is detected. It protects us, it makes us react to the damage. The problem is when that alarm is not turned off and the pain becomes chronic.

We always try to alleviate pain; even chronic pain. In certain cases, we can now dare to say that we can cure it, thanks to the recent Pain Reprocessing Therapies that are giving very promising results.

Medicine offers patients a cure, but what if it can't be cured?

-Until recently, in the case of chronic pain, we could only aspire to palliation. For the first time, as I said before, we are beginning to cure this type of pain in many patients. In any case, we always try to apply E.M. Achard's famous sentence: "Cure sometimes, improve often, comfort always".

We are afraid of anesthesia, aren't we?

-Yes, that is a legacy from the past, when both anesthesia and surgery were very rudimentary, and it has remained in people's memory. Today anesthesiology is the medical specialty that has achieved higher safety standards, learning from the experience of pilots and aircraft construction. Part of our job is to listen to their doubts and explain these things to the patients so that they can enter the operating room with peace of mind.

Is palliative care effective, should it be a right for all, or is its cost high?

-There is no doubt about the effectiveness of the Palliative Care. In Spain we have some of the best professionals in the world and, unfortunately, very little administrative and political support. It is cheaper, and more effective, to have a good palliative team to care for the patient at home than to do it in a hospital. Unfortunately, there are managers who, under an ideological and utilitarian bias, consider that it is even cheaper to end the patient's life.

Spain and so many other countries have a deficit in palliative care. Why is this happening? Do we have trained professionals?

-The training and the professional and human quality of our professionals is enviable. It is such a demanding specialty that there is a phenomenon of self-selection of the best for such hard and human work.

The deficit of palliative care is due neither to training nor to professional vocations, but to a lack of interest on the part of public administrations. It is due to a management that, under a materialistic conception of the human being, prioritizes numbers over people. In the end, it is an ideological issue that comes from supranational bodies and does not consider the value of life. As I was saying before, not without a certain crudeness, it is cheaper to end life of a patient than to accompany him/her as he/she deserves.

The authorFrancisco Otamendi

Gospel

Keep the flame burning. 32nd Sunday in Ordinary Time (A)

Joseph Evans comments on the readings for the 32nd Sunday in Ordinary Time and Luis Herrera offers a brief video homily.

Joseph Evans-November 9, 2023-Reading time: 2 minutes

The parable of the wise and foolish virgins is one of Our Lord's most dramatic parables and speaks to us of one of the most important themes: our entrance or exclusion from heaven.

The Church offers us this parable today, contextualizing it through the first reading, from the book of Wisdom, which extols the greatness of wisdom, and the second reading, in which St. Paul speaks of the second coming of Christ and of those who will rise to a new life with him.

Wisdom is not highly valued in contemporary society - we are more concerned with our appearance, or our influence, or our social position - but it was highly valued in ancient times and there are several Old Testament books about it. By linking a reading on wisdom to the parable of the wise and foolish virgins, the Church teaches us that true wisdom is that which leads us to heaven. 

Wise decisions are those that will lead us to eternal life with God. Therefore, whenever we have to make a decision, it is good for us to ask ourselves: will this way of acting lead me to Heaven? If the answer is "yes", we should do it. If the answer is "no", we should not do it.

The parable is very rich and has its roots in the wedding customs of Jesus' time, when young unmarried women went out to meet the bridegroom in the evening to accompany him with lighted lamps to the bride's house. They thus went as representatives of the bride and were "virgins" and therefore supposed to be chaste. 

It is frightening to think that chaste members of the Church, which is the bride of Christ, could also be excluded from heaven. One can live a form of chastity but let the oil of one's soul run out. What is this extra oil? Numerous Church Fathers and spiritual writers have given their interpretation. It may be charity, humility or the grace of God. It is probably all of these.

It speaks to us of that spiritual reserve of our soul that allows us to persevere when God seems to disappear from our life, when we fall into the darkness of sleep (which, as Jesus teaches in this parable, happens to all of us).

There is always a certain darkness in the Christian life and we can feel the apparent absence of God with greater or lesser intensity at different times in our lives.

There may be moments of darkness, when we seem to sleep, in a marriage or in a celibate vocation, but then the oil is the good habits of prayer, struggle and commitment that we have built and continue to live. 

The foolish virgins were foolish because they lived only for the thrill of the procession, for the fun of the moment. Wisdom arises from a heart that loves and realizes that love is more than emotion.

Love is a persevering quest that remains faithful and even grows in moments of darkness, seemingly dull, like oil, but with a flame burning.

Homily on the readings of the 32nd Sunday in Ordinary Time (A)

The priest Luis Herrera Campo offers its nanomiliaA short one-minute reflection for these Sunday readings.

The Vatican

The Pope: Madeleine Delbrêl, witness of faith in the suburbs of Paris

This morning at the General Audience, the Holy Father introduced a twentieth-century French woman, the Venerable Madeleine Delbrêl, who lived for more than thirty years in the poor and working-class suburbs of Paris. With her example, Francis calls to be "courageous witnesses of the Gospel in secularized environments". The Pope prayed for the peoples suffering from wars.

Francisco Otamendi-November 8, 2023-Reading time: 4 minutes

In the catechesis on the Passion for the evangelizationThe Pope, the apostolic zeal of the believer, who this morning completed his 25th session since January, has fixed his gaze on the Audience in the venerable French Madeleine Delbrêl, with the theme "The joy of faith among non-believers", and the Gospel passage in which Jesus speaks of the salt of the earth and the light of the world.

The Servant of God Madeleine Delbrêl (1904-1964), a social worker, writer and mystic, lived for more than thirty years, together with other companions, in the poor and working-class suburbs of Paris, Francis explained. "This choice to live on the peripheries allowed her to discover the love of God in everyday life and to make it known to those farthest away with a simple and fraternal lifestyle". 

After an agnostic adolescence, Madeleine came to know the Lord. She set out in search of God, responding to a deep thirst she felt within herself. "The joy of faith led her to choose a life entirely dedicated to God, in the heart of the Church and in the heart of the world, sharing simply in fraternity the life of the people of the street."

"Marxist ideology environments."

From her life witness, the Pontiff underlined in particular that "in that environment, where Marxist ideology predominated, she was able to experience that 'it is by evangelizing that we are evangelized'." "Madeleine's life and writings show us that the Lord is present in every circumstance and that he calls us to be missionaries here and now, sharing life with the people, participating in their joys and sorrows." 

The Venerable Frenchwoman teaches us, the Pope said, that "secularized environments also help us to convert and strengthen our faith," Francis stressed. "Let us not forget that life in Christ is "an extraordinary and extraordinarily gratuitous treasure," which we are called to share with everyone."

In "secularized" places

In his words to the French-speaking pilgrims, the Pope also reflected on the idea that we are evangelized by evangelizing. "With her heart always on the move, Madeleine allowed herself to be challenged by the cries of the poor and non-believers, interpreting them as a challenge to awaken the missionary aspiration of the Church. She sensed that the God of the Gospel must burn in us to the point of bringing his Name to all those who have not yet encountered him".

"Madeleine Delbrêl also taught us that we are evangelized by evangelizing, that we are transformed by the Word we proclaim. She was convinced that secularized environments are places where Christians have to struggle and can strengthen the faith that Jesus gave them."

Greeting the Spanish-speaking pilgrims, Francis returned to the same idea: "Let us ask the Lord to give us his grace to be courageous witnesses of the Gospel, especially in secularized environments, helping us to discover the essentials of the faith and strengthening us in difficulties. May Jesus bless you and the Blessed Virgin Mary watch over you".

Contact with non-believers

In another moment of the Audience, Pope Francis said "Contemplating this witness of the Gospel, we too learn that in every situation and personal or social circumstance of our lives, the Lord is present and calls us to live our time, to share the life of others, to mingle with the joys and sorrows of the world".

In particular, the Holy Father added, the Venerable Madeleine Delbrêl "teaches us that even secularized environments are useful for conversion, because contact with non-believers provokes in the believer a continuous revision of his way of believing and a rediscovery of the faith in its essentiality".

"Just peace" in the Holy Land

In addressing the Italian-speaking faithful, the Pontiff referred to Holy Land and to UkraineLet us think and pray for the peoples suffering from war. Let us not forget the martyred Ukraine, and let us think about the peoples Palestinian e Israelimay the Lord bring us a peace just. We suffer so much. The children suffer, the sick suffer, the elderly suffer, and so many young people die. War is always a defeat, let us not forget that. It is always a defeat.

The Pope also recalled that "tomorrow we will celebrate the liturgical feast of the Dedication of the Basilica of St. John Lateran, the Cathedral of Rome. May this anniversary awaken in everyone the desire to be living and precious stones, used in the construction of the House of the Lord".

"Let us pray for the deceased".

The petition for the deceased came when addressing the Portuguese-speaking pilgrims. "This month revives in us the nostalgic memory of our dead. They left us one day with a request, tacit or explicit, for our spiritual help in their passage to the beyond. We know that our prayers for them reach Heaven, and so we can accompany them there, strengthening the ties that bind us to eternity. Let us pray for them!" prayed Francis.

In his greeting to the Poles, he pointed out that "in a few days you will celebrate the anniversary of the recovery of Poland's independence. May this anniversary inspire you with gratitude to God. Pass on to the new generations your history and the memory of those who have preceded you in generous Christian witness and in love for your homeland. I bless you from my heart".

As usual, the Holy Father also addressed the pilgrims of other languages: English, German and Arabic, and concluded with the Our Father and the Apostolic Blessing.

The authorFrancisco Otamendi

The World

60 years of wonders: three Pontifical Universities celebrate communication

Three Roman Pontifical Universities are celebrating the 60th anniversary of "Inter mirifica", one of the first decrees approved by the Second Vatican Council, dedicated to the media.

Giovanni Tridente-November 8, 2023-Reading time: 2 minutes

Three Roman Pontifical Universities united by their passion for communication are celebrating together the 60th anniversary of one of the first decrees approved by the Second Vatican Council, the "....Inter mirifica"dedicated to the media and published on December 4, 1963.

Putting into practice Pope Francis' invitation to "network" among Universities and Ecclesiastical Faculties to "study the problems that affect humanity today, arriving at proposing adequate and realistic ways of solution" ("Veritatis gaudium"), the Pontifical University of the Holy Cross -through its Faculty of Institutional Communication-, the Pontifical Lateran University -through its Pastoral Institute Redemptor Homnis- and the Pontifical Salesian University -through its Faculty of Social Communication-, organized a three-day reflection on the problems that affect humanity today, the Pontifical Lateran University -through its Pastoral Institute Redemptor Homnis- and the Pontifical Salesian University -through its Faculty of Social Communication-, organized a three-day reflection on the important conciliar text and its historicity and updating.

It was undoubtedly one of the most fruitful seeds of the Vatican Council IIThe book, which had the merit of launching the Church's modern journey into communicative territories, is always cited when speaking of the link between the Church and the mass media. It is always cited when speaking of the link between the Church and the mass media, it is a bibliographical source of research and dissertations, and the focus of seminars and study days such as the one now being organized in Rome.

The first day of the Symposium, entitled 60 Years of Wonders, began on Tuesday, November 7, at the University of the Holy Cross, with a presentation of the historical-institutional perspective, examining the document "Inter mirifica" also in relation to previous documents, the pre-conciliar magisterium on communication, institutional communication itself during the Council and the implications for the Church's communication offices.

The following day's activity took place at the Pontifical Lateran University, focusing on the theoretical and practical dimension of the pastoral care of communication, examining, for example, the models of the theology of communication, the links of the Document with the current media context and the pastoral care of digital communication.

On the last day, it was the Salesian Pontifical University that hosted the Congress, focusing the various interventions on updating the document in the light of the logic of the Networks, and in particular of the digital Church, artificial intelligence, trainers and networked communication tools.

"Reflecting today on 'Inter mirifica' means placing oneself in a perspective of innovative academic research, no longer crystallized in one's own specific identity and formative proposal," said Massimiliano Padula, a sociologist at the Lateran University and one of the promoters of the initiative.

The deans of the three organizing institutions, Daniel Arasa for Holy Cross, Paolo Asolan for the Lateran University and Fabio Pasqualetti for the Salesian University, spoke at the Congress. Other speakers included sociologist Mihaela Gavrila, philosopher Philip Larrey and theologian José Maria La Porte.

An excellent opportunity, in short, to put into practice the other invitation of Pope Francis in "Veritatis gaudium", the apostolic constitution dedicated to Universities and Ecclesiastical Faculties, namely, that of integrating the different intellectual competencies to achieve "the inter- and transdisciplinarity that must be exercised with wisdom and creativity in the light of Revelation".

The authorGiovanni Tridente

Culture

"Madre no hay más que una", the option to see in theaters this month.

The boy and the heron y There is only one mother are the proposals of our film specialist to watch this month.

Patricio Sánchez-Jáuregui-November 8, 2023-Reading time: 2 minutes

As every month, Patricio Sánchez - Jaúregui recommends new releases, classics, or content you haven't seen yet. This month, the two proposals: El niño y la garza and Madre no hay más que una, are in the movie listings.

The boy and the heron

Hayao Miyazaki's presumed swan song is among his most open to interpretation. Through a series of surreal and melancholic images, "The Boy and the Heron" tells the charming and moving story of a boy's coming-of-age process in the face of tragedy.

Beautifully animated, this is a love letter to all the director's fans (Spirited Away, Princess Mononoke, Grave of the Fireflies...), sometimes confusing, sometimes clear, but undoubtedly moving.

A beautiful painting that becomes a magical and unforgettable experience. A worthy farewell to an absolutely exceptional artist, that you will want to revisit again and again, just to feel that pure, unadulterated, unfiltered Miyazaki magic.

The boy and the heron

DirectorHayao Miyazaki
ProducerStudio Ghibli
MusicJoe Hisaishi
Platform: Cinemas

There is only one mother

Documentary, testimony and report. "Mother there is but one" is a tribute to the most relevant figure in the life of human beings on earth, embodied in BlancaBea, Isa, AnaMaria, Olatz .... All of them united by this simple and unfathomable bond: motherhood, and all the circumstances that derive from it. Stories, problems, anecdotes...; surprises, novelties, illnesses... The juggling with work, the prejudices they face when they want to have children, the social or economic difficulties... Tragedy, comedy, life.

There is nothing like the beginning of everything. And that everything that begins, that life, begins inside a person with her laughter, tears, unexpected pregnancies, lost children, many hours without sleep and thousands of unimaginable dreams that come true... In the words of its director: "In a world in which being a mother is an exercise of juggling several at the same time, they deserved this tribute, so that from their mouth and own testimony, we can tell the world how wonderful it is to be a mother... and also to be children".

There is only one mother

Address : Jesús García
ScriptJavier González Scheible
Platform: In theaters
The World

Italian citizenship for Indi Gregory 

The Italian government has granted Italian citizenship to Indi Gregory, the English girl whose life-saving treatments are to be suspended by the London High Court. Thanks to this, the girl could be transferred to the Bambino Gesù hospital in Rome, which has agreed to continue her treatment.

Antonino Piccione-November 7, 2023-Reading time: 2 minutes

The decision to grant the girl Italian citizenship was adopted yesterday (Monday, November 6) by the Italian Government. Thanks to this, the girl, affected by a rare disease, could be transferred to an Italian hospital, avoiding the interruption of the treatments that keep her alive. As reported in the communiqué issued after the urgently convened Council of Ministers, the Executive, "at the proposal of the Minister of the Interior, Matteo Piantedosi, has agreed to grant Italian citizenship to little Indi Gregory, born in Nottingham (UK) on 24 February 2023, considering the exceptional interest of the national community in guaranteeing further therapeutic development for the minor, and in the protection of pre-eminent humanitarian values which, in this case, are related to the preservation of health". As is known, Italian law prohibits any form of euthanasia. The decision follows the disposition expressed by the pediatric hospital "Bambino Gesù" in relation to the admission of Indi Gregory and the consequent request for the granting of Italian citizenship presented by the parents' lawyers. The Italian Government has also communicated to the hospital management and to the family its commitment to cover the costs of any medical treatment deemed necessary.

Indi Gregory is an eight-month-old English girl affected by a rare mitochondrial disease whose life-saving treatments are to be suspended by the High Court in London. The girl, born in February, suffers from mitochondrial depletion syndrome, an extremely rare degenerative genetic disease that causes the underdevelopment of all muscles. The meeting at Palazzo Chigi concluded in a few minutes, with a "quick decision" that made Indi Gregory an Italian citizen. Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni commented on Facebook, "Until the end, I will do what I can to defend (Indi's) life and the right of the mom and dad to do everything possible for her." The goal is to allow Indi's transfer to Rome, where the "disconnection" of the machines that keep her alive, especially the assisted ventilation, would be avoided. Indi is currently admitted to Queen's Medical Center in Nottingham, awaiting implementation of the Supreme Court ruling. There, doctors argue that continuing the therapies would only cause unnecessary suffering for the newborn. Indi's parents had appealed, backed by pro-life associations, to prevent the interruption of the treatments and to be allowed to transfer their daughter to Rome.

"From the bottom of our hearts, thanks to the government, we are proud that our daughter is Italian," commented Dean Gregory, Indi's father. "There is hope and confidence in humanity." The decree granting Indi Italian citizenship was signed by the President of the Republic. The parents immediately filed an appeal with the Supreme Court in London to be allowed to transfer her to the Bambino Gesù hospital.

The authorAntonino Piccione

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Integral ecology

Housing suffocates more than three million households, denounces Caritas

Spending on housing has become a "determining factor that unbalances the domestic economy", and is already "a big bottomless pit for many families, especially for those with lower incomes and more vulnerable," said today Caritas Spain and Foessa Foundation, which have proposed measures to alleviate this situation.

Francisco Otamendi-November 7, 2023-Reading time: 5 minutes

Expenses related to the payment of housing and its supplies are by far the ones that have increased the most in family budgets, thus unbalancing the economies of millions of families in our country, denounced this morning. Natalia Peirogeneral secretary of Spanish Caritasand Daniel Rodríguez, member of the Foessa Foundation's research team, who presented the report entitled 'Income and expenses: an equation that conditions our quality of life'. 

Throughout his speech, unbalancing data were revealed in a socioeconomic context that continues to test the ability of households to survive, the report states.

For example, the lower income families spend more than six out of every 10 euros (63 %) on housing, supplies and food, compared to less than four out of every 10 euros spent by families with higher incomes. 

The actual figure, according to Caritas and Foessa Foundation, is that three million households (16.8 %) remain below the severe poverty line once these basic expenses, which represent a significant effort, have been paid. 

Another significant piece of contextual information is that while social housing stock in the European Union is around 9 percent, and in countries such as the Netherlands it even reaches 30 percent, in Spain the percentage is still 2 percent. 

Serious challenges

Natalia Peiro noted at the outset that "since the onset of the shocking tsunami triggered by the Covid-19 pandemic, whose consequences spanned both the social and economic spheres, along with its immense cost in terms of health, various events have continued to plague families and their economies. Challenges such as the conflict in Ukraine, the rising costs of energy supplies or the inflationary crisis, continue to test the ability of households to meet essential expenses such as food and housing".

In this line, Daniel Rodriguez has assured that "while it is necessary to address the income-expenditure equation simultaneously, probably the most pronounced deficit is currently in the area of expenditure. Thus, despite a moderate but steady growth in income, expenses, with special mention to housing, have risen significantly, which has generated significant challenges in terms of affordability and financial sustainability for many households". 

In his opinion, the rate of severe material deprivation has not shown a decrease proportional to the increase in total income. "This suggests that other factors, and in particular expenditures, may be playing a critical role in determining the living conditions of the population," he stressed.

The scourge of inflation

The Foessa study points out that while it is encouraging that income in Spain has increased by 11 % since the financial crisis of 2008, "the truth is that the inflationary context of recent months has caused household spending to increase by 30 %".

This disparity is even more pronounced among the poorest households, since the increase in income in these families has been practically non-existent (0.5 %).

The mismatch between the growth in income and the increase in expenses - together with the high percentage of working poor (11.7 %), and the low coverage and protective intensity of the minimum income (only 44 % of the population in severe poverty receive it) - "is causing the capacity of many families that were already in a situation of vulnerability to be overwhelmed. 

"In fact, the percentage of households in severe material poverty already stands at 8.1 % of the population (3.8 million people)," the expert pointed out.

Very precarious balances

Two of the solutions carried out by many households to reduce expenses, according to the report, is to share housing, or reduce energy expenditure. According to the latest data from the INE's Living Conditions Survey (2022), the number of families who could not keep their homes at an adequate temperature increased by 189 % compared to 2008, Daniel Rodriguez recalled.

"There is a constant precarious balance between guaranteeing the payment of the monthly housing payment and its supplies in the first days of the month, at the expense of falling below the severe poverty line and, as a result, neglecting other fundamental household needs. This struggle to find a balance between all the essential needs of the family becomes a constant challenge, since, despite the efforts and strategies implemented, it is often difficult to achieve a decent standard of living," explained Daniel Rodriguez.

More years and more effort for housing

The effort a family must make to acquire a roof over its head is also on the rise. Today it takes 7.7 years of gross annual income to buy a home, compared to 2.9 years in 1987. "Not only are more years needed, but in most cases, income is made up from various sources, as there are many more households with more than two incomes thanks to the incorporation of women into the labor market," said the sociologist from the Foessa Foundation.

Buying a home is not the only cause of stress on household finances. Half of the households with a rental home also suffer from financial stress. According to data from Einsfoessa 2021, using 2020 data, one-third of the rental population are in moderate stress and, even more worryingly, 16 % of the rental population experience extreme financial stress. This means that rent payments account for more than 60% of their income.

"As we learned in the Great Financial Recession of 2008, these precarious situations can be the prelude to even more severe crises, such as evictions and foreclosures. When families constantly struggle to cover housing costs, they become vulnerable to losing their homes and financial collapse," said Daniel Rodriguez.

As for food spending, the sociologist commented that we are witnessing "a brutal escalation of prices", and gave the example of olive oil, which is close to ten euros per liter in many supermarkets.

Some proposals

The study proposes some considerations in the area of both income and expenditure to improve the financial equilibrium of households. To this end, it considers the following to be decisive:

1) Concrete and effective intervention actions to guarantee access to decent and adequate housing (see art. 47 of the Spanish Constitution), such as enlarge the number of social housing units for rent, "which would provide families with an affordable and secure option to obtain quality housing at affordable prices." 

2) Plan and coordinate employment policies The company's programs are focused on groups with more difficult access to the labor market and take into account the personal and family situation of the worker.

3) Addressing job insecurity from a comprehensive perspective. "To achieve this, we must chart a course that continues on the path of reducing the temporary nature of contracts and the part-time nature of working hours, allowing more people to access full-time jobs with all the benefits that this entails."

4) To make the necessary legislative changes to ensure that domestic workers, The vast majority of them are women, to achieve full equality of labor and social security rights.

5) Establish an assurance system for minimum income with sufficient coverage, reaching the entire population in a situation of severe poverty, including people in an irregular administrative situation. 

6) "The aforementioned system of minimum income guarantee The amounts must also be sufficient, i.e., they must be in line with real prices and the cost of living, as well as with family composition. In addition, the commitment of both the central government and the autonomous regions is necessary, offering complementarity between the benefits provided by each of the levels of public administration," according to the report.

The authorFrancisco Otamendi

Evangelization

The Virgin Mary's army of peace

For centuries, many Catholics around the world have dedicated a few minutes each day to pray the Holy Rosary. This custom turns millions of people into members of the "army of peace" organized by the Virgin Mary.

Paloma López Campos-November 7, 2023-Reading time: 7 minutes

One of the best known Catholic customs is the Holy Rosary. This prayer, urged on by the Virgin Mary, makes millions of people members of an "army of peace".

Lawrence Lew, promoter general of the Holy Rosary in the Order of Preachers

Lawrence Lew, a Dominican friar and general promoter of the Order's Rosary, says something similar. He is convinced that "Our Mother is asking us to become participants in the divine plan of peace". To this end, one of the best things we can do is to pray the Rosary, even if only during the little free moments we have each day.

In this interview with Omnes, he discusses the history of the Dominican order and this Catholic custom, as well as the real impact that intimacy with the Virgin Mary can have on our relationship with Christ.

What is the relationship between the Dominican Order and the Virgin Mary and the Holy Rosary?

– The oldest collection of stories dating to the 13th-century about the foundation of the Order of Preachers, who are also known as Dominicans after our founder St Dominic, recount that the Order was the fruit of Our Lady’s prayers. In various visions, Our Lady was seen imploring her Son, in his mercy, to give to the world an Order that would be dedicated to preaching the fullness of the Truth, to preaching the Gospel of Christ who is our one Saviour, to proclaiming the Good News of divine mercy and salvation for humanity.

The Rosary, which tradition says Our Lady gave in some way to St Dominic, is a perfect instrument for the mission and charism of the Dominican Order. For just as the Order was founded to contemplate divine truth and to preach the things that are contemplated, so the Rosary is firstly a meditation on the mysteries of salvation in Christ, and then, as an act of vocal prayer and also through Rosary processions and chapels and by being prayed on the streets wherever we go, it is also a visible and audible preaching of the Gospel to those around us.

As such, it was the Dominicans who preached the Rosary and taught it to the laity, especially through promoting Confraternities of the Rosary that would pray it and organise Marian processions. In the 16th-century Pope St Pius V, a Dominican pope, propagated the Rosary with the fifteen traditional Mysteries (Joyful, Sorrowful, Glorious) that was being prayed in the Dominican Order, and he also asked the Rosary Confraternity to pray for victory at the battle of Lepanto. What followed is well known and the success and popularity of the Dominican Rosary has its roots in this historical moment.

Why has a Rosary pilgrimage been organized in the United States?

– The Dominican friars in the USA, and especially in the Eastern Province of St Joseph, are to be credited for the organisation of the Dominican Rosary Pilgrimage. At a time of increasing polarisation, and the fragmentation of society, in times of unrest and of division, the Dominican response is, firstly, a call to concrete prayer. We turn to Jesus through Mary particularly through the Rosary so as to recall the goodness and mercy of God, and to see how beautiful is the call he has given us in Christ, which is to share in divine friendship. Dominicans preach this, and we try to give witness to this by the way we live together in our communities, and also by bringing people together to share in our prayer.

The Dominican Rosary Pilgrimage, it seems to me, did this so beautifully and well, and the mind was fed by the talks given by Fr Gregory Pine OP, and then the soul was uplifted by the processional Rosary interspersed with song, and finally, we were united through the Sacrament of the Holy Eucharist.

In today's troubled times, why is it important for Catholics to turn to the Virgin Mary?

– Mary is our mother, given to us by the Lord as he was dying on the Cross. There can be no more “troubled” time than this! So in our moments of distress and of death, we turn to the mother Christ gave us. Why? Because she lead us to her Son, our Saviour who is the conqueror of sin and death. Led by Mary to him, and clinging to him, we shall surely find that our troubles in this life are only temporary and passing compared to the eternal joy that is found in remaining close to Jesus. Mary always leads us to her Son. Thus St Thomas Aquinas said that Our Lady is like the star that guides ships safely to the harbour who is God.

Is there a real difference in the life of a Christian when he prays the Rosary?

– The Blessed Virgin Mary herself gave us the Rosary, and down to our current times she has appeared and recommended it to the saints. At Fatima, for example, Our Lady said she will be known as ’The Lady of the Rosary’, and she repeatedly asked the children of Fatima to pray the Rosary (five decades) every day. Our Lady, as a good mother, does not ask us to do anything superfluous or unnecessary, but rather, she asks us to do those things which are conducive to our salvation and to our true good. So many things which we do in life, which we occupy our days with are, in fact, unnecessary when compared to the goal of salvation through a deeper following of Christ and the living out of our Baptismal vocation.

The Rosary, for a Christian, will lead to a deeper friendship with God if we truly pray it. The problem, though, is that often the Rosary is just said, recited, and not prayed. The Rosary Confraternity guidebooks all remind us that the soul of the Rosary is meditation, that is to say, a mental focus on the mysteries of salvation, on what Jesus is doing for us, and the grace he wants to give us by these saving actions. But without meditation, the Rosary becomes lifeless, like a body without a soul – it is a corpse. Hence the saints of the Rosary, such as St Louis Marie de Montfort call us to pray the Rosary with attention, even just one decade at a time, if this will help us focus better.

How does Our Mother's presence influence our lives?

– God could have become man without a mother. But in his wisdom and providence, God chose to be born of a woman, as Scripture tells us. Therefore, the Son of God, in his Incarnation, has a mother and the Second Person of the Trinity takes his human flesh and DNA from Mary. This is a beautiful and astounding reality, and it also shows the divine humility that, in God's divine plan, he needs a mother. Hence, without Mary, there can be no incarnate Jesus Christ. Mary, therefore, and her presence so to speak makes all the difference.

As I said, Mary leads to her Son, and indeed, the Divine Maternity is envisioned by God from all eternity so that with the mother comes the Son, and the Son with the mother. Therefore, as soon as we turn to the Blessed Mother, we are also led to Christ and pray to Christ our God and Saviour. The Rosary, therefore, is a Christocentric prayer, as the popes have said, and it is a compendium of the Gospel of Jesus Christ.

How can we pray the Rosary well, without falling into mere repetition of prayers?

– There are many ’spare’ moments in our day, those five minutes or so between things, or waiting for things to happen, which we might utilize by scrolling through our smartphones. These wasted moments, I think, can be converted into fruitful moments of prayer. Pray one decade of the Rosary at a time. There is no need to rush the prayers, but take in the world around you, and offer the world, its peoples, its situations to Jesus through Mary. As you pray that decade, consider that God has chosen to dwell among us, that he descends into the pain and suffering of our humanity, and that he has risen so that we too can transcend the misery of sin and death. Using sacred images of these Joyful, Sorrowful, and Glorious Mysteries can help, I think, to focus the mind on our prayer.

Lucia dos Santos, one of the seers of Fatima (OSV News photo /courtesy Shrine of Fatima)

We also need to be familiar with the Scriptures which are the source for our knowledge of these Mysteries. Hence St Jerome said that “ignorance of the Scriptures is ignorance of Christ”. The Rosary, by itself, does not make up for our ignorance of the written Word of God, so we do need to read the Scriptures as a basis for praying the Rosary. Hence part of the First Saturday devotion that Our Lady asked Sr Lucia of Fatima to propagate involves fifteen minutes of meditation on the mysteries of our salvation, that is to say, on the Scriptures. For the prayer of the Rosary is then a genuine meditation, a kind of ‘lectio divina’ on the Gospels, through which the Holy Spirit, acting on our knowledge, deepens our understanding of divine truths.

If we do this consciously throughout the day, one decade at a time, we will find at the close of the day that we have in fact offered up at least five decades of the Rosary without too much constraint on our time.

What words of encouragement would you like to address to those who have not yet taken the step to pray the Rosary frequently?

– As Our Lady of the Rosary said in 1917: “Will you pray the Rosary daily for peace and for an end to the war?” Our merciful mother asks us most courteously to become participants in the divine peace plan, and it is a grace to be invited to do this. As I said, Our Lady asks nothing superfluous of us, but only gives us whatever will aid our salvation and keep us close to her Son. Therefore, if you wish to grow in love for Jesus, and to become an active member of his “peace corps”, then please do take up a daily Rosary.

And if you struggle, or fail sometimes, or are distracted, or feel its all a bit dull and dry, then please persevere and offer up your difficulties to God. I too used to be in that position, and sometimes I feel that way too. However, because I trust Mary and love her as my mother, I try my best to please her, to do as she asks, with confidence that Mary always leads me to Christ who is “the Way, the Truth and the Life” (Jn 14:6). The Rosary, therefore, like physical exercise and other disciplines is not always enjoyable or pleasurable but it is always necessary. After all, the aim of the Rosary is to bring me closer to Jesus, and without him I can do nothing. (cf Jn 15:5).

Spain

Cardinal Rouco encourages faith in God at the 25th CEU Congress

At the presentation of the 25th Catholics and Public Life Congress, which will take place from the 17th to the 19th of this month at the CEU San Pablo University, the Cardinal Archbishop Emeritus of Madrid, Antonio María Rouco Varela, encouraged the recovery of the relationship between public life and God: "We must rediscover faith in God, as the background that causes you and the end to which you go".

Francisco Otamendi-November 7, 2023-Reading time: 3 minutes

"There was a historical need for a meeting such as the Catholics and Public Life Congress. A formula to give life to the need for a response in society, to move forward in search of the truth," said Cardinal Rouco Varela, in the analysis made on the occasion of the 25th edition of the CongressThe theme of the meeting is "Living, sharing, proclaiming. Evangelize". 

Cardinal Rouco Varela recalled the different topics that have been addressed since 1998 in the Congress, "from the sensitivity and evolution of the problems, related to the conception of man, with anthropology, the basic concerns of the Church in Spain".

In his speech, the Cardinal reflected on "what it means to be Catholic: to live the Christian faith in the communion of the Catholic Church". He also stressed that "the visible Church is a community of believers who, through baptism, enter into Christ as members of his Body. To be Catholic is to be in that community, the Body of Christ." "To be Catholic is to belong to Christ," he pointed out.

"Encounter with a Person".

Rouco Varela reminded us of Romano Guardini and the well-known phrase from the introduction to the encyclical of Benedict XVI, "Deus Caritas Est": "We have believed in the love of God: this is how a Christian can express the fundamental choice of his or her life. One does not begin to be a Christian by an ethical decision or a great idea, but by an encounter with an event, with a Person, who gives a new horizon to life and, with it, a decisive orientation", "Christ himself", the Cardinal added.

Throughout his presentation, Cardinal Rouco, who was introduced by Professor José Francisco Serrano Oceja, mentioned the Dogmatic Constitution Lumen gentium of the Second Vatican Council; he stated that "the Church will never disappear"; and he recalled different moments of the last Popes and of the current Pope Francis. 

Last Popes 

For example, he recalled that Paul VI was "an exceptional Pope" who appointed him Auxiliary Bishop of Santiago de Compostela in 1984, and recalled his suffering due to the "anarchy" in the years following the Second Vatican Council. He also referred at various times to the messages of St. John Paul II in Santiago, "Europe, be yourself". 

At the end, in response to some questions, he reiterated that the main thing is "the relationship of personal and public life with God", "the problem of God", he added. He then responded to the question of how to witness to the faith with "a very simple answer: by fulfilling the ten commandments of the law of God. Regarding the charisms, he said: "let them live". 

And as for the successive editions of the Congress emphasized that they have always been "in tune with the basic concerns of the Church in Spain and of the Pontificates of John Paul II, Benedict XVI and Francis".

Profound significance

After the cardinal, the president of the Catholic Association of Propagandists and the San Pablo CEU University Foundation, Alfonso Bullón de Mendoza, thanked the late president Alfonso Coronel de Palma for founding the congresses, and Cardinal Rouco Varela for his presence: he participated in and celebrated the concluding Mass of the first Congress of Catholics and Public Life in 1998.

The director of the CongressRafael Sanchez Saus, recalled that this meeting The event "has a profound significance", with national and international speakers, and will hear first hand the trajectory and projection of two Catholic congresses that have emerged outside our borders: Puerto Rico and Chile. 

This year, special importance has been given to the Youth Congress, and at its conclusion Magnus Macfarlane-Barrow, founder and CEO of Mary's Meals and Princess of Asturias Award for Concord 2023, will give the closing lecture entitled: "Charity and the art of living generously". Afterwards, the Manifesto with the main conclusions of the meeting will be read. 

The authorFrancisco Otamendi

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Evangelization

Abel LoayzaWe need more priests and lay animators in the communities".

Abel Loayza, a secular priest of the Diocese of Chiclayo-Peru and aggregate member of the Priestly Society of the Holy Cross, will exercise his priestly ministry in the Prelature of Moyobamba, located in the Peruvian Amazon since January 2021.

Juan Carlos Vasconez-November 7, 2023-Reading time: 5 minutes

Mission territories have always had a very special attraction for Christians, because of the mystique of making the name of Christ and the beauty of the good news, of the Gospel, resound in every corner of the earth. 

– Supernatural territorial prelature of Moyobamba is an ecclesiastical province of the Church in Peru. The Prelature is entrusted by the Holy See to the Archdiocese of Toledo in Spain and has its seat in the town of Moyobamba, in the department of San Martin.

Loayza shares with Omnes his pastoral work in this territory of the Peruvian Amazon where priests and lay people keep alive the faith of villages and communities.

What are the main challenges facing this geographical area? 

-Moyobamba is the largest territorial prelature in Peru, covering 51,253 km². Each parish has villages or rural communities. The one I serve - one of the smallest - has 32 communities and 3 tribes. 

We have 25 parishes, served by 51 priests, most of them missionaries: 10 from Spain, 1 from India, 5 from Poland, 1 from Italy, 3 Peruvians from other jurisdictions, 11 religious and 20 priests incardinated in the Prelature of Moyobamba. 

The villages are scattered throughout the jungle and communication routes are precarious, especially during the rainy season (November-April) when the trails are impassable due to mud.

How is the interaction with the faithful in mission territory?

-Some priests travel for hours by boat on the rivers to attend to their communities. We priests try to reach the communities once a month, but the more remote villages receive one to three visits a year. The faithful want to receive the sacraments, especially Confession and the Eucharist. 

When the priest arrives, the faithful wait for him in the village chapel. The day begins with confessions, then follows the celebration of the Holy Mass in which some receive Baptism. After the celebration of the Eucharist, a catechesis is given to the faithful who wait for it and receive it with attention. Then the priest takes his leave, as he is expected in another rural community or in the parish seat. 

In most of the villages we have lay animators who receive monthly spiritual and catechetical formation. The animators celebrate the Sunday Liturgy of the Word in the absence of the presbyter, pray the Rosary, visit the sick, prepare the faithful to receive the sacraments and take material care of the chapel; without their collaboration the evangelization of these places would be more difficult, but the animators are few and there are many hamlets that do not have an animator. 

It is evident that we need more priests and more lay animators in the communities to reach more and better the faithful. 

How does the indigenous clergy function? 

-With the arrival of the Spanish missionaries from Toledo in 2004, the construction of St. Joseph's Seminary in Moyobamba began. Currently, we have 20 major seminarians and 19 minor seminarians preparing for the priesthood.  

There are 10 priests who have been formed in our seminary. They are young priests, well formed, pious and with a missionary spirit, who serve in the parishes of our Prelature, but they are still insufficient.

Our Bishop Rafael Escudero takes great care of his priests. We live and work in teams of two priests per parish, and every month we travel to the city of Tarapoto to attend the monthly retreat, followed by a theological updating class, the pastoral meeting and a luncheon where we celebrate the birthdays and anniversaries of priestly ordination for the month. 

The bishop of the prelature of Moyobamba with the clergy

At the end of the meeting, each priest returns to his parish to continue his mission; some of them travel up to 8 hours by van to attend the training sessions. For my part, every two months, a numerary priest of the Opus Dei He travels 13 hours by bus from the nearest center to Moyobamba to offer the spiritual care that the Work promises to each of its members. St. Josemaría's phrase "out of a hundred souls we are interested in a hundred" is a reality that I experience with each visit of this brother. 

How are you celebrating 75 years of life? 

-In 2023 we will celebrate the 75th anniversary of the foundation of the Prelature of Moyobamba. Our bishop has wanted many of the faithful to gain the plenary indulgence during this Jubilee year. For this purpose we have organized Jubilee meetings for priests, religious, lay animators, altar servers, young people, spouses, religion teachers and the sick. Each meeting begins with a Christian formation class, followed by a procession with the image of Our Lady and the recitation of the Rosary through the streets of Moyobamba to the cathedral, where confessions are heard and Holy Mass is celebrated. The meetings end with a festive get-together with our Bishop. 

Meeting of lay animators with the Bishop of Moyobamba

The central days of the Jubilee will be November 24 and 25, 2023. We have scheduled formation meetings to make known the history of evangelization in the Peruvian jungle, especially in the Prelature of Moyobamba. The days will close with the celebration of the Eucharist, which will be attended by the Bishops of Peru, the priests and faithful of our Prelature. We hope that all this will be for the glory of God and will help us to continue evangelizing this part of the Church.

Any event from working in these lands that has influenced you the most in your life?

-As soon as I arrived at the Prelature, I called the animators for the monthly meeting at the parish headquarters. Every first Friday of the month the animators make a pilgrimage to the parish to fulfill a promise they have made to the Sacred Heart of Jesus: to go to confession, receive communion and receive a Christian formation class. 

Mario, one of the animators, told me that his father was sick and wanted to go to confession and receive the Anointing and Viaticum, but that he had not been able to do so due to the restrictions of the pandemic time.

Mario had traveled four hours by motorcycle to get to the formation meeting. His father had also been an animator and for years on the first Friday of every month he also walked to the parish to go to confession and receive the Eucharist. 

After the meeting I accompanied Mario to his farm. We arrived at 5 pm, his father went to confession and, surrounded by his wife, children and friends of the farmhouse, he received the Anointing of the Sick and Viaticum. That was his last communion. After the priest took his leave, the sick man told his children that he wanted to rest for a moment, and a few minutes later he passed away peacefully. It was the first Friday of the month, but this time it was the Lord Jesus who visited him in his home. 

Crossing a river to go to mission areas
The Vatican

Monika Klimentová: "Everything took place in a climate of respect and charity".

Monika Klimentová, head of the press office of the Czech Bishops' Conference, was one of the members of the communications team for this session of the General Assembly of the Synod.

Giovanni Tridente-November 6, 2023-Reading time: 3 minutes

Now that the work of the first session of the General Assembly of the Synod Omnes had the opportunity to hear first-hand the impressions of one of the dozens of people who worked "behind the scenes" to ensure support for the entire organization. Monika Klimentová, head of the press office of the Czech Bishops' Conference, worked at the Synod throughout the month of October as part of the group of professionals in charge of communications.

What did it mean to you, as a lay faithful, to participate in this important ecclesial meeting?

-I was not a delegate to the Synodal Assembly, but I contributed to the international communications team, composed of the communications staff of the Synod Secretariat, the Dicastery for Communication and various members from all continents. Our role was to listen during the Assembly to the reports of the working groups or individual interventions and, if necessary, to recommend topics that resonated during the day for a daily press conference. We also suggested some members or participants of the Synod who could speak at the press conferences, in tune with the local Churches, including the Bishops' Conferences. By the will of Pope Francis, it was not possible to broadcast the content of the reports, but instead we were able to convey the "atmosphere" experienced by the various delegates. I must say that for me it was an edifying experience to participate in the entire Assembly and to witness firsthand this process of listening, discernment and mutual exchange desired by the Holy Father. Certainly, there were differences of opinion, but everything took place in a climate of respect and charity that impressed me very much.

For the first time a special methodology was used, which favored the exchange between members, participants and experts. How did you experience this "new procedure"?

-As I have already said, everything took place in a climate of friendship and dignity, starting with the smaller circles where bishops, priests, religious and lay people sat at the same table and each one could express his opinion on a specific topic. I think this methodology worked very well. I also talked about it with the bishop who has represented the Czech Republic, and he confirmed how these discussions exceeded his expectations. Everyone listened to each other; of course, they might not agree with everything that was said, but no one insulted the others because of a difference of opinion, but always tried to reach a common consensus.

Pope Francis was present as a member of the Assembly. How did you perceive the Holy Father's presence?

-Being able to sit in the same auditorium with the pastor of the whole Church is not something that happens every day and it is a significant emotion. Of course, the Pope did not participate in the "smaller circles", but he was always present in the Assembly when the results of the working groups were presented, listening attentively to everything that was said. Of course, during the breaks we also had the opportunity to greet him.

It has been said on several occasions that the synod is not a parliament and that what counts is "walking together". From the inside, can you confirm that this is exactly how things were?

-Yes, I can confirm that. In a synod the difference with a parliament is obvious. There are no parliamentary clubs, for example. The delegates prayed together, the days always began and ended with prayer and after three or four reports there was a space for silent recollection. At the beginning of each new module the Eucharist was celebrated, the preparation for which was entrusted to the different continents or rites. The delegates were not only able to "walk together" in the Paul VI Hall, but also made a communal pilgrimage to the catacombs, to the roots of Christianity. At the end, it is true, there was a vote on the final synthesis. This is perhaps the only element of comparison - albeit a somewhat forced one - with a parliament.

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Abortion, a "human right"?

While various UN agencies devote a disproportionate amount of time and resources to helping girls have abortions, commitments to improve their access to education, water, sanitation, food and other urgent humanitarian services often take a back seat.

November 6, 2023-Reading time: 2 minutes

To commemorate the International Day of the Girl Child, a UN treaty body, the Committee on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women, has issued a statement affirming that "access... to safe and quality abortion is a human right under international law, and especially crucial for girls". The UN agency argues that unless young women have access to abortion, they will not be able to lead full lives or reach their full potential, and that unless widespread access to abortion is guaranteed, the debate on any other right may be worthless.

In another article I referred to how the UN Special Rapporteur for Freedom of Expression, Irene Kahn, had published a report recommending that governments and social media companies silence those who express traditional views on marriage, abortion, sexuality and gender identity. And I'm sure if you keep tracking we can find many more examples of these kinds of decisions.

The drift that the UN has been taking for years and that various international institutions are joining is very worrying. France is taking steps to recognize abortion as a right in the constitutional text. The French deputies voted with a strange unanimity, by 337 votes in favor and only 32 against.

The recognition of abortion as a right at the highest level would be something really serious. Those of us who know that, as St. John Paul II said, 'the death of an innocent person can never be legitimized,' would be breaking a law and could be denounced or imprisoned simply for promoting this type of approach. 

Do we realize the implication of all this? 

It is disconcerting and clarifying to see how the UN is embarked on this kind of agenda, and it makes us see clearly the potential of those who are promoting this vision of the world and of society markedly removed from the natural order. An agenda that they want to impose on the whole world as a new ideological colonization, as Pope Francis denounces. Abortion is, for them, the cornerstone of their project. Unless life is also an inalienable principle for us, the UN and the powerful of this world will advance and impose their totalitarian project with all their strength, including that of the law.

It is true that, until now, no UN resolution or treaty has ever considered abortion as a human right. But these kinds of statements by various committees are paving the way toward that goal. Meanwhile various UN agencies, including UN Women, devote a disproportionate amount of time and resources to helping girls to have abortions, while commitments to improve their access to education, water, sanitation, food and other urgent humanitarian services are often put on the back burner.

It is urgent to become aware of the enormous challenge we face. The UN and those who promote this type of ideology advance without twisting their course. The time will come for the final blow in which the persecution of those of us who defend life will be direct and under the protection of the law. It will not be long now. 

The authorJavier Segura

Teaching Delegate in the Diocese of Getafe since the 2010-2011 academic year, he has previously exercised this service in the Archbishopric of Pamplona and Tudela, for seven years (2003-2009). He currently combines this work with his dedication to youth ministry directing the Public Association of the Faithful 'Milicia de Santa Maria' and the educational association 'VEN Y VERÁS. EDUCATION', of which he is President.

The Vatican

Francis on the war in the Holy Land: "In the name of God, enough".

At the Angelus on this Sunday of November, the Holy Father cried out to "stop in the name of God, cease fire" in Palestine and Israel. "Have the fortitude to say enough," he prayed, referring to the war in the Holy Land. Commenting on the Gospel, he said "no to the duplicity of preaching one thing and doing another".

Francisco Otamendi-November 5, 2023-Reading time: 3 minutes

Pope Francis has prayed in the Angelus of this Thirty-first Sunday in Ordinary TimeIn his Gospel, Jesus rebukes the scribes and Pharisees who do not practice what they preach, that "in the name of God" the war in the Holy Land be stopped, that "they cease fire", and that "all possible ways be explored so that a widening of the conflict is absolutely avoided".

Moreover, the Pontiff said in a tone of anguish "that the wounded may be helped, that aid may reach the population of Gaza, where the humanitarian situation is extremely serious. The hostages, including so many children, must be released immediately and returned to their families".

"Let us think of the children involved in this war, as well as in Ukraine and other conflicts. Let us pray for the strength to say enough is enough," the Pope encouraged.

Nepal, Afghans, storm victims

After the recitation of the Marian prayer of the Angelus, Francis visited some places of suffering in the world and said he was "close to the people of Nepal, who are suffering because of an earthquake, as well as to the Afghan refugees who have found refuge in Pakistan, but who now do not know where to go". The Pope also prayed "for the victims of the storms and floods in Italy and other countries".

Referring to groups of pilgrims, he greeted with affection "all of you, Romans and pilgrims from other countries, in particular the pilgrims from Vienna and Valencia" and from Cagliari. "Please don't forget to pray for me," Pope Francis concluded, a request that is. prayer intention for the month of November.

No to the duplicity of heart and life

In the gospel commentaryBefore the Angelus prayer, referring to the scribes and Pharisees who "say and do not do", Pope Francis invited everyone, especially those with responsibilities, not to be "double-hearted" and not to worry only "about being impeccable on the outside".

Commenting on the Gospel passage from St. Matthew (23:1-12), proposed for today's liturgy, on Jesus' words to the scribes and Pharisees, which the Pope described as "very severe," he noted. two aspectsHe also pointed out "the distance between what is said and what is done, and the primacy of the exterior over the interior". On the first, he emphasized that, to the religious leaders of the people of Israel, "who claim to teach others the Word of God and to be respected as authorities of the Temple", Jesus questions "the duplicity of their lives: they preach one thing, but then live another".

"We are fragile," Francis added, and so we all experience "a certain distance between saying and doing." But having "a double heart," living with "one foot in two shoes," is something else. Especially "when we are called - in life, in society or in the Church - to play a role of responsibility".

"The rule is to be credible witnesses first."

"Let us remember this: no to duplicity!" he added. "For a priest, a pastoral worker, a politician, a teacher or a parent, this rule always applies: what you say, what you preach to others, commit yourself to live it first. To be teachers with authority it is first necessary to be credible witnesses."

Pope Francis concluded with the usual questions for examination, "Do we try to practice what we preach or do we live in duplicity? Do we say one thing and do another? Are we concerned only with appearing flawless on the outside, made up, or do we care for our inner life in the sincerity of the heart?"

In his concluding prayer, the Pontiff asked that we turn to the Virgin Mary. "May she who has lived with integrity and humility of heart according to God's will, help us to become credible witnesses of the Gospel."

The authorFrancisco Otamendi

The Samaritan woman who went to confession at Jacob's Well

The Samaritan woman at Jacob's well is the daughter, the wife, the mother, the teacher, the catechist, the courageous and assertive woman who allowed herself to be healed in order to become a bearer of healing for many.

November 5, 2023-Reading time: 3 minutes

At John 4:1-30 is related what was perhaps one of the most extensive dialogues that remained written in the Gospel. It was not between Jesus and an apostle, a temple priest or a scholar of the word. Rather, it was with a sinful, alienated and marked woman, not a Jew, but a Samaritan. Jesus, who always thirsts for souls, as when on Calvary's cross he said "I thirst", at the foot of Jacob's well he said to this Samaritan woman: "... I thirst".Give me to drink. But if you knew the gift of God and recognized the one who asks you for water, you would ask me and I would give you living water. For assuredly, I say to you, whoever drinks of this water (of the well) he shall thirst again: but whosoever drinketh of the water that I shall give him shall never thirst". 

Under the unforgivable glare of the burning sun of the deserts of the region of Samaria, with a panorama discolored by drought and aridity, a dazzling contrast is painted between human realities and divine promises. In this desert, rivers of living waters will flow into eternity. The drama of the life of a woman with deep and insatiable affective deficiencies was about to be transformed. To her usual and daily experience of exile and desolation due to error or sin, she will be promised the experience that liberated souls live in spiritual intimacy with God who intertwine after finding themselves at some decisive crossroads in life.

Thirsty hearts

Jesus was talking to a woman anonymous to the readers but well known in her town. Throughout her life she was trying to fill notable voids with failed experiences of failed love. It is these deficiencies in human beings that become urgent but fruitless searches. The Samaritan woman had lived through five love failures which could no longer be camouflaged or excused.

Those five love breakups came into her life laden with insecurity, contempt, abandonment, irrelevance, lack of appetite, sadness and desolation. But how does one water the desert of Samaria until it blooms, and how does one transform a life plundered of so much innocence, purpose, fulfillment and happiness? It is the question that is heard so much in the offices of psychologists, life counselors, and spiritual guides. The answer would be this: only by accepting an offer not to be refused: the Creator of the seas and rivers will divert one of them from its course to force it through a dry heart until it is soaked with new illusions and hopes.

Humanity with a woman's face

The Samaritan woman is not only a used or aged woman's face with the blows of life; she is also the one who represented at that time the sins of all the people of Samaria who had built a temple on Mount Gerizim in disobedience to God, alienating themselves from the Jewish religion and customs. The Samaritans at some times in their history worshiped 5 gods brought from 5 pagan regions. When Jesus speaks to this woman with 5 husbands, he speaks to the whole region.

Personal sins and social sins often resemble and intertwine. Sinful humanity has the face of a wounded woman, and the sin of a nation has its origin in the pain of a girl raped of her innocence or of a creature outraged of her dignity and destiny.

The confessional next to the well

Jacob's well is that improvised confessional where souls thirsty for love will continue to arrive, but overflowing with pain. The wounds of the past are contaminated and stagnant water that threaten to make us sick. The thirst in the heart of a wounded woman has many names and adjectives: thirst for relevance, beauty, youth, purpose, successful motherhood with fruits and legacies. The Lord Jesus, physician and healer of pierced hearts, points out and confirms that the needs of the soul are as real for survival as those of the body, and offers generous portions of love and forgiveness. "Take of the water that I offer you, for the time will come, and it is near at hand, when true worshipers will worship the Father in spirit and in truth." What an announcement! What a prophecy for a world that yearns for what would most sustain it: the constant presence of its God! And what an offer so impossible to refuse!

It is time to stop begging for crumbs of love when the Bread of Life is speaking to you. And if you accept God's gift, come out of anonymity and let yourself be recognized as a free and healed woman.
A healed woman will be positioned and empowered to transform many, as when at the end of John 4, it was she, and not Jesus' disciples, who ended up evangelizing Samaria. She is the daughter, the wife, the motherThe teacher, the catechist, the courageous and assertive woman who allowed herself to be healed in order to become the bearer of healing for many. Sit down with Jesus in the "Jacob's well", or better yet, in the confessional and in front of the Blessed Sacrament, to begin or complete the most extensive and complete dialogue you have ever had with Him, and I assure you that you will never be thirsty again.

The authorMartha Reyes

D. in Clinical Psychology.

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Movements and parishes

The integration of the various movements and charisms in the life of parishes sometimes encounters situations that are difficult to manage.

November 5, 2023-Reading time: 2 minutes

I have read the report in the Experiences section of Omnes issue 732, October 2023, about the Omnes Forum about Integration of ecclesial groups into parish life. An interesting topic, about which some comments come to mind.

Some years ago - I don't remember how many, I would have to remember - I was commissioned to write an article on the presence of ecclesial movements in parishes, for this same magazine, which at that time still bore the name "Palabra" (Word). The then diocesan bishop of Getafe, D. Joaquín María López de Andújar, suggested a commentary based on his experience. He thought that, when some new movement or charism arrives to a diocese, or perhaps to a parish, as in the frame of reference of this Omnes Forum, the situation is similar to that of the father of a family to whom another child is born; there are parents who assume it very well, they adapt the spaces of the house, if necessary they put a bunk bed where there was a bed, etc., and there is no problem; but others do not know how to manage with the new child.

I limit myself now to underline something that María Dolores Negrillo, from the executive of Cursillos in Christianity, said during the Forum, when referring to priests who do not admit them, and reply when one of the members of a movement comes to offer to collaborate in the parish: "...".With all my love, I have to say that all the groups are done, and we don't know what to do with you."; or, in other cases: "They complicate our lives; we do not want them.". Indeed, these things do happen. 

I return to the comment of Bishop López de Andújar, because something similar sometimes happens with diocesan bishops, for example, in relation to permanent deacons or the Ordo virginum. It can be clarified that it is not obligatory to have either one (deacons) or the other (virgins); and, in practice, there is an enormous disproportion between the different dioceses in the case, for example, of permanent deacons, who exceed 60 in Seville or 12 in Getafe, while in some dioceses there are none at all.

In a similar way, we also find that not all priests allow the Neocatechumenal Way to be established in their parish. They begin with a catechesis of proclamation, but they do not always admit them. There is no doubt that the Way does much good to many souls, including many priests, who not only attend to them, but they themselves "walk". It is also remarkable the fact that the whole family, parents and children, usually "walk". But there is a fear of the risk of transforming the parish and configuring it in the style of the Way.

This is not always the case; nor is it generally the case with diocesan priests linked to other spiritualities: Communion and Liberation, Priestly Society of the Holy Cross, Focolare... If they change, the parish moves forward without trauma, or rupture.

My conclusion: there is a lot of progress to be made in this, in the sense that the report underlines: "Everyone agreed to dialogue".

The World

Sister Nabila from Gaza: "We risk our lives every minute".

Nabila Saleh, a Sister of the Congregation of the Rosary of Jerusalem and resident in Gaza, shares with Omnes the extremely difficult situation in the area. The Pope calls daily at the Holy Family parish in the area, which has become a veritable "refugee camp".

Federico Piana-November 5, 2023-Reading time: 3 minutes

Sister Nabila goes out from time to time. If, even for a moment, the shelling gives her a break, she pokes her nose out of the parish of the Holy Family and walks with her heart in her throat through the devastated and ghostly streets. Buildings reduced to a pile of rubble, blood and death. 

Gaza no longer exists, or almost does not exist. 

Nabila Saleh's pace is fast. The nun of the Congregation of the Rosary of Jerusalem knows that staying outside, going in search of food or checking that the school where she taught until a few weeks ago with her companions is not being looted and vandalized, could also mean not returning to the only Latin church in the city, which has become a refuge for 600 Christians. Poor Christians who have lost everything, no longer have a home, often not even children. And the children no longer even have parents.

"They are afraid. They have in their eyes the images of the Greek Orthodox parish hit by bombs. Eighteen Christians died that day and among them were eight minors. The wounded were taken in here by us," Sister Nabila tells Omnes.

Children also welcomed

In the group of 600 desperate people there are also 100 children, many of them disabled and in need of special and continuous care. These are the children cared for by Mother Teresa's nuns, who have found accommodation with elderly people who look after them all day long.

Holy Family Parish, Gaza

"Here we need everything," explains the nun, "because we lack food, water, medicine. We don't have any more fuel: we have enough gas oil left for one more week and then we don't know what will happen. The situation is very difficult, with the bombings we are risking our lives every minute". 

No place is safe

Sr. Nabila's account becomes more stark when she reveals that the school in the town that her congregation runs had welcomed Muslim refugees into its classrooms at the beginning of the war, but then "we had to abandon everything because the school is close to a hospital behind which there is a Hamas military post and the shelling had intensified in that same area."

Fortunately, given the impossibility of reaching the hospital, there are four doctors at the Sagrada Familia who take care of the wounded. And they do it tirelessly and with great difficulty.

Hope does not die

The Latin parish in Gaza could be considered a real refugee camp. To run it with love and devotion there is an almost exclusively female group, says the nun: "Three sisters of the Congregation of the Rosary, two sisters of the Incarnate Word and three sisters of Mother Teresa. Then there is a religious, Father Iusuf, parochial vicar".

The parish priest, Father Gabriele Romanelli, was trapped in Jerusalem when the Strip was closed, but he never misses an opportunity, even from a distance, to encourage and console his faithful. "The people - adds Sister Nabila - have not lost hope. They attend the two daily Masses celebrated in our church and pray the Holy Rosary with fervor".

The Pope's closeness

The person who answers the phone when Pope Francis calls - now almost every day - to the parish to inquire about the situation, is usually Nabila herself. "We - she reveals - tell him everything that happens here. Talking to him and knowing that he is praying for us gives us courage and strength to go on".

The people, says the nun, "when they know that the Pope has called, they thank God. They live all this with great joy.

The authorFederico Piana

 Journalist. He works for Vatican Radio and collaborates with L'Osservatore Romano.

Pope's teachings

Trust and care

During the month of October, the Assembly of the Synod of Bishops took place in Rome, for "to put God back in the center of our gaze".. In addition, the Pope has published the following apostolic exhortations Laudate Deumon the care of our common home, and C'est la confianceabout St. Therese of the Child Jesus.

Ramiro Pellitero-November 4, 2023-Reading time: 9 minutes

For times of crisis, Christians turn to faith, which is about trust; and this means that, like Jesus, we must care for others and for the world around us. 

With this proposal, Francis places himself in full continuity with the beginnings of his pontificate, on the way to his eleventh anniversary. Then (May 13, 2013) he outlined his program in the shadow of St. Joseph, whose mission, the fruit of his faith, was none other than to guard God's gifts and serve his loving plan of salvation. 

In recent weeks, after his trip to Marseilles, on October 4 the Pope inaugurated the work of the Synodal Assembly on synodality in its first phase. The same day saw the publication of the apostolic exhortation Laudate Deum on the climate crisis. In the middle of the month, he signed the apostolic exhortation C'est la confiance, on the 150th anniversary of the birth of St. Teresa of the Child Jesus. 

Marseilles: the "shudder" of faith lived out 

The Pope went to Marseilles to take part in the celebration of the Mediterranean MeetingsThe event, in which the bishops and mayors of the area are carrying forward a process to foster a more humane world, where hope and fraternity have their place. In the background is the complex issue of migrants who arrive - or die - for example, crossing the Mediterranean. 

The trip was closed at the stadium Velodromewith the Mass where he stated that "we need a shudder" like that of John the Baptist in the womb of his mother Elizabeth, when he received the visit of Mary who was carrying the Messiah. 

"This The noted Peter's successor, "is the opposite of a heart that is dull, cold, comfortable with a quiet life, that is shielded in indifference and becomes impermeable, that hardens, insensitive to everything and everyone, even to the tragic discarding of human life, which today is rejected in so many people who emigrate, as well as in so many unborn children and in so many abandoned elderly". (homily 23-IX-2023). A summary of the Pope's message in Marseille could be: we must choose fraternity over indifference. 

The Synod from the point of view of trust

The Pope's two interventions (a homily and an address at the beginning of the October Synodal Assembly) set the tone for the work of those weeks. 

The homily of October 4 began by contemplating Jesus' prayer to the Father: "I praise you, Father, Lord of heaven and earth, that you have hidden these things from the wise and prudent and revealed them to the little ones." (Mt 11:25). This prayer represents the gaze of Jesus in the midst of the difficulties he encounters (contradictions, accusations, persecution). 

He experiences a real "pastoral desolation", but is not discouraged: "At the moment of desolation, therefore, Jesus has a gaze that reaches beyond: he praises the wisdom of the Father and is able to discern the hidden good that grows, the seed of the Word welcomed by the simple, the light of the Kingdom of God that makes its way even during the night." 

Participate in the gaze of Jesus 

From this view of Jesus, and with references to St. John XXIII (cfr.. Allocution at the beginning of Vatican Council II, October 11, 1962) and Benedict XVI (cfr.. Meditation at the beginning of the synod on the new evangelization, October 8, 2012), Francis declares: "This is the main task of the Synod: to put God back at the center of our gaze, to be a Church that sees humanity with mercy." And all this at the prompting of the Holy Spirit. 

Only in this way, he adds, will we be able to be, as St. Paul VI proposed, a Church that "colloquium is made". (encyclical Ecclesiam suam, n. 34), "that imposes no burdens but a gentle yoke". (Mt 11:30). 

Thirdly, that gaze of Jesus, which blesses and welcomes, and which we want to make our own, "it frees us from falling into some dangerous temptations.". Francis points out three temptations: rigidity, lukewarmness and tiredness.. In the face of them, the gaze of Jesus turns to us "humble, vigorous and cheerful", The Church is capable in the midst of divisions and conflicts within and outside the Church, which must be "repaired" and "purified", as St. Francis of Assisi did. Not in herself, it is understood, who is holy and untouchable because of her divine side, but in us. "For we are all a People of forgiven sinners - both sinners and forgiven - always in need of returning to the source, which is Jesus, and setting out once again on the ways of the Spirit so that his Gospel may reach everyone." 

The Holy Spirit, protagonist of harmony

In his speech on October 4, Francis began by pointing out why he had chosen the theme of synodality for this synod (not an easy topic). It was one of the themes desired by the bishops of the world, along with that of priests and the social question. 

After recalling, as he has done so many times in recent months, what a synod is "not" (neither a parliament nor a meeting of friends), he underlined a theme dear to his heart: in the Synod there is a main protagonist who is not any of us, the Holy Spirit. 

"Let us not forget, brothers and sisters, that the protagonist of the Synod is not us: it is the Holy Spirit. And if the Spirit is among us to guide us, it will be a good Synod. If among us there are other ways of moving forward for human, personal, ideological interests, it will not be a Synod, it will be a more parliamentary meeting, which is something else. The Synod is a path made by the Holy Spirit".

He unites us in harmony, the harmony of all differences. If there is no harmony, there is no Spirit: it is He who makes it".

The Holy Spirit is like a mother who guides and consoles; like the innkeeper to whom the Good Samaritan entrusted the man who had been beaten on the road (cf. Lk 10:25-37). Synodal discernment consists precisely in learning to listen to the different voices of the Spirit. In rejecting the temptations of criticism "under the table" and spiritual worldliness. In prioritizing not talking, but listening. Listen in this "pause" that the whole Church makes during this month, like a holy Saturday, to listen to what the Holy Spirit wants to make us see. 

Laudate Deumon the climate crisis

Trust in God, proper to faith (hence the term "faithful" = one who has trust), also gives us the ability to trust those around us. And it leads us to care for what belongs to the common good, beginning with human dignity and the care of the Earth for all. 

The exhortation Laudate Deum (LD) is a continuation of the encyclical Laudato si' (LS)on caring for the common home (2015). 

A moral drama

In the framework of the Social Doctrine of the Church, the Pope starts, also here, from the astonished gaze of Jesus before the wonders of his Father's creation: "....Look at the lilies of the field..." (Mt 6:28-29). Now, by contrast, and in many cases, it is a true moral drama that involves various cases of what is called "structural sin" (cf. encyclical Sollicitudo rei socialis, 36; Catechism of the Catholic Church, 1869).

Francis affirms categorically the existence of the global climate crisis (nn. 5-19) in which human causes, if not the only ones, count significantly, even if sometimes denied or doubted by public opinion; he also affirms that some damages and risks will be irreversible, perhaps for hundreds of years. And that it is better to prevent a catastrophe than to regret it through negligence. "Nothing more is asked of us than some responsibility for the inheritance we will leave behind us after our passage through this world." (n. 18). Moreover, as the covid-19 pandemic has shown, everything is connected and no one is saved alone..

It deplores the technocratic paradigm that continues to advance behind the degradation of the environment. It is a way of thinking "as if truth, good and reality spontaneously spring from the same technological and economic power". (LS 105); as if everything were resolved by infinite or unlimited growth (LS 106). That is why it is necessary to rethinking our use of power (LS 24 ff.), its meaning and its limits, especially in the absence of solid ethics and a truly human spirituality. 

Lack of an effective international policy

From there he goes on, in a third point, to denounce the weakness of international policy (LS 34 ff) and the role of the international climate conferences with its advances and failures. Negotiations are not progressing because of countries that put their national interests ahead of the global common good (LS 169), with all that this entails in terms of "lack of awareness and responsibility" (LD 52). 

The fifth section is devoted by the Pope to expectations for the COP28 in Dubai (United Arab Emirates), scheduled to be held from November 20 to December 12, 2023. "We need to overcome the logic of appearing as sentient beings and at the same time not having the courage to produce substantial changes." (LD 56). 

The sixth and last point of the document sets forth the ".spiritual motivations" (nn. 61 ff.) "that spring from one's own faith", especially for the Catholic faithful, while at the same time encouraging the same for other believers. Recognition of God as Creator, respect for the world, the wisdom that flows from it and gratitude for all this are condensed in the very attitude of Jesus when he contemplated created reality and invited his disciples to cultivate similar attitudes (cf. n. 64). Moreover, the world will be renewed in relation to the risen Christ, who envelops all creatures and directs them to a destiny of fullness, so that there is mysticism in the smallest realities and that the world will be renewed in relation to the risen Christ, who envelops all creatures and directs them to a destiny of fullness. "the world sings an infinite Love: how can we not take care of it?" (n. 65).

In the face of the technocratic paradigm, the Judeo-Christian cosmovision invites us to sustain a "situated anthropocentrism", that is to say that human life is situated in the context of all creatures that make up a "universal family" (LS 89, LD 68). 

The Pope's proposal to the Catholic faithful is clear: individually, to reconcile ourselves with the world that shelters us, to beautify it with our own contribution. At the same time, to promote appropriate national and international policies. In any case, what is important, says Francis, is to "remember that there are no lasting changes without cultural changes, without a maturation in the way of life and in the convictions of societies, and there are no cultural changes without changes in people." (LD 70). And this includes important cultural signs - which can encourage processes of transformation at the social and political level - at the personal, family and community levels: "The effort of households to pollute less, reduce waste, consume wisely, is creating a new culture." (LD 71). This will allow you to move forward "on the path of mutual care"..

C'est la confianceSt. Therese's "secret": the "secret" of St. Therese

The exhortation C'est la confiance (abbreviated as CC) on trust in God's merciful Love, on the 150th anniversary of the birth of St. Therese of the Child Jesus and of the Holy Face (October 15, 2023), literally proposes the message of St. Therese: "Trust, and nothing but trust, can lead us to Love." (n. 1). Francis adds: "With trust, the wellspring of grace overflows in our lives, the Gospel becomes flesh in us and turns us into channels of mercy for our brothers." (CC 2).

The "attraction" of Jesus 

The first section, "Jesus for others"highlights two lights that shine in Therese's relationship with Jesus.

First, its missionary soul, because, as in every authentic encounter with Christ, her experience of faith called her to mission. "Therese was able to define her mission with these words: 'In heaven I will desire the same thing I desire now on earth: to love Jesus and to make Him loved'". (CC 9). 

Moreover, she understands that Jesus, in drawing her to Himself, also draws to Himself the souls she loves, without tension or effort. This happens on the basis of the grace of Baptism and through the action of the Holy Spirit, who, in fact, frees us from self-referentiality., of self-centered holiness. 

The second section, "the path of trust and love", expresses the message of this great saint, who understood what God asks of the "little ones". A message also known as "the path of spiritual childhood". It is a path that, as the Pope rightly points out, everyone can live, and which, I might add, has found other forms and expressions in saints such as Charles de Foucauld and Josemaría Escrivá. 

Beyond all merit, the daily neglect of the

And Francis explains by getting to the theological core of his document: in the face of a Pelagian idea of holiness (cfr. Gaudete et exsultate47-62), "Therese always stresses the primacy of God's action, of His grace". (CC 17).

What does Jesus ask of us? He does not ask for great deeds, but "only abandonment and gratitude". This does not mean, on our part, admitting a certain conformism or quietism, but rather, the Pope points out with reference to the saint, "his boundless confidence encourages those who feel fragile, limited, sinful to let go and transform in order to reach high." (CC 21).

As we can see, this trust and abandonment do not refer only to one's own sanctification and salvation, but embrace the whole of life, freeing it from all fear: "Full trust, which becomes abandonment in Love, frees us from obsessive calculations, from constant worry about the future, from fears that take away peace...." (CC 24). It is the "holy abandonment"

In the midst of the darkness, a firmest hope

This trust, even in the midst of the most absolute spiritual darkness, was lived by Therese, who personally identified herself with the darkness that Jesus wanted to experience on Calvary for sinners. She "feels she is a sister to atheists and, like Jesus, sits at table with sinners (cf. Mt 9:10-13).. Intercede for them, while continually renewing their act of faith, always in loving communion with the Lord." (CC 26). 

The gaze on the infinite mercy of God, together with the awareness of the drama of sin (the Pope picks up the account of the saint in relation to the condemnation of the criminal Henri Pranzini) build the springboard from which Therese formulates her message. 

Love and simplicity at the heart of the Church 

The third section of the exhortation formulates this message in detail: "I will be love.". She is an example of how love for God is both ecclesial and very personal, heart to heart. "At the heart of the Church, my Mother."he decided, "i will be love". And Francisco adds: "Such a discovery of the heart of the Church is also a great light for us today, not to be scandalized by the limits and weaknesses of the ecclesiastical institution, marked by obscurities and sins, and to enter into her burning heart of love, which was kindled at Pentecost thanks to the gift of the Holy Spirit." (CC 41).

Precisely "thus arriving at the ultimate personal synthesis of the Gospel, which began with complete trust and culminated in total gift to others." (CC 44). And this expresses "the heart of the Gospel" (CC 48).

The Pope concludes by pointing out that "we still need to pick up this brilliant intuition of Therese and draw the theoretical and practical, doctrinal and pastoral, personal and communitarian consequences. We need audacity and interior freedom to be able to do so". (CC 50). 

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Cinema

Ana, from "Madre no hay más que una": "I do not realize myself: I am in relation to others".

On October 20, the documentary film "Madre no hay más que una" was released, a tribute to motherhood based on the testimony of six mothers who tell their experiences. Omnes interviewed Ana, one of the protagonists.

Loreto Rios-November 4, 2023-Reading time: 3 minutes

On Friday, October 20, the documentary film "Madre no hay más que una", a tribute to motherhood through the example of six specific mothers: Ana, BlancaIsa, Olatz, María and Bea. Directed by Jesús García ("Medjugorje, la película") and produced by Gospa Arts, "Madre no hay más que una" shows the testimonies of these six mothers at a time when there are fewer and fewer births and even couples who have many children are judged.

You can see the theaters where you can enjoy the movie and more information. here.

Trailer for "Madre no hay más que una".

In Omnes we have interviewed Ana, one of the protagonists, a doctor in Philology who is dedicated to the research of ancient manuscripts and manuscripts. A few months ago she appeared in ABC because she was not allowed to board the train with her four children.

What did motherhood mean to you?

It was an overwhelming surprise that lasts to this day. I never imagined that motherhood could resize my life in such a way, filling everything with a new fullness. My children have helped me to take a renewed and grateful look at my own parents, to marvel even more at the mystery that is life, and even to understand its meaning more deeply: I look at my children and quickly understand that I am here to love and be loved, that because I have been called into existence I have an inalienable value and beauty. Living with them, moreover, allows me to rediscover the child in me, helps me to become small, simple, joyful.

How does your vocation to marriage make you grow in your relationship with God?

My marriage is the greatest gift I have received from God, from it our children are born: the way I found my husband against all odds and the way he complements me make me absolutely sure that there is a provident God who has made us cross paths; my husband is my resting place, the necessary help, my greatest joy.

At the same time, the opportunity for mutual self-giving that marriage means helps me to understand the dynamics of the gift in which our life finds its deepest meaning: I am made to give my life and I know this because in this giving to each other we experience ourselves more and more happily.

In today's society, the emphasis is often placed on the fact that motherhood means giving up other things, such as professional growth. Do you share this opinion?

For me, the first mistake involved in this diatribe is that of having placed family and work in the same place, as if in reconciling the two were on an equal footing. My motherhood and my responsibility shape me ontologically, but not my work, which I love and live as a mission, but in no way is on a par with my husband and my children.

For me it is rather the other way around, I believe that work should be adapted to the family, to its rhythms and needs, as far as possible. Moreover, if my children have brought something to my work, it is the possibility of living it in a very free way, without putting on it the forging of my self-esteem; my life is already full, regardless of my work performance. In fact, the expression "work fulfillment" has never convinced me; among other things, because I do not fulfill myself: I am in relation to others, who make me a wife, a mother and also a teacher.

What has been the biggest challenge of being a mother?

For me the greatest challenge, the greatest difficulty, is to understand that I cannot free my children from suffering, something I explain in the film; it is very difficult for me, although I know that this is so and that, in fact, I should not fall into the illusion or the trap of trying to keep them in a bubble. For a mother, a child's suffering hurts more than her own.

¿Phy do you think people should see this film?

I think this film is a gift because it shows that surrender, fatigue, renunciation of oneself, far from being an enemy to reach happiness, are its springboard. It saddens me that more and more we speak of children as a burden, instead of as an immense gift that we will not have enough life to contemplate, understand or be grateful for. I think we live in a society that proposes a very hedonistic and individualistic concept of happiness, for which motherhood is presented as an obstacle; and in this sense, it seems to me that the testimony of each of the mothers who appear in the film manages to show that the deepest joy is hidden among diapers and tiredness, but also among laughter, hugs and precious conversations before bedtime.

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United States

Dioceses in the United States celebrate the "Red Mass

Each year in October, dioceses in North America celebrate the so-called "Red Mass". The ceremony invokes God's guidance and blessing on members of the legal community and government officials.

Gonzalo Meza-November 4, 2023-Reading time: 3 minutes

Each year in October, dioceses in North America celebrate the so-called "Red Mass", named after the liturgical color of the Votive Mass of the Holy Spirit. The ceremony invokes God's guidance and blessing on members of the legal community and government officials, the main guests of this liturgy. It is attended by magistrates, lawyers, government officials and members of the legal academic community. Although in most dioceses this Mass takes place on the Sunday preceding the first Monday in October (the start of the U.S. Supreme Court term), some jurisdictions hold it later in October.

The first Red Mass was celebrated in New York in October 1928. However, its origins date back to the 13th century. It is believed that the first such liturgy, focused on magistrates, took place in the cathedral of Paris in 1245 and then spread throughout Europe. Although the color red currently has a theological meaning that refers to fire and the presence of the Holy Spirit, when the Mass began in 1310 in England, the magistrates of the Supreme Court wore scarlet vestments and thus the name "Red Mass" was popularized.

Washington DC

One of the best known Red Masses is the one celebrated in the American capital at St. Matthew's Cathedral. This year's ceremony took place on Sunday, October 1, 2023. The liturgy was attended by nearly 900 people including two Supreme Court Justices (John G. Roberts, Jr., and Amy Coney Barret) as well as justices from other courts, diplomats and members of the federal government. Although Cardinal Wilton Gregory, Archbishop of Washington DC, usually presides at this Mass each year, on this occasion it was presided over by Auxiliary Bishop Mons. John Esposito (the cardinal was in Rome to participate in the Synod of Bishops).

In his homily, Msgr. Esposito noted, "Gathered here are eminent jurists, legislators, academics and advocates who do the quiet work of helping people with their daily problems. There are also men and women with different roles, all with different social and ethnic backgrounds and religious traditions." Referring to the Holy Spirit who descended on the Apostles at Pentecost, the prelate said, "Like them, this morning we raise our voices in confident prayer to ask God for the blessings of wisdom, knowledge, and the humility to accept what is true, distinguishing clearly between right and wrong, just and unjust." 

Los Angeles, California

On the other side of the country, on the west coast, this Mass took place on October 25 at the Cathedral of Our Lady of Los Angeles. It was organized by the local chapter of the Society of St. Thomas More and was attended by more than 200 people including judges, state legislators, lawyers, legal professionals, as well as Justice Patricia Guerrero, Chief Justice of the California Supreme Court. The liturgy was presided over by Archbishop Jose H. Gomez, Archbishop of Los Angeles, and the homily was given by Father Edward Siebert, a Jesuit priest and rector of Loyola Marymount University.

At the end of the Mass, Justice Guerrero delivered an address during which she praised the example of St. Thomas More and evoked the violence and suffering currently being experienced in the world. Guerrero said that St. Thomas More "represents a guiding figure for lawyers, judges and public servants to navigate the complexities of our work and our world. Thomas More reminds us that in a world that can often seem turbulent, we must not abandon our duty as guardians of the law," said Guerrero.

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