Sunday Readings

Readings from the Nativity of St. John the Baptist

Andrea Mardegan comments on the readings for the Nativity of St. John the Baptist.

Andrea Mardegan-June 21, 2021-Reading time: 2 minutes

Neighbors and relatives rejoice with Isabel, but not with Zacarias, because there is always a certain shame in talking to a mute and relating to those who have fallen into disgrace. And so, shame becomes an accomplice of coldness, the discomfort of the unfortunate increases and he feels left out. 

Mary lets all the attention go to Elizabeth, but she notices that Zechariah feels marginalized. She approaches him and rejoices with him. She, who knew his confidences, knew that he had hoped to regain his voice with the birth of his son. So she knows that he might now be discouraged, and she warns him with a word of encouragement. He tells her that the recovery of her voice will come suddenly, when God wills it, and it will be like a new birth. He advises her not to think about when it will happen, because it cannot be predicted. But the time is near, because two other prophecies that the angel had spoken had been fulfilled: "Elizabeth will bear you a son." y "many will rejoice at his birth". The third word that referred to Zechariah -"you shall have joy and rejoicing."- not yet fully completed: joy yes, but not yet jubilation, because it lacks the voice for jubilee.

"Zechariah: it is time to cultivate faith, hope and priestly wisdom. The day will come when you will recover your voice and then you will praise the Lord as you have never done in your life." Mary prayed to the Son of the Most High who was growing in her womb, that he would ask his Father to restore Zechariah's voice soon, so that he could make known to the world the works that God had worked in him.

There was always much harmony between Zechariah and Elizabeth. Everything that had happened in the temple, Zechariah had told his wife, with writings and gestures. Also the detail of the name: "You shall name him John.". Elizabeth, aligned with God's will and with her husband, overturns the traditions of the family and the people. Zechariah is questioned with a simple gesture. They know that he listens and that he understands, but they leave him aside. They assumed he would agree to give his name to their son, but they did not ask him first. Zechariah suffers to the end the embarrassment of neighbors and relatives who do not speak to him and only nod to him, even though he is only mute, not deaf and dumb. Zechariah asks for a tablet on which to write so that there can be no doubt and finally he can give an outward sign of voluntary adaptation to the message of the angel and therefore of God: "Juan is his name." writes. 

God accepts Zechariah's gesture of obedience and faith and loosens his tongue, and Zechariah speaks prophetic words of blessing and praise: "And thou, child, shalt be called the Prophet of the Most High: for thou shalt go before the Lord to prepare His ways."

Homily on the readings of the Nativity of St. John the Baptist

The priest Luis Herrera Campo offers its nanomiliaa small one-minute reflection for these readings.

Scripture

"God sends them a seducing power" (2 Thess 2:11-12).

Juan Luis Caballero-June 21, 2021-Reading time: 4 minutes

The second Letter to the Thessalonians contains a statement that at first sight is puzzling, but which, in reality, appears throughout Scripture, expressed in various ways: "Therefore God sends them a seducing power, that they may believe a lie, so that all who have not believed the truth, but have indulged in unrighteousness, may be condemned" (2 Thess 2:11-12). To understand it we must contextualize it and be attentive to the grammar of the original Greek.

The Letters to the Thessalonians

One of the central themes of the two Letters to the Thessalonians is that of the Parousia or Second Coming of Jesus Christ -the day of the Lord-, who will come to judge and certify the condemnation or salvation of men (1 Thess 4:13 - 5:11; 2 Thess 2:1-12). 

Paul preached for the first time in Thessalonica quickly, and the letters serve to continue with the formation and to exhort and give relief in persecutions and doubts. In both letters it is insisted that we do not know when the Parousia will be and some basic references are given: the fact that some believers have already died, without the Lord having come, does not disprove Paul's preaching; the day of the Lord has not yet come, although some say it has, because a series of events have to happen beforehand, which are briefly mentioned.

The "little apocalypse" of 2 Thessalonians

Some scholars call the passage 2 Thess 2:1-12 "little apocalypse". In fact, the motifs and terminology used there are those proper to the apocalyptic genre (cf. 4 Esdras 13:10; Mt 24:1-51; Book of Revelation). And this must be taken into account in their interpretation: we must not look for correspondences in the realities of the symbols and images used; what is described as imminent must not be transposed to the distant future; prophetic announcements that will only be understandable after they have been realized must not be translated into historical terms. 2 Thessalonians 2:1-12 is preceded by a thanksgiving that speaks of the perseverance of the Thessalonians in the midst of persecutions and tribulations; this is, Paul says, "a sign of the righteous judgment of God" (2 Thess 1:3-5), a reality on which he then dwells, speaking of the divine retribution that awaits those who have accepted the Gospel - the reward of rest - and those who have rejected it - punishment with eternal punishment (2 Thess 1:6-10). 

After a brief prayer asking for perseverance (2 Thess 1:11-12), Paul addresses the question of the coming of the Lord, not so much to say when or how it will be as to comfort those to whom it is addressed (2 Thess 2:1-12). He then exhorts again in perseverance in the faith (2 Thess 2:13-17). From what has been said up to this point and from what follows (2 Thess 3:1-18), we can say that at the heart of the letter is the preaching and acceptance of the Gospel preached by Paul, and the consequences of rejecting it with regard to salvation.

God's righteous judgment

The Pauline expression on which we will focus is found in this immediate context: "Then the wicked one [apokalyphthesetai ho anomos] will appear, whom the Lord will exterminate with the breath of his mouth (cf. Is 11:4; Rev 19:15; see Ps 33:6) and destroy with his majestic coming [with the manifestation (radiance) of his coming: te epiphaneia tes parousias autou] (cf. 1 Cor 15:24, 26). He, by the action of Satan, will come with all power [energeian], with false signs and wonders [kai semeiois kai terasin pseudous; cf. Rev 13:13-14], and with all kinds of deception [apate; cf. Col 2:8; Eph 4:22] evil [of unrighteousness: tes adikias; cf. 1Co 13:6; Rm 2:8], directed at those who are perishing, since they did not accept the love of the truth [tes aletheias] in order to be saved. Therefore God sends them a seducing power [a force of deception: "energeian planes"; cf. Dt 29:3; Is 6:9-10; 29:10; Mt 13:12-15; Rm 11:8], so that they may believe the lie [to pseudei], so that they may be condemned [judged: krithosin; cf. Rm 2:12] all those who did not believe the truth [te aletheia; cf. Gal 5:7], but had pleasure in unrighteousness [te adikia]" (2 Thess 2:8-12). 

The exposition of these verses is carried out according to a comparison or synkrisis: the manifestation of the wicked one versus the manifestation (= parousia) of Christ (cf. 2 Tim 1:10; 4:8); the wonders worked by the power of Satan versus the wonders worked by Christ; seduction and lies versus truth; injustice versus justice; rejecting versus believing; condemnation versus salvation. 

The text is presented not as a threat to believers, but as a consolation, making them consider the fate of those who have voluntarily rejected the Gospel. It is also, therefore, an exhortation to perseverance. The tense of the verbs situates the reference to "those who are perishing" from what has already happened (it is seen from the end): that is, "those who are perishing" are those who throughout their lives have stubbornly closed themselves to the Gospel. In doing so, they have become easy prey to the power of deception that has led them away from God (Rom 1:18-32). 

God does not want neither misunderstanding nor seduction by lies. Nevertheless, he foresees it and makes it serve his designs: he manifests the sin of the heart and precipitates judgment (cf. Ex 4:21: the case of Pharaoh). This is the divine disposition: God wants everyone to be saved and to come to the knowledge of the truth (1 Tim 2:4), but he cannot save those who voluntarily reject him. 

God takes man's freedom seriously, which does not mean that he is not lord of history or that he does not give us the help we need. Seduction does not come from God, but from Satan (cf. 2 Cor 4:4), but the unjust are guilty of this seduction because of their decisions. The way of salvation is openness to God, listening to the Gospel, acceptance of the truth, faith (cf. Mk 16:16).

The authorJuan Luis Caballero

Professor of New Testament, University of Navarra.

Father S.O.S

A new reality in the pandemic

Precisely because of all the suffering of these months you are in a scenario that can help your identity to become more present. Do not expect everything to go back to the way it was. Do new things, have a strategy for the future, take advantage of the opportunity that reality gives you.

Carlos Chiclana-June 21, 2021-Reading time: 3 minutes

In the face of so much adversity and loss, human beings remain strong: they resist, attack and persevere. Many have become more aware of their personal reality and have put themselves at the wheel of their lives. They are the strong and committed leaders that these brave times need and who can guide you with these ten ideas:

1. If you are alive, your mission is not over. You are reading this, because the virus has not killed you. It sounds strong, yes, and it is so. You are going to die, so live and live well, what is really worthwhile for you, don't wear yourself out over nonsense. We are all survivors, but don't become victimized, because you become infantilized and subdued. Be a protagonist. Look for what makes you more you, more good. Remove useless burdens. Put aside what does not contribute. The awareness of death helps you to increase your presence in life.

2. You are a mammal. You need hours of sleep, orderly eating, sunshine, contact with nature, following the cycles of the day and the seasons, physical exercise, play, hobbies, environmental changes. The hours of confinement have shown you this. Take more care of the "body self" and your other selves will thank you with emotional stability, mental clarity and greater tolerance to stress.

3. Fear is the messenger, keep the message and fire it. Whether you are one of those who treasured toilet paper or of the denialists, some have responded to fear and vulnerability out of submission and others out of rebellion. If you can develop a new strategy or a new capacity, it is precisely because you are afraid, you feel vulnerable, you are overwhelmed by evil, you are sensitive, you feel helpless, you find it difficult, you are fed up, you are hurt, you are restless, you feel oppressed or death is painful to you. This is the reality of the person, and now that you know it more closely, it is just in and through it that you can grow and be more authentic.

4. Don't wait until the funeral to say you love him/her. The distance and limitations of meeting encourage us to consider the need for human relationships. It is time to cultivate them, improve communication, say what you want, think and feel. You are relational from the first moment of your existence. Establish a healthy balance between giving and caring, helping and being helped. Express it and don't get emotionally engulfed.

5. Invest in what really pays off. Stop the world, I'm getting off! With this braking many have realized that they were running on a hamster wheel, alienated with systems, jobs or ways of life that did not interest them. An opportunity to get off the merry-go-rounds that don't take you to your destination and only make you dizzy. Do some pruning, remove what's left over and sort out your priorities. Partner with you. Walk lightly.

6. Accept, accept and accept. If the pandemic had been anticipated, would you expect such adaptability? Online masses, recorded meditations, different Christmas or vacations without vacations. Acceptance is one of the most powerful actions of the will, because it overcomes resignation and takes responsibility for one's own life. Creative acceptance that responds with its own personality.

7. Your freedom makes me bigger. The solidarity initiatives that have arisen have shown the goodness of human beings. Yours too, right? It is time to love and replace confrontation with listening, understanding, helping, respecting, validating, suggesting, trusting, hoping, forgiving, recovering, giving the opportunity, rebuilding, rehabilitating, uniting in the difference, meeting the freedom of the other, diversifying your relationships and thus, making you better. 

8. God has risen again. Reflection and connection with oneself has led many to discover that there is a temple within and that the inhabitant is not the ego; that there is a checking account in heaven that is not filled with money, that angels exist and that God's answer also comes through you. All on the same team.

9. Culture of celebration. It is time to celebrate any event: a new flower in the bonsai, the smile of someone who looks at you, some people shouting in the bar. Time to reinforce any detail we see and to say words of affirmation to the other. To be satisfied for so much that you do well, for so much that others do well. To be able to be called Don Satisfied. 

10. Thanks to life. During hard confinement you were privileged to have access to a terrace or a small garden. How many simple luxuries we enjoy every day! Running water, stopping at a bar, going to the park, coming and going as you please. You can cherish all those things you took for granted, which are a great gift of life and enjoy them. Go to sleep each day with a smile of gratitude. Give thanks and thanks will be given to you.

Culture

Viktor Frankl (1905-1997) "Dad, why do we say 'good God'?"

As the years go by and the horror of the Holocaust is left behind, the reading of Man's Search for Meaning is decisive for many young people in our society who are looking for meaning in their lives. It can be said that it is a book that is becoming more topical every day.

Graciela Jatib and Jaime Nubiola-June 21, 2021-Reading time: 4 minutes

Viktor Frankl, the founder of the speech therapyis a great referent of 20th century psychology. His life is marked by experiences of incomprehensible designs, but full of a conviction and a shocking force. Perhaps this is why he leaves us traces that inspire and move us. In his work Man in search of meaning (Herder, Barcelona, 2018, 3rd ed.) recounts a colorful dialogue with his little daughter - barely 6 years old - that points to an ongoing problematic in both philosophy and the teaching of religion. The little girl asks him: "Dad, why do we say 'good God'?". The answer seems blunt, but it is not: "A few weeks ago you had measles and the good Lord cured you." I answered. The girl was not satisfied and replied: "Yes, Dad, but don't forget he sent it to me first." (p. 146). This naive approach is a good example of the question that has always raised questions for human beings: the presence of evil in the world, which seems antagonistic to the idea of a God who loves and cares for his creatures. "Let no one lower to tears or reproach / this declaration of the mastery / of God, who with magnificent irony / gave me both the books and the night."Jorge Luis Borges will say -perhaps with sarcasm before the reality of his blindness- in his Poema de los dones.

Frankl acknowledges a long existential nihilism in his youth and having suffered heartbreaking declines within weeks of entering Auschwitz. He also had a strong anguish a few months after his liberation in April 1945: the concentration camps had made him lose his capacity for happiness. 

One of his most inspiring passages is the one in which he recounts, shortly after his liberation, a walk through a flowery field, a beautiful natural landscape and the freedom so longed for. A freedom undermined by the record of indignity and loss to which he was subjected, the death of his parents and his pregnant wife, the perverse destruction of his work in the Lager... Now, "there was no one to be seen for miles around, there was nothing but sky and earth and the joy of larks, the freedom of space. I stopped, looked around me, then at the sky, and fell to my knees. At that moment I knew very little of myself and the world, I had but a single sentence in my head: 'In anguish I cried out to the Lord and He answered me from space in freedom.' I do not remember." -concludes- "How long I remained there, repeating my prayer. But I am sure that on that day, in that instant, my life began again. I went forward, little by little, until I became a human being again". (p. 119).

Frankl's task in this impressive book is to show a way of salvation that is possible after having gone through the hell of the camps and having suffered extreme fatigue, hunger, dirt, disease, mistreatment of all kinds; in spite of everything, one can rise from hope towards a life that finds us again with a deep meaning to decipher; in opposition to the atheistic existentialism of Sartre, for whom man invents himself and creates his meaning, Frankl will express: "I affirm, on the other hand, that man does not invent the meaning of his life, but discovers it." (p. 128). It is perhaps for this reason that "man should not question himself about the meaning of life, but understand that he is the one whom life questions". (p. 137). Because the human being is animated by "a will to meaning"The same one that allowed Viktor Frankl to wander through the concentration camps without losing a shred of dignity.

We read in the Gospel of John: "Do you not know that I have authority to crucify you as well as to set you free? Then Jesus answered him, "You would have no authority over me, if God had not permitted you to do so." (Jn 19:10-11). These blessed words open up crucial questions about the presence of evil in people's lives.

We have found a trace of the path that leads to the truth in the words of Adolfo Pérez Esquivel, Nobel Peace Prize winner (1980) and friend of Pope Francis, who in his work Resisting in hope (2011) recounts the discovery of a large bloodstain on the walls of the prison where he was subjected to aggression and torture; with that same blood the prisoner had written "God does not kill".. This expression filled him with grief when he realized that someone had had the capacity to write this with his own blood and in the midst of the purest desperation. Esquivel considers it as a cry of humanity: "God does not kill".in the context in which it was written, "it is one of the greatest acts of faith I know.".

The shocking presence of evil has shown its starkest face at crucial moments in history, such as wars or totalitarianisms that subjugated the dignity of human beings, curtailing their individual and collective freedoms. "History." -writes Frankl- "gave us the possibility of knowing human nature perhaps like no other generation. What, in fact, is man?" (p. 115), and will conclude the book with this impressive response: "Man is that being capable of inventing the gas chambers of Auschwitz, but he is also the being who has entered those same chambers with his head erect and the Lord's Prayer or the Shema Israel on his lips." (p. 160). 

The reading of Man in search of meaning continues to leave its mark on all those who approach this book because it radically shows us the depth of being human.

The authorGraciela Jatib and Jaime Nubiola

Read more
The Vatican

"To be disciples of Jesus it is necessary to be involved with Him."

During the Angelus prayer this Sunday, Pope Francis commented on the Gospel, encouraging us to always seek the Lord, even in the difficult seasons of life.

David Fernández Alonso-June 20, 2021-Reading time: 3 minutes

Pope Francis commented on this Sunday's Gospel during the Angelus prayer in St. Peter's Square, reflecting on the difficulties and trials of life and the posture we adopt in the face of them. "Today the Gospel narrates the episode of the storm calmed by Jesus (Mk 4:35-41). The boat in which the disciples are crossing the lake is assailed by the wind and the waves and they fear sinking. Jesus is with them in the boat, but he remains in the stern, sleeping on a headboard. The disciples, filled with fear, cry out to him, "Master, do you not care that we perish?" (v. 38)."

"Many times we too," the Holy Father commented, "assailed by the trials of life, have cried out to the Lord: 'Why do you remain silent and do nothing for me?' Especially when we seem to be sinking, because the love or the project in which we had placed great hopes fades; or when we are at the mercy of the persistent waves of anxiety; or when we feel submerged by problems or lost in the middle of the sea of life, without a route and without a port. Or even, in those moments when the strength to go forward disappears, because work is missing or an unexpected diagnosis makes us fear for our health or that of a loved one".

Francis recalled the importance of keeping our eyes on what is truly important in the face of difficult times in our lives: "In these situations and in many others, we too feel drowned by fear and, like the disciples, we run the risk of losing sight of what is most important. In the boat, in fact, even if he sleeps, Jesus is there, and he shares with his own all that is happening. His sleep, on the one hand surprises us, and on the other puts us to the test. The Lord, in fact, expects us to be the ones to involve him, to invoke him, to put him at the center of what we live. His dream causes us to wake up. Because, to be disciples of Jesus, it is not enough to believe that God is, that He exists, but it is also necessary to get involved with Him, to raise our voice with Him, to cry out to Him".

"Today we can ask ourselves: what are the winds that are blowing over my life, what are the waves that are hindering my navigation? Let us tell all this to Jesus, let us tell him everything. He wants it, he wants us to cling to him to find refuge from the abnormal waves of life. The Gospel tells us that the disciples approach Jesus, wake him up and speak to him (cfr v. 38). This is the beginning of our faith: to recognize that alone we are not able to stay afloat, that we need Jesus like sailors need the stars to find our way. Faith begins with the belief that we are not enough on our own, with the feeling that we need God. When we overcome the temptation to close in on ourselves, when we overcome the false religiosity that does not want to bother God, when we cry out to Him, He can work wonders in us. It is the meek and extraordinary power of prayer that works miracles.

The Pope concluded by encouraging us to always seek Jesus, not to leave him in a "corner": "Jesus, implored by the disciples, calms the wind and the waves. And he asks them a question, which also concerns us: "Why are you so fearful, how can you not have faith" (v. 40). The disciples had let themselves be carried away by fear, because they had stared at the waves instead of looking at Jesus. It is the same for us: how many times do we stare at our problems instead of going to the Lord and leaving our worries to him! How many times do we leave the Lord in a corner, at the bottom of the boat of life, only to wake him up in the moment of need! Let us ask today for the grace of a faith that never tires of seeking the Lord, of knocking at the door of his Heart. May the Virgin Mary, who in her life never ceased to trust in God, awaken in us the vital need to entrust ourselves to him every day.

Read more
Integral ecology

"We are corporeal beings, and without corporeality there is no family."

"Transhumanism destroys all basic family relationships," María Lacalle, vice-rector for Faculty and Academic Planning at the Francisco de Vitoria University, and director of the Instituto Razón Abierta, which organized the congress on this movement, told Omnes.

Rafael Miner-June 20, 2021-Reading time: 6 minutes

Oxford University Professor, Anders SandbergIn the inaugural conference of the Congress on Transhumanism at the Francisco de Vitoria University, he stated that "the fundamental debate on this issue is whether through transhumanism we will continue to be human, or, on the contrary, we will lose our human essence". Well, from different approaches and angles, several speakers alluded to this question, in one way or another.

The last one to do so was Professor of Philosophy Juan Arana, of the University of Seville, who, in his closing remarks, pointed out that "our struggle is not against transhumanism, but for the survival of man". In addition, Juan Arana wondered about the essence of what is human in the face of the different transhumanist currents; and affirmed that "the philosophy of transhumanism is full of holes", and that "it is necessary to measure the consequences of our capabilities".

"All transhumanism is a hollowing out and transposition in techno-scientific terms of what it is to be human." "We will continue to think about what it means to be human and to work on transhumanism and posthumanism. For the moment, we are not cyborgs but sapiens," he said. Elena PostigoThe director of the Open Reason Congress in the conclusions. Postigo referred to the desire for immortality and transcendence to which mankind is called and, as he pointed out, "the desire for immortality and transcendence is the only way to achieve it. in an interview with OmnesHe reiterated that "it is in our hands to know how to use science and technology prudently and responsibly, at the service of people and the common good.

María Lacalle

Professor Elena Postigo revealed to Omnes that "it was María Lacalle who, exactly one year ago, proposed this Congress to me". So it seemed logical to talk to María Lacalle, Vice Rector for Faculty and Academic Planning at the University Francisco de Vitoria, and Director of the Instituto Razón Abierta. We talked with her, particularly on the subject of her specialty, the family, and transhumanism. In addition to her university work, María Lacalle is the mother of six children and has four grandchildren.

The first question is obvious: How did you come up with the idea for this Congress? Normally, intuitions are the result of work.

̶ It was not my illumination, but that of the whole team. From the Open Reasoning Institute we try to promote in the University the proposal of Benedict XVI to propose an open reasoning approach to university work. He said that the university is the house where truth is sought, and to know the truth we must try to see the whole of reality, not just a small part of it, fleeing especially from the scientistic reductionism that is so frequent nowadays. Combining this aspiration to know the whole truth, it is a matter of asking reality the most relevant questions for the human being, going beyond the limits of each science. And also taking into account what John Paul II told us, that the University has to investigate the challenges of each time, trying to offer proposals that are for the good of the person and the common good. Thinking about what is around, one of these challenges is transhumanism, which also, as it is transversal, has an impact on all areas of knowledge and allows the inclusion of the entire university community.

The first day of the congress has passed. The second day has just begun. At the risk of being unfair, because perspective is needed, can you comment on anything that has struck you about this first day?

̶ Something that we have just discussed in the team is that outside speakers are surprised by how we approach things in a way that is intrinsically related to philosophy. That is, philosophical reflection is not a cherry on top of a purely technological talk, but here we approach things in an integrated way. And we've been delighted that people outside recognize that difference, because that's what we're trying to do.

We have seen round tables with a historical, cultural, medical, engineering, etc. approach. You are participating in one on family, with a strong title: 'Towards the dissolution of the family in a post-human utopia'. How can transhumanism impact such a vital institution for society as the family?

̶ Here we could ask ourselves about what anthropological conception underlies transhumanism. Throughout yesterday we saw that, on the one hand, one sees a materialism and a mechanicism; on the other hand, as a spiritualism, that proposal that Sandberg made to us at the beginning, the aspiration to scan our brain and upload it to the cloud. Be that as it may, the two currents, although apparently opposed, in the end coincide in something, which is an unfair understanding of corporeality. And from a realistic anthropology we must affirm that we are bodily beings. We are body, a body open to infinity, an incarnated spirit, but we are corporeal; we do not have a body, but we are body. And without corporeality there is no family, conjugal love is a carnal love, it is a love that includes sexual surrender, procreation is corporal.

And what do we find in these transhumanist proposals? That in a certain sense they also converge with the gender proposals. There are two major issues. One, what they call morphological freedom, to modify or manipulate the body as one wishes, including sexual identity; and on the other hand, the aspiration to free women from the 'unbearable burden' of pregnancy and motherhood. It is an ancient claim.

It seems that these things are coming up now, but we can remember Simone de Beauvoir, when she said that women are imprisoned in an annoying body and that they must be freed from that body; and above all from motherhood. To achieve this, work is being done to achieve asexual reproduction. And we are familiar with the pretension of obtaining artificial wombs, generating gametes artificially, in such a way that it is not the woman who has to carry this heavy burden. And also, by the way, it will be possible to dispense with men as well... Well, this is a joke...

Through in vitro fertilization there is already some of that....

̶ There is already some of that. We already see how at a given moment sexuality is detached from procreation, and now what we see is that it is not only sex without procreation but procreation without sex. What impact does all this have on the family? Obviously, it destroys all the basic family relationships: the conjugal relationship, the filiation, the kinship relationship, etc. We do not have time now to go deeper into the matter. Besides, between family and person there is a biunivocal relationship, isn't there? The person cannot develop properly without healthy family relationships, and at the same time, without a balanced person, a family cannot be constituted.

To the extent that a person is more machine-like and less human, what would those relationships be like? What kind of relationship can there be between a person and a machine? What about feelings, emotions, etc.?

̶ Indeed, it would not be a personal relationship, and therefore there could be no love relationship. In any case, I have not investigated that part of transhumanism that aspires to the cyborg, or the man-machine hybrid, but rather that part that converges with gender anthropologies, and that aspires to a self-construction, manipulating our body, toward a society genderlessAs they say, in a society in which sexual bimorphism has ended, everyone is free to build themselves, and therefore maternity and paternity must be taken out of the equation, we must make it happen through artificial means, so that children do not hinder us...

My research has not been so much on the science fiction side. Because what I'm talking about is already here, in part. The artificial womb has not yet been achieved. Now, is it a fully human form? What will happen to the children thus gestated? Because we know that in gestation there is not much interaction between mother and child. If we put it in a plastic bag, how is that child going to develop?

What can we do to help science and technology serve the human person?

̶ Of course, the key is training. Universities have a very big responsibility. In our vision, we want to be a reference in sciences and professions centered on the person. That is to say, we want to train our students so that when they go out into the working world, they carry out their profession from the centrality of the person, which means seeking the good of the person and the common good. If scientists took this into account, they would surely abandon certain lines that clearly go against the dignity of the person. Sometimes the scientific community reacts, as against this Chinese man who genetically manipulated twin girls. He seems to have been put in jail, although everything that comes from China is so opaque... But there are others asking for licenses in other parts of the world to do research. The key is for scientists to put the good of the person at the center, not commercial or other interests.

How was this case in China?

̶ A Chinese scientist genetically engineered two embryos of twin girls to be resistant to the HIV AIDS virus, because the girls' father had the virus. He implanted the embryos, and the girls were born. Until now, there had been experiments of this type, but they had not been able to implant the embryos. In this case, the embryos were implanted and the girls were born. These are two girls who have been genetically manipulated, with all that this implies. We think we are God, but we are not aware of what we are doing. Life is very powerful, and to touch anything.... Here we would have to talk to a geneticist.

Initiatives

Three girls win Race for Life Storytelling Contest

María José Gámez, from Seville; María Moreno, from Badajoz; and Lorena Villalba, from Gijón, who works in Zaragoza, have won the Story Contest of the Solidarity Race for Life that will take place next Sunday, June 27, in Valdebebas Park (Madrid).

Rafael Miner-June 19, 2021-Reading time: 5 minutes

– Supernatural Race for Life is already here. Next Sunday, June 27, we will once again say Yes to Life with a solidarity race, which will take place physically in Madrid at the Valdebebas Park, or virtually from each municipality. There will be two modalities: 5 or 10 km, and you can participate with family or friends, and make the route running or walking. It will be possible to run from 8:00 a.m. on June 25 until 11:00 p.m. on Sunday, June 27.

In Valdebebas, the physical race will start at 10:00 a.m.; beforehand, the Manifesto "Deportistas por la Vida" will be read. At 11:30 a.m. the awards ceremony will take place. Below is a brief explanation of how to register. The race has been organized by the Asociación Deportistas por la Vida y la Familia, members of the Plataforma Sí a la Vida, as a show of support from the world of sports for the dignity of the human person from conception to natural death, for those killed by Covid-19, and to celebrate the tenth anniversary of this Platform. 

The Yes to Life Platform, made up of more than 500 associations, is celebrating the tenth anniversary of its founding and for this reason, in addition to the virtual event held on March 21which gathered interesting testimonies and activities, has organized a second part with a physical presence with the Solidarity Race for Life on June 27.

In this way "Spanish society will once again be able to hear the voice of the defense of all human life and the urgency to defend it at a time when it is especially attacked by the euthanasia law and the persecution of those who offer information and help to pregnant women to save the life of their children," says Alicia Latorre, coordinator of the Platform.

Winners, from Seville, Badajoz and Gijón

In addition to the preparation of the race, there has also been a Short Story Contest about The gift of life and sportreported Omnes. And the winners have turned out to be three winners. In the category of under 19 years, the first prize ex aequo has been for María José Gámez Collantes de Terán, 17 years old, a student in the first year of high school at the Adharaz Altasierra school (Espartinas, Seville), from the Attendis group, with a story titled Run! y María Moreno Guillén, from Badajoz, of the same age, also a student of First Baccalaureate of the school Puerta Palma-El Tomillar of Badajoz, of the same educational group, with the story entitled The happiness of my life.

In both cases, the winners learned about the Short Story Contest through their teachers. Loreto Macho Fernández, a graduate in Physical Activity and Sports Sciences and a Physical Education teacher at Adharaz, informed about the contest, and several of them wrote their stories. And Margarita Arizón, teacher of Universal Literature, commented on the contest, and María Moreno and some other students from the school in Badajoz were encouraged.

In the category of Athletesthe winner was Lorena Villalba Herediaa native of Gijón, with the story entitled Nyala, after overcoming, triumphing. Lorena has a degree in Primary Teaching and Physical Education from the University of Oviedo, and subsequently completed a master's degree in Research and Innovation in Early Childhood and Primary Education at the same university. She currently works as a teacher and researcher at the University of Zaragoza.

Nyala's story

Nyala is the story of an albino boy, the youngest of eleven brothers in an African country, who is helped by a Marist brother and begins to compete internationally. He is enrolled in a Spanish university and the dream of his life arrives... We will not reveal the plot. The stories of María José Gámez and María Moreno also have a plot. You will be able to see them in an electronic book of omnesmag.com, which will collect the 30 best stories according to the Jury's opinion.

Javier Fernández JáureguiThe president of Athletes for Life, reminds us that "Baron de Coubertin wanted there to be artistic competitions in addition to sporting events, and that it is mandatory to submit a proposal for cultural activities in each city bidding for the Olympic Games.

In declarations to Omnes, Lorena Villalba reveals that she found out about the contest from some colleagues with whom she had sometimes talked about life and some religious topics, and they were the ones who passed the information on to her. Lorena sees in this award "a sign that God has sent her" to return to writing short stories, something she had abandoned.

Formalize registrations. Family

Registration for the Solidarity Run for Yes to Life on June 27th is easy. The simple one is 16 euros, but the organization has also provided a registration for a family group, between 2 and 10 people, for only 24 euros. "The idea is to make participation more affordable," says Javier Fernández Jáuregui, president of the Association of Athletes for Life and Family. Registration for the race virtually is even cheaper: 9 euros for the simple race, and 15 euros for the family group, between 2 and 10 people. There is also a dorsal 0, at 5 euros.

Registrations can be made here:

Physical career: https://www.rockthesport.com/es/evento/deportistas-por-la-vida

Virtual career: https://www.rockthesport.com/es/evento/deportistas-por-la-vida-virtual 

For more information, please visit deportistasporporlavidaylafamilia.com or call 629406454.

The Manifesto

Javier Fernández Jáuregui encourages to join the many athletes who have signed the Athletes' Manifesto, in which they commit themselves to give the best of themselves for the life of every human being in any circumstance of their lives, and ask the public authorities to commit themselves to this task.. 

The Solidarity Race for Life is an event full of life and joy, despite denouncing the aggressions against human life, in which there will be music, reading of manifestos, awards ceremony and a minute of silence in memory of the deceased. The spirit of self-improvement and solidarity of universal sport, always in search of the integral development of the human person, will be highlighted at all times.

Alicia Latorre wishes to encourage everyone who is hesitating: "The Yes to Life Platform encourages all civil society that defends life from its beginning to its natural end to show their support by running for life on June 27th, either virtually, each one from their place of residence, or in person running or walking with family or friends"..

In the Manifesto to be read in Valdebebas, the athletes affirm their "commitment and loyalty to life; they underline their desire for life to be "exalted, encouraged and protected in any circumstance, situation or period of life", and defend it "as lovers and practitioners of physical activity and sport, as descendants of our parents or caregivers, who gave us life and the opportunity to experience and improve our human qualities thanks to sport".

The Vatican

The poor evangelize us

Pope Francis reflects, in the Message prepared for the Fifth World Day of the Poor, to be celebrated throughout the Church on November 14, 2021, on the words of Jesus "the poor you have with you always".

Giovanni Tridente-June 18, 2021-Reading time: 3 minutes

"The poor you have with you always", Jesus said in Bethany in the house of the "leper". But this should not mean an adaptation to the situation but the awareness that we are called in the first person to live this reality from a fundamentally evangelical perspective.

Pope Francis explains it well in the Message prepared for the Fifth World Day of the Poor, to be celebrated throughout the Church on November 14, 2021, reflecting precisely on these words of Jesus.

Five years after its institution - which took place, as will be recalled, at the end of the Jubilee of Mercy - the Holy Father maintains that this appointment must take root "more and more in our local Churches", opening themselves to a process of evangelization "which in the first instance goes out to meet the poor, wherever they are".

In fact, we must not wait for them to knock at our door, but reach out to them "in their homes, in hospitals and nursing homes, in the streets and in the dark corners where they sometimes hide, in centers of welcome and hospitality...", managing first of all to "really recognize them", and also making them "part of our life and instruments of salvation".

Sacrament of Christ

We must become aware, in fact, Pope Francis explains in the Message, that "the poor of every condition and of every latitude evangelize us", because they allow us to recognize, through the multiple facets of their condition and their lives, "the most genuine features of the Father's face".

Aspects that the Pontiff had already addressed at the beginning of his pontificate in his Encyclical Evangelii gaudium, when he invited not to fall into an excess of activism towards the needy, but to show true attention and concern for the person of the poor and their welfare.

Jesus himself had not only been on the side of the poor, but had shared with them the same fate. In other words, they are brothers and sisters "with whom to share suffering" but also to whom discomfort and marginalization must be alleviated, restoring dignity and ensuring the necessary social inclusion. Pope Francis in this reflection calls them not by chance "sacrament of Christ", because they represent his person and refer to him.

A true conversion

However, this reflection and this dynamism would be in vain without a true conversion, which "consists, first of all, in opening our hearts to recognize the multiple expressions of poverty", and then living coherently "with the faith we profess". A change of mentality is necessary, which must go in the direction of sharing and participation, and therefore of the desire to free oneself personally from every restriction - also material - "that prevents us from attaining true happiness and beatitude".

The Holy Father is categorical about this: "If we do not choose to become poor in ephemeral riches, worldly power and vainglory, we will never be able to give our lives for love; we will live a fragmentary existence, full of good intentions, but ineffective in transforming the world".

It is also necessary to confront the "new forms of poverty" that arise, for example, from a misuse of the market and of finance, with professionals "lacking in humanitarian sentiment and social responsibility"; from the pandemic that has forced many into unemployment; but also from the more insidious indifference generated by an individualistic lifestyle.

Development processes

The answer may be to initiate "development processes in which the capabilities of all are valued", in reciprocity, solidarity and sharing.

In this, governments and world institutions cannot remain on the sidelines, called to a "creative planning, which allows to increase the effective freedom to achieve the existence with the capabilities of each person". Because if the poor are put on the sidelines, as if they were responsible for their condition, "the very concept of democracy is put in crisis and any social policy becomes a failure".

Read in this perspective, therefore, the famous phrase of Jesus "You have the poor with you always" (Mk 14:7) acquires the meaning of a true opportunity offered to all to finally do good to humanity.

Read more
Newsroom

UMAS celebrates its Assembly on the 40th anniversary of its constitution

The leading mutual insurance company for Church entities announces that it has entered into agreements with the three main health insurance companies in the country.

Omnes-June 17, 2021-Reading time: < 1 minute

UMAS held its General Assembly yesterday virtually. The mutual insurance reference for Dioceses, Orders and Congregations and for Third Sector Entities has also announced the launching of Umas Health for the Catholic Church thanks to the agreements established with the three main health companies in the country, in order to provide the best possible service to its members.

In addition, UMAS announced that its results, despite the pandemic, put its solvency ratio at 4.45 times the legally required level.

According to the UMAS Annual Report, in 2020 it had 12,169 members, 12 regional offices, more than 20,000 policies underwritten, and nearly 20,000 claims handled with great agility.

Latin America

U.S. Bishops' Assembly begins with an exhortation to unity

The approval of a "declaration on the meaning of the Eucharist in the life of the Church" has been the theme that has dominated the debate from the first minutes of this Assembly, and which reflects the polarization existing in the Church of this country.

Gonzalo Meza-June 17, 2021-Reading time: 3 minutes

Yesterday began the Spring Assembly of the U.S. Conference of Bishops, a meeting that will conclude on Friday and is being held virtually because of the pandemic. Although over the next few days the bishops will address a number of issues relevant to the life of the Church in the United States (new English translations of the Liturgy of the Hours, a pastoral plan for marriage and the family, and a comprehensive vision for Native American ministry), the issue that has dominated from the first minutes in this Assembly, and which reflects the polarization existing in the Church in this country, is the approval of a "statement on the meaning of the Eucharist in the life of the Church."

An initiative addressed to all members of the Church, but which has behind it a main addressee: President Joe Biden, who despite declaring himself a practicing Catholic and a communicant, has promoted since the beginning of his mandate, policies contrary to the teachings of the Church in the defense of life and marriage formed by a man and a woman.

Yesterday, at the beginning of the conference, some bishops opposed to the issuance of the statement tried to modify the agenda of the meeting by proposing to postpone the discussion of the document on the Eucharist until the next Assembly in November and to eliminate the protocol time limits for its discussion, so that the topic could be discussed in person and/or without time limits. The proposal did not succeed, as 59 % of the bishops opposed it. Thus the discussion of the document continues as scheduled for June 17. 

This polarization is not only evident in the hierarchy but at all levels of the American Church. That is why in their inaugural addresses, the Apostolic Nuncio to the United States, Archbishop Christophe Pierre, and Archbishop Jose H. Gomez, Archbishop of Los Angeles and President of the Conference of Bishops, launched a fervent call for unity and not to associate faith or marry it to ideologies or political parties. As we emerge from this pandemic we must ask ourselves if "are we being a Church that responds to the real needs of our people?" said Bishop Christophe Pierre. The model of the Church that Christ calls us to be, he said, is the model of the Good Samaritan, "who goes out with compassion and mercy to those who suffer to bring them true healing."

What is lacking today in the process of evangelization, he said, is "to begin again from Jesus Christ," but the starting point is not to shame the weak, but to propose the One who can strengthen us in our weaknesses through the sacraments of reconciliation and the Eucharist. "Holy Communion," the nuncio indicated, "is not simply a thing to be received, but is Christ Himself: a Person to be encountered. A Catholicism that is confused with a mere cultural tradition or that does not distinguish itself from other proposals, even political or ideological ones, based on certain values, will never convince this generation or the new ones. We are not a church of the perfect, but a pilgrim Church in need of the mercy offered by Christ". It is not a matter of crushing others, but of accompanying, loving and dialoguing respectfully, the Nuncio clarified. 

Jose Gomez, acknowledged that the (political) division in American society also reflects and affects the Church: "We live in a secular society where politics becomes a substitute for religion for many people. Therefore, "we need to guard against the temptation to think of the Church only in political terms. Unity in the Church does not mean conformity of opinion, or that the bishops never disagree. The apostles argued passionately. They disagreed about pastoral strategies and methods. But they never disagreed about the truth of the gospel. In the wake of the pandemic, Gomez said, our Holy Father calls us to strengthen the unity of the Body of Christ.

The unity urged by Archbishops Pierre and Gomez will be put to the test today in what will be a heated debate among the bishops over the wording and terminology of this statement on the Eucharist in the life of the Church.

Spain

"These Conversations eliminate the gap between social reality and the Church."

Juan Carlos Elizalde, Bishop of Vitoria, described for Omnes the first impressions of the initiative Conversations at the Cathedral, dialogues with the bishop open to anyone with any type of concern or question about the Church, the Magisterium or the Christian life. 

Maria José Atienza-June 17, 2021-Reading time: 2 minutes

The Cathedral of Mary Immaculate, Mother of the Church, in Vitoria, Spain, was the scene yesterday afternoon of the Conversations at the CathedralA fluid dialogue between more than a hundred people and the Bishop of Vitoria, D. Juan Carlos Elizalde. A first meeting in which the prelate, in statements to Omnes, said he "felt very comfortable".

This initiative of the diocese of Alava, which will continue next year, had an excellent reception, despite the storm that was present in the capital. More than a hundred people attended these Conversations at the Cathedral. As Bishop Elizalde himself pointed out, "in this first meeting the people who attended were, for the most part, close to the Church, militant Christians... although the questions were very diverse".

The talks began with a brief introduction of the speaker's curriculum vitae and an explanation of the initiative. In his statements to Omnes, Bishop Juan Carlos Elizalde pointed out that "one of the things I wanted to convey is that I am aware of the risk involved today in speaking about the Gospel, about complex issues concerning the Church or society, because you can always be misunderstood".

The dialogue was "fluid and natural", as the Bishop of Vitoria pointed out: "there were questions of many kinds, about the secularization of society, the future of the Church, the mission of Christians today, or the challenges and obstacles facing Catholics today". The questions, said Bishop Elizalde, "denoted real concern, not unhealthy curiosity or morbid curiosity".

For Bishop Elizalde this format of meeting is a privileged way to know the real questions that Catholics have in a natural and close way: "I think it is a format that helps and makes family within the Church," he said.

The Bishop of Vitoria is convinced that "all bishops want to be close to their people, to know their concerns. Initiatives like these Conversations at the Cathedral help to eliminate that gap, that separation that we often find between social reality and the Church. In my case, I was very happy to speak and together we were able to find a hopeful vision of the return to the Gospel or the humanization of social structures.

Read more
Latin America

U.S. bishops' assembly debates communion to abortion politicians, other issues

The spring general assembly of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) begins in the United States, addressing issues vital to the life of the Church in the United States, such as the debate over communion to abortion politicians.

Gonzalo Meza-June 17, 2021-Reading time: 2 minutes

From today until June 18, the spring general assembly of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) begins in the United States. This meeting will be virtual because of the restrictions imposed by the Covid 19 pandemic. The Assembly will begin with an address by Archbishop Christophe Pierre, Apostolic Nuncio to the United States of America, followed by an introductory message from the Archbishop of Los Angeles, Jose. H. Gomez, president of the USCCB.

Although the assembly's agenda includes a number of issues vital to the life of the Church in the United States, one issue is at the center of the debate not only at this meeting, but in the national and international media. 

It is the approval of a "formal statement on the meaning of the Eucharist in the life of the Church". Although this initiative is addressed to all Catholics, the main objective is to send a message to President Joe Biden and to American Catholic politicians about the meaning of the reception of the Eucharist and what it entails, particularly to manifest in public and in private coherence with the Catholic principles of the Church, especially in matters of the defense of life and the family composed of a man and a woman. Although Joe Biden declares himself to be a "practicing" Catholic and attends Mass regularly, during his term in office he has promoted a large number of pro-abortion and pro-same-sex union policies. This fact has upset more than one U.S. prelate, some of whom have even asked the Archbishop of Washington to make a statement. He has refused. 

The issue is the tip of the iceberg that manifests the polarization that exists in the North American Church. Although some bishops have expressed and written pastoral letters about this fact, other bishops consider that it is not pertinent to express a public "scolding". Upon learning of the USCCB's intention to issue a "formal statement," the Prefect for the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, Luis Ladaria Ferrer, sent a letter to the President of the USCCB a few weeks ago asking for reconsideration and careful reflection on the appropriateness of issuing such a document. Despite this "warning" from Rome, the USCCB and the bishops have decided to include the topic in this Assembly. It is very likely that the drafting of this document, if approved, will be postponed until the next fall assembly in November, when the bishops will meet in person in Baltimore and can discuss face-to-face this very sensitive issue, which could cause a major division in the North American Church and also generate tensions with Rome. 

This is not the only topic to be discussed at the Assembly. There are other topics of great importance, among them:

-the causes of beatification and canonization for the Servants of God Joseph Verbis Lefleur and Marinus (Leonard) LaRue; 

-the approval of three translations of the Liturgy of the Hours by the International Commission on English in the Liturgy (ICEL) for use in U.S. dioceses;

-a National Pastoral Framework for Marriage and Family Life Ministry in the United States entitled: "A Call to the Joy of Love";

-the development of a new formal statement and comprehensive vision for Native American Ministry;

-approval of the drafting of a National Pastoral Framework for Youth and Young Adults.

The live broadcast of the public sessions can be followed and will be available on the following web site www.usccb.org/meetings.

Read more

Education does not go on vacation

Now that we are so close to summer, we all, because we are all involved in educational work in one way or another, must see this as a very important time in educational work. Or to put it another way, education has no vacations.

June 17, 2021-Reading time: 3 minutes

Now that the school term is over and we are about to start the summer vacations, one might think that the time to educate is over and now it's time to rest. But it is just the opposite, summer is a very important time in the educational work. Or to put it another way, education has no vacations.

Educating, as we know, goes far beyond learning certain knowledge. It is to enable human beings to develop their full potential. And the mission of educating children and young people is fundamentally an exercise that corresponds to parents. That is why families should also experience summer as a time of growth and maturation of their children. And just the opposite, to think that summer is a time to forget about everything, to let children do whatever they want, because we have already had enough hardness in this course, would be a tremendous mistake.

Families should also experience summer as a time of growth and maturation for their children.

Javier Segura

So what should we do? Well, the first thing to keep in mind is that we must help our young people to fight against the main temptation of summer, which is to get carried away by laziness, by proposing activities that are as dynamic and creative as possible. Because resting is not about doing nothing, but about changing activities. Summer is not for lying on the couch all day and thus generate a negative habit of laziness and idleness, but to enjoy many activities that throughout the course we do not have time to do. Activities that can be tremendously enriching. And thus generate a habit of good.

Of course, it all starts with having a certain order of life, a timetable, concrete proposals. To direct our own activity. And very concretely it happens not to be lying in bed until the body endures. It is true that it is summer and we must rest, but a proactive attitude in which we take advantage of the day from the morning is the best way to live the summer to the fullest. There is so much to do!

Why not visit historical places, get to know corners of our country? Why not enjoy nature, a climb up a mountain? Why not learn about wildlife in the places closest to our environment? Why not read a good book? Why not take a bike ride to nearby places? Anything but the easy option of playing video games, lying in bed, killing time. And furthermore, why not cultivate friendships and relationships with the family? Why not help and accompany other people who are lonely or sick? Why not think of others and live a summer of giving and solidarity? Why not use the summer so that the soul also has time to pray and meet God?

I can't help but think that the ideal model for a young man this summer is that of, precisely, another young woman: Maria.

Having just received the news that her elderly cousin was pregnant and therefore in need of help, Mary did not think twice. The Gospel tells us that she hurried up the mountain and stayed with her for three months - a whole summer. In haste, quickly, overcoming her laziness, Mary went up to Ain-Karim, the village of her cousin Elizabeth. She forgot herself and decided to give herself totally to those who needed her. And she did it joyfully, singing, intoning the Magnificat, spreading the happiness she carried inside, in her very core. Without complaints of any kind, giving herself to others, living united to the Lord.

A summer lived in this way will be a time of growth and maturation. Let us not miss the opportunity to live it this way ourselves and to teach it this way to our children.

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.

Read more
Integral ecology

"In transhumanism we have to distinguish science fiction from what we will be able to see."

"The challenge is to see where the risks lie, to guide science and technology in the service of human beings," says Elena Postigo, director of the Open Reason Congress on Transhumanism, which starts today at the Francisco de Vitoria University. We talked to this professor and researcher about a future that is almost here.

Rafael Miner-June 17, 2021-Reading time: 6 minutes

When someone asks what transhumanism is, one could answer with a prediction by the Swede Anders Sandberg, of Oxford University, when he assures that, in the near future, machines will be able to do everything the human brain does. Or when he revealed that the medal he wears around his neck contains instructions to be cryonized before he dies in the hope of being revived in a few thousand years. For these things, among others, he is qualified as a transhumanist.

elena postigo

Its positions do not coincide on many issues with those of the Instituto Razón Abierta, of the Universidad Francisco de Vitoria, nor probably with those of the Instituto Razón Abierta, of the Universidad Francisco de Vitoria. Elena Postigo, director of the Open Reason Congress that takes place today and tomorrow at this university, both online and in person, with an ambitious interdisciplinary program. That is why it will be even more interesting to listen to Sandberg today at the inaugural conference, and to the other experts from various Spanish and foreign universities.

To dive in the transhumanism and to situate this congress, Omnes has interviewed Elena PostigoThe director of the Institute of Bioethics of the same University, who points out that "transhumanism is sometimes spoken of as if it were a homogeneous current, when in fact it is not. Transhumanism has many derivatives, some not as radical as those of the transhumanists.

About the so-called cyborg "There is also discussion," says Elena Postigo. "It would be a synthesis between organic and cybernetic. Personally, I don't share the idea of the cyborg as understood by transhumanists," she says. But let's start at the beginning.

How did the idea of holding this Congress come about? Why transhumanism?

̶ The director of the Open Reason InstituteMaría Lacalle, exactly one year ago, proposed this Congress to me, because I have an open research group on transhumanism at the university, and she thought that transhumanism could be an ideal terrain to address the issues raised by the Open Reason Congress.

The Open Reasoning Institute was born years ago at the University with the aim of promoting reflection, study and discussion among different fields of knowledge, both science, philosophy and theology, in order to achieve what Pope Benedict XVI called open reason, or expanded reason, which reflects the desire to recover the sapiential character of the university task.

That is to say, to recover what the university was, which was the integration of knowledge. We are in an era in which each knowledge studies its own, and does not take care of the rest, so we lose sight of the human being. The Open Reason Institute was born with this purpose, of a reason open to faith, which integrates the different knowledge, and which sees the issues, the cultural currents of our time, from this integrating and sapiential perspective.

We are in an era in which each knowledge studies its own, and does not take care of the rest, so we lose sight of the human being.

Elena Postigo Director of the Institute of Bioethics UFV

And I accepted María Lacalle's proposal, with a program that addresses from basic issues to more specific questions. For example, the limits of science, what problems arise for law, for the family, for all disciplines. We set up working groups by faculties, to find out what topics they were interested in, etc., and this is how the round tables of the Congress came into being. It can be said that the whole University collaborated in order to offer an integrating and critical vision of what transhumanism is, and what challenges it poses for the university and for society in general.

You speak in a thread on his transhuman twitter account Will science soon be in a position to consider this? Are we talking about science fiction or something that has the appearance of reality? Can the alternative really be homo sapiens or cyborg?

̶ This has to be approached centuries ahead. That is, as if the medieval man suddenly landed in our time. Let us imagine a 12th century man landing ten centuries later. The changes he would find would be impressive. We have to make the mental effort of the scenario posed by transhumanism a hundred or two hundred years in the future. My answer is that part of what they propose is plausible, it is not utopian, it could happen. Another part is not. I think there is a part of utopia.

I think that in transhumanism we must distinguish between science fiction things -such as, for example, resurrecting after death, cryogenics-, which I think are utopian, because they are based on wrong theoretical premises, such as thinking that the human being is only matter; and others that we can get to see. Surely there will be a stage, and we are already in it, in which we will consider the possibility of improving the human being, through genetics, nanotechnology, robotics, artificial intelligence, etc. And I think there can be a good use of science and technology.

But there are other things that are not, that I consider to be utopian, and that are not going to be realized. The challenge consists precisely in seeing where the risks are, in guiding science and technology in the service of human beings, also so as not to harm future generations. This is precisely the ethical analysis. But part of it is not utopian, and it can be achieved in a hundred or two hundred years. Another part I don't think it will ever happen.

The challenge is to see where the risks lie, to guide science and technology in the service of human beings, also so as not to harm future generations.

Elena Postigo. Director of the Institute of Bioethics UFV

What implications might transhumanism have for the human being? And for sexuality, or the family? Can you comment on anything, even if it is addressed at the Congress?

There is a relationship between transhumanism and gender bioideology. Transhumanism speaks of the dissolution of genders and sexes. There is an author, Donna Haraway, who sustains this thesis; that is to say, in the future there will be neither male nor female, there will be a cyborg that will not have sex. This has implications for the family, because transhumanism also speaks of ectogenesis, of the artificial uterus.

I am talking about transhumanism as if it were a homogeneous current, when in fact it is not. Transhumanism has many offshoots, some not as radical as those of the transhumanists. In short, it has serious implications for the family. And this is of particular concern to me. Transhumanism and gender ideology connect in a vision of human nature that looks towards self-construction, not as something given, something created, but as something that is self-constructed through my consciousness, my desire and my self-determination to be what I want to become.

Along with what we are talking about, it is also true that domotics, or robotics, can achieve important advances for the quality of life of human beings, especially if they have degenerative diseases. You have referred to this before. However, to what extent could a human construct, such as a cyborg, have emotions, feelings, even consciousness? There are ethical limits...

Science and technology are not evil. They are fruits that have come out of human intelligence, and that, in general, although they can be misused, they have been used so far for the benefit of humanity. These sciences that you point out are going to have a therapeutic use to improve the quality of life of certain people. That is unquestionable and fantastic. What we are talking about, the use of robotics, for example, is not a cyborg.

What is the problem? For example, what could happen if a computer connected to our brain were to come along and give us certain orders that could condition our freedom or our conscience? That is an ethical problem. You ask me about the ethical limits. I cannot give a single criterion now. It is necessary to see, for each of these interventions, exactly what is involved. A genetic alteration is not the same as a connection of the brain to a computer, or a nanotechnological implant, or a nanorobot. They are very different things and that is why a detailed study of each intervention is required, to see its purpose, the means used, etc.

I would say that as ethical criteria, we should always ensure respect for the integrity, life and health of people; we should also ensure that conscience, freedom, privacy and intimacy are safeguarded; and thirdly, we should ensure that all interventions are fair and do not generate more inequality. Or, for example, that they are not discriminatory. There is talk of prenatal eugenics, genetic eugenics, to cite another example.

As ethical criteria, we should always ensure the respect, integrity, life and health of people;

Elena Postigo. Director of the Institute of Bioethics UFV

As for cyborgs?

̶ What is a cyborg? On this there is also discussion. It would be a synthesis between organic and cybernetic. Personally I do not share the idea of the cyborg as understood by transhumanists. A cyborg is an entity that from its origin is an organic-cybernetic synthesis, and that does not have to be human. We are talking about a robot with organic cells, or beings that do not yet exist. And here a whole world arises, which is that of robots, of machines?

Could they ever have a conscience? My answer is no. We could simulate a human intelligence, but we could hardly simulate a creative process or an emotion. This is where we get into what a human being is, which is not just matter. From a materialistic perspective, for them there would be a continuity between a human and a more perfected robot. From a Christian humanist perspective, they are two completely different things. One is spiritual and has a life principle in itself, and the other does not.

Photo Gallery

Women at the center of Manos Unidas' work in Africa

Women, like this Kenyan woman, were the main protagonists of Manos Unidas' work on the African continent and received special attention in the projects due to the increase in violence against them during confinement. 

Maria José Atienza-June 16, 2021-Reading time: < 1 minute
Sunday Readings

Readings for Sunday 12th Sunday in Ordinary Time

Andrea Mardegan comments on the readings of the XII Sunday in Ordinary Time 

Andrea Mardegan-June 16, 2021-Reading time: 2 minutes

The evening came and Jesus preached on the shore of the lake, told several parables, then explained them to his disciples in private; he healed the sick, cast out demons.

Multitudes of people have come to him: he did not even have time to eat. He is very tired, but he does not give it importance and says to his disciples: "Let's cross to the other shore.". It is the East, inhabited by pagan people. Jesus gives himself no rest and wants to go to other towns to bring his word. The disciples dismiss the crowd and lead him away. "with them, how he was, in the boat", saving you new jobs.

Just "as he was": worn out by fatigue. Jesus, trusting in his experience as a fisherman, abandons himself, can't stand it any longer, and now that others are thinking of rowing and driving the boat, he approaches the cushion in the stern, leans over and collapses into a deep sleep. 

Pope Francis pointed out on March 27, 2020 in St. Peter's Square that this is the only time the Gospel describes Jesus sleeping. In its essentiality, apart from meals and suppers, the Gospel does not dwell so much on describing aspects of the Lord's daily life. The few that it recounts help us a lot: we perceive him closer to our lives. In the background of this narrative is the story of Jonah sleeping with a stormy sea, but the discontinuity is that here the sleeping protagonist is the same one who calms the storm with his command. God alone commands over the sea, winds and storms, as Job recalls: "Who shut the sea between two gates, when it came rushing out of its mother's womb, when I clothed it in clouds and wrapped it in a dark cloud, when I set a boundary for it?" Or, as the psalmist relates: "The storm subsided into silence, the waves of the sea fell silent. At the sight of the calm they rejoiced, and he led them to the desired harbor." (107, 28-30). 

The disciples have some faith in him and awaken him to save them, but on the basis of mistrust: "You don't care that we're lost?". Their faith is not yet full and firm, as Jesus tells them: "Do you still have no faith?". Jesus commands calm to the sea, as the devil to come out of the man in the synagogue: Mark uses the same verb (cf. Mk 1:25). It is understood that they wonder: "Who is this?". They take a step closer to the faith that Jesus really cares for them, and prepare to see him sleeping on the cross and in the tomb. There, too, they will find it hard to believe that the storm of the cross will be resolved in the calm of the resurrection. 

This episode helps us to ask the Lord to increase our faith in the power of God, which is manifested in the weakness of the humanity that the Incarnate Word wanted to take upon himself, and in that of his Church, in the storms of history.

The Vatican

"Even in the most painful of our sufferings, we are never alone."

Pope Francis today concluded his catechesis on prayer. In the meeting held in the courtyard of St. Damasus of the Vatican Apostolic Palace, the Holy Father focused on the prayer of Jesus during his passion. A moment, the Pope emphasized, in which "the prayer of Jesus became even more intense and frequent".

Maria José Atienza-June 16, 2021-Reading time: 6 minutes

The Pope wanted to point out how "those last hours lived by Jesus in Jerusalem are the heart of the Gospel, because the event of the death and resurrection - like a flash of lightning - sheds light on all the rest of the story of Jesus" since they represent "the total salvation, the messianic salvation, that which gives hope in the definitive victory of life over death".

Prayer of intimacy in the midst of suffering

The Pope wanted to focus his catechesis on the prayer of Christ in the midst of the terrible suffering of his Passion and death on the Cross. Moments in which, assailed by mortal anguish, Jesus turns to God, calling him "Abba", "this Aramaic word - the language of Jesus - expresses intimacy and trust. Precisely when he feels the darkness that surrounds him, Jesus pierces it with that little word: Abbà! Jesus also prays on the cross, enveloped in darkness by the silence of God. And yet the word 'Father' appears once again on his lips", Pope Francis stressed, adding that "in the midst of the drama, in the atrocious pain of soul and body, Jesus prays with the words of the psalms; with the poor of the world, especially with those who are forgotten by all".

"In the last stretch of his journey, Jesus' prayer becomes more fervent."

Francis also dwelt on another point, linked to last week's catechesis: the prayer of intercession that Christ makes for each one of us, the so-called "priestly prayer" that Jesus addresses to the Father at the moment "when the Hour draws near, and Jesus makes the last stretch of his journey, his prayer becomes more fervent, and also his intercession on our behalf".

A prayer that reminds us, the Holy Father wanted to emphasize, that "even in the most painful of our sufferings, we are never alone. The grace that we do not only pray, but that, so to speak, we have been 'prayed', we are already welcomed into the dialogue of Jesus with the Father, in the communion of the Holy Spirit". An idea that he also picked up in his greeting to the pilgrims of different languages after the catechesis.

Full text of the catechesis

Dear brothers and sisters, good morning!

In this series of catecheses we have recalled on several occasions how prayer is one of the most evident characteristics of the life of Jesus. During his mission, Jesus immerses himself in it, because dialogue with the Father is the incandescent nucleus of his whole existence.

The Gospels testify how the prayer of Jesus became even more intense and frequent at the hour of his passion and death. In fact, these culminating events constitute the central core of Christian preaching, the kerygma: those last hours lived by Jesus in Jerusalem are the heart of the Gospel not only because to this narrative the evangelists reserve, in proportion, a greater space, but also because the event of the death and resurrection - like a thunderbolt - throws light on all the rest of the story of Jesus.

He was not a philanthropist who took care of human sufferings and illnesses: he was and is much more. In Him there is not only goodness: there is salvation, and not an episodic salvation - that which saves me from an illness or a moment of discouragement - but total salvation, the messianic salvation, that which makes us hope in the definitive victory of life over death.

In the days of his last Passover, we find Jesus fully immersed in prayer. He prays dramatically in the garden of Gethsemane, assailed by mortal anguish. Yet Jesus, precisely at that moment, addresses God by calling him "Abba", Daddy (cf. Mk 14:36). This Aramaic word - the language of Jesus - expresses intimacy and trust. Precisely when he senses the darkness that surrounds him, Jesus pierces it with that little word: Abba! Jesus also prays on the cross, enveloped in darkness because of God's silence. And yet on his lips the word "Father" appears once again. It is the most audacious prayer, because on the cross Jesus is the absolute intercessor: he prays for others, for everyone, also for those who condemn him, without anyone, except a poor wrongdoer, taking his side. "Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do" (Lk 23:34).

In the midst of the drama, in the atrocious pain of soul and body, Jesus prays with the words of the psalms; with the poor of the world, especially with those forgotten by all, he pronounces the tragic words of Psalm 22: "My God, my God, why have you forsaken me" (v. 2). On the cross the gift of the Father, who offers the unreserved love of his Son as the price of our salvation, is fulfilled: Jesus, burdened with all the sin of the world, descends into the abyss of separation from God. Nevertheless, he turns to him again and calls out: "My God!

Jesus remains immersed in his filiation even in that extreme moment, until his last breath, when he says: "Father, into your hands I commit my spirit" (Lk 23:46). Jesus therefore prays in the decisive hours of his passion and death. With the resurrection, the Father will answer his prayer.

Jesus also prays in a very human way, displaying the anguish of his heart. He prays without ever renouncing his trust in God the Father.

To immerse ourselves in the mystery of the prayer of Jesus, so intense in the days of the Passion, we can dwell on what is the longest prayer we find in the Gospels and which is called the "priestly prayer" of Jesus, narrated in chapter 17 of the Gospel of John. The context is still Paschal: we are at the end of the Last Supper, during which Jesus institutes the Eucharist. This prayer - explains the Catechism - "embraces the whole Economy of creation and salvation, as well as his Death and Resurrection" (n. 2746). As the Hour draws near, and Jesus makes the last stretch of his journey, his prayer becomes more fervent, as well as his intercession on our behalf.

The Catechism explains that everything is summed up in that prayer: "God and the world, the Word and the flesh, eternal life and time, the love that gives itself and the sin that betrays it, the disciples present and those who will believe in him through his word, the humiliation and his glory" (n. 2748). The walls of the Upper Room stretch out to embrace the whole world; and the gaze of Jesus does not fall only on the disciples, his guests, but looks at all of us, as if he wanted to say to each of us: "I have prayed for you, at the Last Supper and on the wood of the Cross" (n. 2748).

Even in the most painful of our sufferings, we are never alone. This seems to me the most beautiful thing to remember, concluding this cycle of catecheses dedicated to the theme of prayer: the grace that we not only pray, but that, so to speak, we have been "prayed", we are already welcomed into the dialogue of Jesus with the Father, in the communion of the Holy Spirit.

We have been loved in Christ Jesus, and also at the hour of the passion, death and resurrection everything has been offered for us. And so, with prayer and with life, we can only say: Glory be to the Father and to the Son and to the Holy Spirit, as it was in the beginning, now and forever, for ever and ever. Amen.

Dear brothers and sisters:

Today we conclude our catechesis on prayer. One of the most evident characteristics of Jesus' life is his dialogue with the Father in prayer and, as the Gospels testify, this dialogue became even more intense at the hour of his passion and death. In the Garden of Olives, Jesus prays in fear and anguish, and addresses God by calling him "Abba," that is, "Papa," an Aramaic word that expresses intimacy and trust.

Also in the darkness and silence of the cross Jesus invokes God as Father. In that

moment, in the midst of excruciating pain, Jesus is the absolute intercessor. He prays for others, for everyone, even for those who condemn him. He pleads with words from the psalms, uniting himself to the poor and forgotten of the world. He relieves the anguish of his heart in a very human way, without ceasing to trust fully in the Father, conscious of his divine filiation until his last breath on the cross, when he delivers his soul into the hands of the Father. In order to enter into the mystery of Jesus' prayer, we will dwell on the so-called "priestly prayer," found in chapter 17 of the Gospel of John. The context of this prayer is paschal.

Jesus addresses the Father at the end of the Last Supper, when he institutes the Eucharist. In his prayer he goes beyond the diners, he intercedes and embraces the whole world, his gaze reaches out to us all. This reminds us that, even in the midst of the greatest suffering, we are not alone; we have already been welcomed into Jesus' dialogue with the Father, in communion with the Holy Spirit.

I cordially greet the Spanish-speaking faithful, of whom there are so many. As we conclude these catecheses on prayer, let us not forget that Jesus not only "loved" us first, but also "prayed" for us first. Jesus has prayed for us first. Ç

Therefore, with our prayer and our life let us say to him: Glory be to the Father, and to the Son, and to the Holy Spirit, as it was in the beginning, now and forever, for ever and ever. Amen. May God bless you. Thank you very much.

Spain

"The brotherhoods bring hope to thousands of people and lead them to faith."

Paloma Saborido is a Christian woman and cofrade from head to toe. "Nazarene since the age of three" and until now, this Malaga, University professor, is very clear that the mission of the brotherhoods and sisterhoods is "to evangelize in the street with a particularly beautiful and attractive means".

Maria José Atienza-June 16, 2021-Reading time: 6 minutes

The Spanish city of Malaga will host, next September, the IV International Congress of Brotherhoods and Sodalities. An event that will make the Andalusian capital the "epicenter of the debate and reflection on popular religiosity", as noted by Paloma Saborido, chair of the scientific committee of this congress a Omnes.

For this woman from Malaga, the International Congress that will take place in "her home" in a few months, is a privileged moment to "form us and give real information about the brotherhoods and sisterhoods to other movements of the Church. We want to show that we are not only aesthetic but that we know what we are doing; that we have our mission in the Church".

To talk to Paloma Saborido is to immerse oneself fully in the Thomistic Way of Beauty as a path to God, but how does a brotherhood member live the faith without falling into mere aestheticism?

Paloma Saborido Sánchez

 -I have been a member of the brotherhood since I was born. Nazarene since I was three years old. I live my faith the way my parents taught me, by transmitting it through the brotherhoods and sisterhoods. And that is my faith, my Christian faith. I pray to some carvings, which I know are made of wood, but they serve me as an instrument to reach God. This is what most of the brotherhoods do".

One thing must be taken into account. The brotherhoods and sisterhoods put on the street a show that is not hidden to anyone. It is a spectacle of light, sounds, colors and aromas. It is impressive. And the better this spectacle is, within the rational limits that the present imposes on us, the better we will be able to carry out the mission we have. We are a means, the mission we have in our Church today is to evangelize: to show the passion of Christ and the message that Christ, through his passion, wants us to receive. That is our end, and we use this means and the Church uses this means.

I live my faith the way my parents taught me, by transmitting it through the confraternities and brotherhoods.

Paloma Saborido

We have to be very clear that the brotherhoods and fraternities have "many perspectives" as the anthropologist Isidoro Moreno says: the touristic, sociological, artistic, economic... and all of them are within the Holy Week, but the brotherhoods above all we are Christians. What we put in the street, for free, giving our family, our money, our effort... we do it only to transfer the message of Christ and we know it. Perhaps sometimes, as the aesthetics is deceiving, there is someone who has been able to remain in that. We know that we have to use that beauty as a means to reach God. There are those who approach the confraternities for the culture, for the art, for the music or because it gives them food, and they already approach, there is a second step and that is that what we offer is the message of Christ.

As you have pointed out, brotherhoods, brotherhoods of all kinds: of passion, of glory... use "beauty as a means to reach God". St. Thomas Aquinas defended it as a privileged means to reach the Truth, but don't you think that the danger of remaining in aesthetics is constant?

-The confraternities and brotherhoods have a mission. Rino Fisichella, whom I had the good fortune to listen to in Lugano (Switzerland) at the First Pan-European Forum of Confraternities, "you have the mission to evangelize in the Church, like priests, to evangelize in the street". For this we have an extremely beautiful means. If we show as best we can that Passion and Resurrection of Christ, that Easter message, the better we will achieve our goal.

In addition to that, especially this year, we have seen how far the work of the brotherhoods and fraternities have focused on what they had to do in this situation: help. Throughout Spain, towns and cities, the brotherhoods have turned to helping those most in need through Christmas campaigns, collection of back-to-school material, making gowns for the health workers, food collections... it has been impressive.

During the pandemic, the work of the brotherhoods and sisterhoods has focused on what they had to do in this situation: help.

Paloma Saborido

One fact is clear in our own country: in areas where there is a presence of brotherhoods and sisterhoods more than half of the children are baptized, there is a greater Christian life; but not so in areas where they do not have much presence, are they aware that they are "a dike to secularization" as some bishops have described them?

-The brotherhoods and confraternities are the movement of the Catholic Church, so to speak, with more possibilities of reaching more people. Simply because of their "plurinaturality" of culture, of art, of tourism, we reach more people than anyone else and that makes it possible for us to evangelize more people. We evangelize with our example, with our way of living, with what we preach from beginning to end, not only on the day of the procession. I remember an example that happened in my confraternity, the Pollinica from Malaga: we had a group of young people in which many young people participated: we had night adoration, we actively participated in the Mass... there were three brothers who came, but they never received communion... one day, the Elder Brother asked them about this and they told him that they were not baptized and asked to receive the sacraments of Christian Initiation because they wanted to be like that, like the confreres with whom they shared their time. This is the only reason why the effort and time you dedicate to this makes sense. Our existence as confreres makes sense so that these people come closer to God and the Church.

This happens all over the world. I recently came into contact with a confraternity in Mexico with similar experiences of approaching the faith. In this revolutionized society, hit by a pandemic that has caused so much suffering, the brotherhoods and confraternities have the ability to excite people and attract them to the faith of Christ and the Church.

Our existence as confreres makes sense so that these people can come closer to God and the Church.

Paloma Saborido

Focusing on the Congress to be held in Malaga next September, why was Malaga chosen for this meeting?

-The Grouping of Brotherhoods of Malaga offered, already in the III International Meeting of Brotherhoods, to host the next meeting framing it in the activities of celebration of its I Centenary, as it is the first grouping in the world.

The Association proposed me to be the scientific director. This was not new to me since, for some time now, we had been promoting the first University Course of Integral Formation in Management of Brotherhoods and Sisterhoods which is taught in a public university and of which we are already preparing the fourth edition, we have done summer courses, etc...

When designing the program We agreed that the debate had to be centered around popular religiosity, Holy Week as a movement in popular religiosity and in analyzing the evangelizing mission of the brotherhoods and confraternities, especially through the days of Holy Week.

How have you structured this objective at the Congress?

-The IV International Congress of Brotherhoods and Sisterhoods structures this reflection on popular religiosity in three panels united by the thread of the evangelizing mission of the brotherhoods and sisterhoods.

On the first day we will talk about popular religiosity as the foundation and basis of Holy Week. We will count with the inaugural conference of Monsignor Rino FisichellaThe presentation will focus on popular religiosity as a source of evangelization and then we will talk about this popular religiosity through speakers from both the anthropological and theological fields: how it is developing today, its sources...

The second day, the focus will be on the representation of the historical moment of the passion of Christ. That day we will have two axes: a panel discussion on the secondary characters of the passion, in which we will approach the evangelizing function of these characters, also the role of women in the passion of Christ, or how they have moved the role, the message of these secondary characters to the imagery ... In the second part we focus on the figure of Christ in his passion through three presentations: analyzing his judicial process, the physical suffering and the moment of the resurrection, through the latest research that has been carried out on the Shroud for which we will count with Paolo Di LazzaroDeputy Director of the Centro Internazionale di Studi sulla Sindone, Centro Internazionale di Studi sulla Sindone

On the third day, as it could not be otherwise, we will focus on the representation of popular religiosity. We will not only know the representations of the Levant, the Castilian, but also how this popular religiosity is represented in areas as different from ours as Central Europe or Italy, Mexico or Byzantine iconography.

Popular religiosity and especially the brotherhoods and confraternities are one of the strongest movements within the Catholic Church.

Paloma Saborido

I think it is an important Congress, not only because of the strength of the theme or the stature of the speakers among whom there are confreres but also those who are not at all, but because we want to have a deep debate on popular religiosity. Nowadays the popular religiosity and especially the brotherhoods and confraternities are one of the movements with more force inside the Catholic Church. We manifest that we are Christians in a clear and palpable way and that it moves many people and it is transcendental to give it the importance it has, as Pope Francis does.  

Encyclical ecologisms, not salon ecologisms

When Pope Francis published the encyclical Laudato Si', more than five years ago, there was no shortage of "attack on the market" or "neo-hippie theology" for an encyclical that introduced, if not in an original way, then specifically, care for creation as part of the Church's Magisterium.

June 16, 2021-Reading time: 2 minutes

Evidently, publishing an encyclical is no mean feat: we are talking about those topics that are part of Christian life as such, that is, the materialization of faith, sacraments, morals... everything that shapes, in one way or another, the existence of Catholics and, therefore, their apostolate in terms of their mission as baptized persons in the world.

To consider Laudato Si' as something like a set of superficial measures covered with ecofriendly and happyflower labels is a limited and materialistic reading of the document.

Mª José Atienza

Since then we have seen how, together with the Pope, a movement has grown in the Church whose aim is to make this call effective. The ecological task is none other than to care for what God, let us not forget, has created for us and what we, let us not forget, must continue to work for: the natural balance - ecology.

Understood in its genuine sense, with a theological vision of life, the planet and man, as creatures, are a reflection of their Creator and, therefore, believing in God, wanting to do what God calls us to do, implies an integral reflection on this world, on the ultimate meaning of things and of existence.

Considering Laudato Si' as something like a set of superficial measures covered up with labels ecofriendly y happyflower is the result of a limited and materialistic reading of the document. The encyclical itself points to the danger of "a superficial or apparent ecology that consolidates a certain numbness and a cheerful irresponsibility".

It is not only about filling churches with solar panels (something very commendable in those who can do it) but to take part in vital paradigm shifts related to food waste at home, consumerism of fashion, or what we spend on vacation (and then the Church does not ask me to throw a euro every Sunday to be seen ...). The call of Laudato Si' is far from shouting environmentalist slogans while we record it with a last generation cell phone. The appeal of Laudato Si' is aimed at fighting against this "throwaway culture, which affects both excluded human beings and things that quickly become garbage".

A good exercise might be, now that the Pope has invited us all to this Laudato Si' platform over the next seven years, to reread the encyclical in the light of the Ten Commandments. We will realize, perhaps, that we cannot love God above all things if we do not love the people of our world and take "into account the nature of each being and their mutual connectedness in an ordered system." Protecting life from beginning to end is ecology, fostering motherhood and helping it to fulfill itself is ecology. Reusing clothes or waiting a month to buy the latest tablet, a simple T-shirt, eating the rest of the bread and not throwing it away is ecology... Yes, ecology, more activist than many others, more at home, not slogans, available to everyone, yes, but of committed action.

The authorMaria José Atienza

Director of Omnes. Degree in Communication, with more than 15 years of experience in Church communication. She has collaborated in media such as COPE or RNE.

Read more
The Vatican

"Share The Journey campaign ends but the mission continues."

Cardinal Luis Antonio G. Tagle, president of Caritas Internationalis, together with the Secretary General of Caritas Internationalis and the Secretary of the Dicastery for the Service of Integral Human Development, closed the campaign Share the journey which Pope Francis opened in 2017 and which aimed to generate a culture of encounter and welcome for migrants and refugees.

Maria José Atienza-June 15, 2021-Reading time: 3 minutes

The press conference to conclude the Campaign began with the intervention of Cardinal Luis Antonio G. Tagle. Tagle, who emphasized that Share the Journey was "a great moment of encounter, solidarity and, above all, an expression of the Church's love for migrants. Christians, Muslims, Hindus, followers of other religions and those without religion were welcomed as human persons".

The prefect of the Congregation for the Evangelization of Peoples and president of Caritas Internationalis wanted to emphasize that, although the campaign has formally concluded, "the mission continues", especially at this time when the pandemic can "intensify selfishness and fear of strangers".

Increased effort during the pandemic

In this sense, Aloysius John, Secretary General of Caritas InternationalisHe recalled that the key objective of the campaign was to "live out the moral imperative to welcome and offer hospitality to migrants and refugees fleeing injustice, suffering, violence and poverty in search of a dignified life.

The Secretary General of Caritas Internationalis recalled some of the actions that, during these four years, have been promoted from the Caritas epicenter to "share the message that migration is an opportunity to open our arms to welcome the stranger" and valued the efforts that, around the world, have been made by the different "to provide support to migrants and refugees, especially during the AIDS-19 pandemic, allowing them access to food, basic necessities, clothing and, above all, health care".

In a special way he wanted to highlight the work of Caritas in conflict areas such as Lebanon, where the migrant center "supported migrant workers who were imprisoned in the country, unable to return to their countries of origin due to travel restrictions imposed by the COVID-19 pandemic and still suffer the effects of the aftermath of the chemical explosion, of which their employers were also victims"; the work of Caritas Jordan in caring for Syrian migrants and refugees with food and medical assistance or the priceless work of Caritas Bangladesh with the thousands of Rohingya refugees seeking safety in Bangladesh.

The Secretary General of Caritas Internationalis has also invited the community to join in the initiative by lighting a virtual candle of hope on the website of Caritas Internationalis  and sharing a message of solidarity with millions of displaced people that they will pass on to Pope Francis.

Also the religious Maria de Lourdes Lodi RissiniIn her intervention via videoconference, the National Coordinator of Caritas in Southern Africa highlighted the work of Caritas in South Africa. In this sense, she pointed out, for example, the work carried out in that area to ensure the entry of undocumented children into the South African educational system or the attention to women who, when they arrive in the country after their husbands, find that these have formed another family and have no resources with which to live or the attention to the thousands of people who were left on the street and without work due to Covid.

Right to live in peace on their land

For its part, Msgr. Bruno-Marie DufféThe Secretary of the Dicastery for the Service of Integral Human Development recalled the four verbs with which Pope Francis calls the Christian community to welcome migrants and which "commit us to undertake a moral, social, political, juridical and spiritual journey with them: Welcome, Protect, Promote and Integrate.

He also wanted to emphasize that "the dignity of the human person, a fundamental principle of Catholic Social Teaching, is what gives meaning and moral translation to the human rights of all people". Particularly important was his call to "work with the countries from which migrants come and support programs of integral human development" because "there is the primary right to be welcomed, but also the right to return to one's homeland, the land of one's ancestors and one's community, to live there in peace".

The campaign "Share the Journey - Sharing the Journey" began in 2017 with the aim of sensitizing the Christian community to the reality of migration and to open our arms to generate a culture of encounter, to ask ourselves and rethink how we welcome the other.

Pope Francis himself emphasized in his opening remarks that "the journey is made in two: those who come to our land and we, who go to their heart, to understand them, to understand their culture, their language. Christ himself asks us to welcome our migrant and refugee brothers and sisters with open arms, with arms wide open. To welcome precisely in this way, with arms wide open". 

Read more

Álvaro, the wink of God

Many media these days are reporting the new adventure of Alvaro Calvente, a teenager from Malaga with an intellectual disability due to Syngap1 syndrome, who will make the pilgrimage to the Royal Shrine of Guadalupe from June 16 to 23, along with his father and his sponsor, on the occasion of the Jubilee Year of Guadalupe.

June 15, 2021-Reading time: 2 minutes

Last year, the pilgrimage to Santiago de Compostela that he narrated on Twitter through his account @CaminodeAlvaroThe wave of affection and devotion that it aroused around the world was such that even Pope Francis wrote a letter of thanks to him. In it he told her that "in the midst of the pandemic that we live in, with your simplicity, joy and simplicity, you were able to set in motion the hope of many of the people you met along the way or through social networks".

Those of us who have had the good fortune to know Alvaro since he was a child and to share with him the life of faith, already knew what this young man was capable of transmitting. Since he was very young, the Eucharist has been the happiest moment of his life. I know children who have enjoyed less a day at Eurodisney than Alvaro is able to experience in a celebration of the Holy Mass.  

To celebrate it with him at our side is to live very closely the mystery, the heavenly banquet in which heaven and earth are united. A great feast in which God gives us everything and we can only welcome this gift from heaven, the manna that rains down upon us. God has not given him the talent to speak clearly, but his gestures of recollection and praise, according to the moment of the Mass, proclaim very clearly to all those who share it with him that something great is happening in the gathered community.

But the Eucharist is only the culminating moment of a life that is an entire liturgy. Like all children of his age, he likes to play soccer, swim in the sea and run in the countryside, but, on every occasion, he keeps God in mind and invites those around him not to forget Him and to love Him above all things.

Of course, the easy explanation is to talk about the repetitive behaviors and fixations of children with disabilities, but who doesn't have a monotheme, an obsession, an issue they keep coming back to?

Like all children his age, he likes to play soccer, swim in the sea and run around the countryside, but he always keeps God in mind and invites those around him not to forget Him.

Antonio Moreno

I rather think that Alvaro is a gift that God has given to his family and to the whole world, because "the foolish things of the world God has chosen to humble the wise, and the weak things of the world God has chosen to humble the mighty" (1 Cor 1:27). Like those figures of "The Magic Eye" in 3D that were hidden behind a colorful illustration and that one was only able to see if one looked deep into the paper, Alvaro is a hidden message to a world that only wants to see what is right in front of its nose.

On one occasion, I heard Álvaro's father say that, if he could choose today to be born without a disability, he would not choose him, "because then he would no longer be Álvaro". And it was necessary for Álvaro to be the way he is so that so many of us can see, beyond the colorful illustration, a three-dimensional God who is real and who winks at us with complicity.

Good road, Álvaro!

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.

Evangelization

"Theology is the faith of the Church seeking to understand what it believes."

Before being an academic discipline, Theology is the living and, at times, exalted knowledge about God that the Holy Spirit offers to all the baptized who live according to his inspiration.

Juan Antonio Martínez Camino-June 15, 2021-Reading time: 5 minutes

Theology has always been for all the baptized. In recent times, even academic theology has become more readily available to all. This is a blessing. It is good that the laity are aware of this and are encouraged to study theology.

The Church will be enriched by their active participation in this service so relevant for the vitality of the ecclesial community and for its evangelizing mission. Even more so, when today the number of the faithful ordained for the apostolic ministry is decreasing, who are the ones who have been dedicating themselves almost exclusively to the study of theology.

Nature of Theology

What is Theology? Certainly, it is an academic discipline. But before that, Theology is the living and, at times, exalted knowledge about God that the Holy Spirit offers to all the baptized who live according to his inspiration.

The Church has recognized this in a special way by declaring Saints Teresa of Jesus, Catherine of Siena, Therese of Lisieux and Hildegard of Bingen to be doctors of the Church. Since 1970, the year of the doctorate of the first two, the Catholic doctrine has been officially recovered, according to which the faithful who are neither pastors nor have studied theology, as is the case of these saints, can also be great theologians.

The Holy Spirit offers to all the gift of wisdom, that is, the excellent knowledge of God. Of course, also to men, although up to now - for unquestionable reasons of justice and opportunity - only women are the faithful who, without being pastors or having studied theology, have been officially recognized with a doctorate.

Theology studies

Theological studies, on the other hand, are a practical science. Its object is not mere knowledge, but the knowledge of faith. Theology is the faith of the Church seeking to understand what it believes. Catholic theology starts from the basic principle that only God speaks well of God. If it is not possible to know a human person without having listened to him, it would be even more impossible to know God if he had not communicated himself, or without his communication. In fact, God communicates in many ways. The whole of creation speaks of the Creator. But the eternal Word, incarnate, is his personal and full communication. This is the faith of the Church, to the understanding of which the secular endeavor of Theology is dedicated. Academic theology is the systematic effort to know Jesus Christ in the light of faith and with all the instruments of human knowledge.

St. Paul already speaks of theology infused by the Spirit. St. Peter exhorted Christians to "give a reason for the hope. Academic theology has its germ there, but it will develop as the faith is implanted in the different cultures, beginning with the Greco-Roman one. Saint Justin and Saint Irenaeus were already great theologians in the first centuries of the Church. St. Jerome and St. Augustine were masters who laid the foundations for the development of the science of faith with the means of human knowledge of their time.

In the Middle Ages, theology will be at the heart of the development of university institutions, which were developed then and continue to this day. St. Thomas Aquinas taught in Paris. Palencia, Valladolid, Salamanca are the cradle of the university among us, together with the cathedral schools of these episcopal sees and with the impulse of the masters of the religious orders.

Today, in Anglo-Saxon countries, the Faculty of Theology is still part of the university.

Juan Antonio Martínez CaminoPresident of the Episcopal Subcommission for Universities and Culture

Today, theology studies have been removed from the university in countries that adopted the French Enlightenment system in their academic systems, as is the case of Spain. But in Anglo-Saxon countries the Faculty of Theology continues to be part of the university.

One of the perspectives of the excellent biography of Benedict XVI, written recently by Peter Seewald, is precisely that of the gestation of this great theologian, who would become pope, in the bosom of German academic institutions, both ecclesiastical and state: first at the School of Theology of the Diocese of Munich, in Freising; then at the Faculty of Theology of the University of Munich, provisionally accommodated in Fürstenried, just after the end of the war. In Freising, the very young Ratzinger studied with classmates who, like him, aspired to be ordained priests. In Fürstenried, on the other hand, he had lay fellow students who helped each other in their academic work. Among them, the case of Esther Betz, daughter of the founder of a large German newspaper, student of theology since 1946 and later assistant to Professor Schmaus, is striking. This woman, a businesswoman, finally, like her father, in the publishing and journalistic world, maintained her friendship with her fellow student until her death, even when he was already Pope. The correspondence between the two theologians is one of the most original sources of Seewald's biography.

The laity have the doors of all academic institutions completely open to them for the study of theology. Naturally, the diocesan seminaries and the centers of studies of the religious, only for the lay people aspiring to the priesthood or members of the respective congregations. But the Faculties of Theology and the Higher Institutes of Religious Sciences, distributed throughout the geography of Spain, admit everyone to their official degrees, as long as they meet the indispensable academic requirements.

All the faculties (except for the internal faculties of religious congregations) have lay people as official students. In the Superior Institutes of Religious Sciences, which have about 4,000

In some places, it is even made easier for lay people who already have a university degree to study theology. In some places, even the official study of Theology is especially facilitated for lay people who, possessing a university degree, are already working in their profession. I can testify to the interest and benefit with which my students in this category studied Theology in the years when I was a professor in the TUP (Theologia Universitaria para Postgraduados), a program aimed at obtaining the degree of Baccalaureatus in Theologia (with civil recognition as a Graduate) offered in the evenings by a Pontifical University in Madrid.

Reasons to study Theology

Why study theology if one does not intend to be or is not a priest or religious? Each one can have personal motivations to keep to himself. But there are two types of objective purposes that justify the study of theology at one of the various academic levels at which it can be pursued.

First, because a baptized person, aware of the treasure that is the professed faith, usually desires to know it more and better than in the first catechesis. This is especially true for those who have cultivated their spirit through other types of study.

Theology helps to live the faith better, to appreciate it more, to defend it from the attacks of the dominant culture, unfriendly to Christian life and, of course, to be trained for the apostolic mission proper to every baptized person, in the family, profession and social life in general.

Secondly, lay people study theology in order to be able to exercise offices or missions in the Church that have often been carried out by priests, but which are not reserved to them. There are very many of them. Let me mention just a few. The teaching of Theology at all levels, from the professorships in the Faculties and Higher Centers, to the religion classes in the centers of infant and secondary education, state or of social initiative; in all these areas good professionals of Theology are needed, also laymen.

Theology helps to live the faith better, to appreciate it more, to defend it from the attacks of the dominant culture.

Juan Antonio Martínez CaminoPresident of the Episcopal Subcommission for Universities and Culture

The performance of various offices in the ecclesiastical mission and administration: courts, diocesan curiae, institutes of consecrated life, parishes, etc. Even in civil life, theology can be a precious complement to offices related to law, health sciences or various types of consultancy.

Theology has always been closely linked to the Christian faith, which is a friend of reason and knowledge. Conversely, Western civilization is so deeply rooted in the Christian faith that its noblest traits could hardly survive without the sap of Christianity. There is nothing to prevent the laity from being protagonists in this great history of evangelization and culture.

The authorJuan Antonio Martínez Camino

Auxiliary Bishop of Madrid. President of the Episcopal Subcommission for Universities and Culture.

Read more
The Vatican

In order to understand the Pope's response to Cardinal Marx

To know the Letter of Francis to the People of God in Germany is a key premise for understanding, in all its meaning, the Holy Father's response to the request for the resignation of the Archbishop of Munich-Friesland.

José M. García Pelegrín-June 14, 2021-Reading time: 5 minutes

The Pope's response to Cardinal Marx's resignation from the episcopal see of Munich and Freising, originally written in Spanish (Argentinian) and whose official German translation is particularly cumbersome because of the excess of literalism - for example, it literally pours out the saying "tener esqueletos en el armario" ("to have skeletons in the closet"), while the metaphor in German would be "tener cadáveres en el sótano" ("to have corpses in the cellar" ("Leichen im Keller haben"); and the same goes for "to put the meat on the spit" which, translated literally, is unintelligible (the equivalent German expression would be "alles in die Waagschale werfen", "to throw everything on the scales") - has surprised by its speed.... and, at least to the Cardinal himself, by his refusal to accept the resignation.

But this is not only surprising because of the speed, but also because of the difference with the lack of response with respect to the Archdiocese of Cologne. As we have already reported, when the expert report on the abuses On March 18, the auxiliary bishops of Cologne, Dominik Schwaderlapp and Ansgar Puff, as well as the current Archbishop of Hamburg, Stefan Hesse (head of the personnel department from 2006 to 2012 and vicar general from 2012 to 2014 in Cologne), resigned from the diocese. The fact that he has not responded so far could be related to the apostolic visitation ordered by Pope Francis on May 28 in the persons of the bishop of Stockholm, Cardinal Anders Arborelius, and the president of the Bishops' Conference of the Netherlands, Bishop Johannes van den Hende, and scheduled to end in the middle of the month. The Pope probably did not want to respond to the requests for resignation until he had the result of this visit which, apart from affecting the three bishops mentioned, responds above all to the growing voices calling for the resignation of the Archbishop of Cologne himself, Cardinal Woelki.

Following the same logic, Francis could have waited until the report on the same matter affecting Cardinal Marx is made public, especially with regard to the period in which he was bishop of Trier (2002-2007) - in 2019, Marx admitted that in 2006 he had omitted to deal with the case of a priest who was accused of having committed several abuses; the Prosecutor's Office opened a file against the priest, but dismissed it, despite clear indications, because the statute of limitations had expired. The result of the report on the matter is expected "in autumn". It will be known then if Marx personally has "skeletons in the closet" (or "corpses in the basement").

The Pope emphasizes that he "agrees with you in describing as a catastrophe the sad history of sexual abuse and the way the Church dealt with it until recently. Francis points out the path that must be followed to overcome the crisis: "It is the path of the Spirit that we must follow, and the starting point is humble confession: we have made a mistake, we have sinned. Neither the polls nor the power of the institutions will save us. We will not be saved by the prestige of our Church, which tends to conceal its sins; we will not be saved by the power of money or the opinion of the media (so often we are too dependent on them). We will be saved by opening the door to the One who can do it and confessing our nakedness: 'I have sinned', 'we have sinned'... and weeping, and stammering as best we can that 'depart from me, for I am a sinner', a legacy that the first Pope left to the Popes and the Bishops of the Church".

The connection between the cards

The Pope's letter to Cardinal Marx is fully in tune with what Francis wrote, on June 29, 2019 - the feast of Sts. Peter and Paul, which is also significant - to. "People of God on pilgrimage in Germany", where it was said: "To assume and suffer the current situation does not imply passivity or resignation and even less negligence, on the contrary, it is an invitation to make contact with that which in us and in our communities is necrotic and needs to be evangelized and visited by the Lord. And this requires courage because what we need is much more than a structural, organizational or functional change".

The current letter to the Archbishop of Munich begins precisely by speaking of courage: "First of all, thank you for your courage. It is a Christian courage that is not afraid of the cross, not afraid to be humbled in the face of the tremendous reality of sin". Although the Pope does not expressly mention "structural, organizational or functional change", it is understood when he encourages us to confess "I have sinned", to seek personal conversion.

Nor does the Pope now expressly refer to the "Synodal Way"; he did so in the aforementioned letter of 2019 - which, according to Cardinal Kasper in a recent interview, the representatives of the Synodal Way should have taken more seriously. There he explained - expressly quoting the Conciliar Constitution. Lumen Gentium and the Decree Christus Dominus Paul VI - what synodality should really be: "Synodality from the bottom up, that is, the duty to take care of the existence and the good functioning of the Diocese: the councils, the parishes, the participation of the laity... (cf. CCC 469-494), beginning with the diocese, since it is not possible to have a great synod without going to the base...; and then synodality from the top down, which allows us to live in a specific and singular way the Collegial dimension of the episcopal ministry and of the ecclesial being. Only in this way can we reach and make decisions on essential questions for the faith and the life of the Church".

The connection between the letter to Cardinal Marx and the Letter to the People of God in Germany invites us to read in the same key the passages of the letter to the Archbishop of Munich in which he reminds us that the reform that is demanded in these circumstances "begins with oneself. The reform in the Church has been made by men and women who were not afraid to enter into crisis and allow themselves to be reformed by the Lord. This is the only way, otherwise we will be nothing more than 'reform ideologues' who do not put their own flesh at stake".

Both letters remind us that the reform required under these circumstances "begins with itself".

José M. García Pelegrín

In any case, the Pope does not endorse the thesis that Marx expressed in his letter of resignation that the Church "is at an impasse. If anything, this "deadlock" is due - as the hitherto editor-in-chief of Die TagespostOliver Maksan - that the Church in Germany "is trapped in a straitjacket" because Cardinal Marx has united "the political-ecclesiastical agenda and the treatment of abuse with the Synodal Way" to form an "inextricable tangle".

Indeed, Cardinal Marx is one of those mainly responsible for the fixation that - as the Synodal Way demonstrates - exists in a large part of the "official" laity, and even in part of the hierarchy in Germany, in linking the treatment of sexual abuse to a path that seeks to overcome the "structures of power", while claiming structural "reforms", a position that Francis - in his Letter to the People of God in Germany - calls a "temptation" and a "new Pelagianism": "I remember that in the meeting I had with your pastors in 2015 I was telling them that one of the first and great temptations at the ecclesial level was to believe that the solutions to present and future problems would come exclusively from purely structural, organic or bureaucratic reforms but that, at the end of the day, they would not touch at all the vital cores that demand attention." Quoting his own Apostolic Exhortation Evangelii GaudiumHe added: "This is a new Pelagianism, which leads us to put our trust in administrative structures and perfect organizations".

Insofar as it reminds us - once again - that reform must be the fruit of a personal conversion, Pope Francis' letter to Cardinal Marx could contribute to freeing the Church in Germany from the "straitjacket," or to breaking the Gordian knot of the tangle alluded to earlier. Of course, this would require that those responsible for the Synodal Way pay more attention to it than they did to the Letter to the People of God in Germany.

Twentieth Century Theology

Theological legacies and challenges

We have a formidable heritage to study not only with the archaeological devotion of those who admire the past, but also as inspiration and support for the new challenges in the life of the Church.

Juan Luis Lorda-June 14, 2021-Reading time: 7 minutes

In this article we will recall the leaven with which theology is made. We will then summarize the contributions of 20th century theology. We will situate ourselves before the new challenges. And from there we will finally obtain some lines of work. 

The ferments of theology

Theology has four motives that make it grow in every age.

1. The "faith that seeks to understand", according to the immortal phrase of St. Anselm: fides quaerens intellectum. We do not simply repeat the words of the message, but we want to understand them in order to nourish and combine them with our experience. Christians believe in the unity of knowledge, because the same God who made the universe has revealed himself in our history and used our words. 

2. The faith is taught. This requires ordering its content and explaining it according to the level of the listeners, from catechesis to the formation of future priests and Christians at the academic level. When it is taught, it is learned. The effort to teach, especially to priests, has historically shaped theology. 

3. The faith faces internal and external difficulties. History shows the dissensions and loss of communion, which are heresies. They usually require much theological discernment. And so do external misunderstandings and criticisms: they require a clarity that has given rise to Christian apologetics. It must be combined with the other sources so as not to focus theology only on the disputed issues. 

4. The Scriptures must be authentically interpreted. On the one hand, the Church has already received and possesses the message, and we are not dependent on the latest interpretation. But the Scriptures are a faithful witness to Revelation and their attentive and pious reading is a constant inspiration.

The great renewals of theology in the 20th century 

In the 19th century, the separation of Church and State in Catholic countries affected and continues to affect the life of the Church. At the same time, by the grace of God, a spiritual and religious renaissance took place, which in the 20th century gave rise to a great number of enthusiastic theologians and a golden age of theological faculties. Thus, to the great patristic theology of the third to fifth centuries, and to the classical scholasticism of the eleventh to thirteenth centuries, a third great epoch was added, covering the nineteenth (Newman, Möhler, Scheeben) and, above all, the twentieth centuries.

Four major leavenings have inspired this renewal: a better knowledge of the Bible, the recovery of the theology of the Fathers, liturgical renewal and the influence of personalist thought, among others.

1. Biblical studies contributed an immense erudition on the history, language and contexts of the Bible; of the great biblical concepts of enormous theological importance (History of salvation, Covenant, Messiah, Kingdom, Ruah...); and of the Hebrew institutions that are the basis of the typological sense (Qhal Yahveh, feasts, worship, temple, synagogal practice...). There is a pending work to summarize this wealth that tends to be dispersed and also produced some confusion about the core of the biblical message. 

2. The return to the Fathers, emblematically represented by the collection Sources Chrétiennes and by the work of De Lubac and Daniélou, it was reinforced by contacts with Russian theology in exile (Lossky, Berdiaev) and dealings with Eastern theology (Congar). It made it possible to center theology on the mysteries, as Scheeben had done, and to construct the treatise on the Church. It meant the end of manualistic scholasticism, which was presented as the only possible form of Catholic theology. And it made it possible to purify the Thomistic tradition by returning to its perennial sources (the work of St. Thomas Aquinas) and an improved knowledge of its history and context (Chenu, Grabmann) and its philosophy (Gilson). 

3. Parallel to the return to the Fathers, and with fruitful synergies, liturgical theology developed (Dom Gueranger, Guardini, Casel). It transformed sacramentology, contributed to the understanding of the mystery of the Church and inspired the Second Vatican Council. But this renewal should not be confused with the post-conciliar application, sometimes improvised and spontaneous, of liturgical fashions. To a large extent, the authentic theological formation of Christians according to the will of the Council is still pending. 

4. The personalist inspiration highlighted something very important. The idea of the person, with so much cultural and juridical relevance, has a theological history. There is a Christian contribution on the dignity of the human being as the image of God, called to be identified in Christ, which is still very relevant. Moreover, the idea that person implies relationship, both in the Trinity and in humans, allows us to understand the realization of persons in the double commandment of charity, and inspires models of coexistence. In the likeness of the Trinity, there is the communion of saints in the Church and in Heaven, and that of families, and that of any authentic human community. It also helps to deepen the personal relationship of the human being with God (I and Thou), and to renew the idea of the soul, as a being personally loved by God, with an eternal relationship. 

Council and post-conciliar 

This spectacular flowering inspired the Second Vatican Council which, promoted by John XXIII, sought to relaunch the life of the Church and evangelization. It set the guidelines and renewed the life of the Church on many points, which are the guidelines of our time. 

Unfortunately, it was followed by a massive post-conciliar crisis that has reduced Christian practice and vocations in Western Catholic countries to at least one-sixth of what it was. Less focused theology played a role in the deviation (Holland), but the main cause was a biased interpretation and a hasty and misguided application of the Council's wishes. Serene judgment is needed to understand what happened and to revalidate the authentic interpretation, as John Paul II and Benedict XVI did.

On the other hand, the large reduction in the number of candidates for the priesthood has left many European faculties at a minimum. 

Some environmental challenges

With this, theology finds itself in a very different context from the previous era. In countries with a Catholic tradition, they still live as "established churches", that is to say, identified with the customs, culture, feasts and rhythms of a nation. They are not mission churches, they do not have institutions or habits of that type, but maintain worship and catechesis, each time with fewer and fewer people. The ecclesiastical structure, with its patrimony, is still enormous, but it is emptying, which also generates a financial problem. The diminishing clergy can be sustained by the diminishing faithful, but the buildings cannot. It is not the main problem, but it absorbs a lot of energy. 

In old Christian Europe we are still living the cycle of Modernity, with the separation of Church and State. Along with the positive aspects of greater freedom and Christian authenticity, we are suffering from a secularization sought as a political program. In theological teaching, this process must be properly accounted for. 

Almost the entire 20th century was dominated by the astonishing worldwide expansion of communism. This meant persecution of the Church in communist countries and intense criticism throughout the world. It was also a temptation for many Christians, who felt that communism embodied aspects of the Gospel more authentically than the Church itself. Another aspect still to be studied. 

The almost miraculous disappearance of communism, in the time of John Paul II, left a huge postmodern void. But the impact of the Russian revolution of 17 was replaced by that of the French revolution of 68. It failed in its utopian attempt to transform bourgeois societies, but it transformed sexual mores, and provoked a new reason for distancing oneself from the faith, which made a crisis in the reception of Humanae vitae. Moreover, it originated the gender ideology, which puts cultural and political pressure on the life of the Church and contrasts with the Christian message on sex and family. It seems that we are at the gates of a new persecution where there will be no martyrs. We must discern about the objections and find the language to express ourselves. 

Training and information challenges 

In the past, Christian families, catechesis in rural parishes and Catholic schools in the cities succeeded in transmitting the Christian faith with a very high degree of effectiveness and identity. This is no longer the case. The irruption of television in every home and more recently, social networks have changed family education: what appears on television and on the networks becomes the norm and the social model instead of the parents. Faith is only transmitted in very committed families. 

On the other hand, ordinary catechesis is totally disproportionate to the volume of information and formation that any child receives in other areas of knowledge. And both Catholic schools, generally religious, and seminaries have suffered the post-conciliar crisis with a loss of personnel and problems of orientation. There is the growing paradox that the majority of Christians are informed about the life of the Church in non-Christian media. This is a great challenge for a Church that is, by nature, evangelizing. 

Specific challenges of theology 

The balance sheet is not very encouraging, and the size of the problems is overwhelming. But the Church lives by faith, hope and charity. And she is led in history by her Lord, who, in every age, raises up the necessary charisms. Theology cannot live in the limbo of academic inertia, but must connect with these peremptory demands. Recalling the four leavenings we mentioned at the beginning, it is urgent:

1. to understand the faith also in relation to our current humanistic and scientific culture;

2. to train new generations of priests to meet the demands of evangelization. To maintain and synthesize the richness of our patrimony by adding the best of the theology of the 20th century that is at the level of our time. And to overcome the cumulative tendency that has occurred in theological treatises by pretending to summarize all the difficulties of the past;

3. to respond to the great objections of our time. Those that follow from the critique of Modernity, those of scientific materialism; and currently, the ideology of gender, where it is necessary to discern and find the adequate language to dialogue and present attractively the Christian message on sex and family. It is also necessary to attend to internal problems such as internal contestation and the schism of Lefevbre;

4. to focus and summarize biblical theology so that it nourishes theology and priestly and Christian formation.

Other more specific tasks:

5. to defend the authentic interpretation of the Second Vatican Council and to broaden its application;

6. to contribute to the ecumenical commitment and interreligious dialogue promoted by the Council;

7. to study recent history in at least four points: the cycle of Modernity, with its Christian inspirations and its distances; the post-conciliar crisis; the Marxist influence; and the dialogue with the sciences;

8. meet the enormous challenge of the formation of Christians. Although theology concentrates on academic teaching, it needs to open up to other spaces. And this has many demands of style and language. 

Conclusion 

Not everything is inconvenient. We have a very rich intellectual heritage of understanding of the world and the human being, which contrasts with the immense void left by the ideologies of the 20th century or with the triviality of global consumerism. We have never been in such a strong intellectual situation, even if it is so weak in the media. 

There are happy points of encounter with our times. First, because the Gospel message connects with the deepest human aspirations today and always (anima naturaliter christiana). With their desires for fulfillment, knowledge and salvation, which are also manifested in the search for a more natural and human life, or in a healthy environmentalism and respect for nature. The environmental and health crises also give rise to a deeper search for the meaning of life. 

And, in the end, we count on the presence of the Lord and the assistance of the Spirit. The experience of weakness is an essential part of the exercise of faith and theology. In this way we overcome the harmful temptation to replace it with our ideas. It is theology only if it is "faith that seeks to understand", also in order to transmit it joyfully. What is needed is a theology that is more humble, more testimonial, more spiritual, more liturgical; or, as von Balthasar wrote, more kneeling. Also a theology closer to the poor and simple, as Pope Francis asks. In short, a more theological theology.

Initiatives

Joachim and Barnabas. Worship: an encounter with Christ

Eucharistic adoration is a life-changing encounter of many young people with Jesus Christ. Initiatives such as Worship try to renew it in the forms.

Arsenio Fernández de Mesa-June 14, 2021-Reading time: 3 minutes

It is no secret that, by the law of life, young people are the future of the Church. And it is also no secret that many of them turn away from a true encounter with God because the Christian life is presented to them not in an attractive way but rather as a burden and a bore. Joaquín and Bernabé, priests of the San Clemente Romano parish in Villaverde Bajo, have racked their brains to find a way to put young people in front of the Eucharist. And let Him do the rest. It is essential to provoke the first encounter in a way that connects with the young people of today. And then we will educate that the feeling or the interior experience is not the first thing. If we limit ourselves to insisting on obsolete methods that do not attract, the churches will remain empty.  

What is the Worship?

The Worship is an adoration of the Blessed Sacrament, but not like the holy hours to which we are accustomed. It has a more charismatic and daring tone. They insist a lot on the importance of praying with music, discovering in the lyrics and rhythms the breath of the Holy Spirit that wants to say something to those present. They also reinforce the visual experience, for example, playing with the lights. Something great is happening, because Christ is present in the midst of everyone, and they want to transmit it through the senses. 

"We seek an integral experience of encounter with the Lord that embraces body and soul in its entirety".Bernabé, a recently ordained priest, tells us. It is not only a moment of prayer, but there is also an initial moment of animation and a testimonial part.

A path in crescendo

The road is in crescendoThe moment of placing oneself before Jesus Christ in the Eucharist, which is the culmination of the WorshipThe English word to refer to worship. They want to emphasize that style that is being given in Lifeteen in the United States and which is producing so many fruits of conversions and vocations among adolescents and young people. "We wanted to do this type of worship with a more sober, more western style, which was not so common. There is the Charismatic Renewal, but it has a more Latin character. The underlying desire is to learn to pray with the body: some moments we pray standing, we are invited to open our hands, kneeling, sitting. 

The purpose is to generate a certain continuity: "we will try to do it monthly or bimonthly.". Joaquín, the parish priest, and Bernabé, his vicar, confessed with enthusiasm: "We want it to be the apostolate of the youth of our parish, so that people can come and enjoy what we are living here, the family, the home that we are generating around the Lord in this community.. The group that organizes and prepares these adorations is part of the group of young university students and professionals. There is a lot of work in the background so that everything goes well, like a welcoming team that receives all those who arrive and accommodates them. They even make bracelets for them. "It is a global experience of encounter with Jesus Christ and not a mere adoration or holy hour.".

A "plus" for young people

One of the young people who take care of all the details with care and affection is Carlos García Taracena, 29 years old. He recognizes that we are used to total silence and sobriety in the forms, something that helps so many people. He thinks that this initiative of the Worship brings a plus to young people: "has brought us to a living God who allows us to express our love for Him corporately.". Remember that we come from something less sensory and this can be surprising. But for Carlos, the experience of so many young people confirms that those who have prayed in this way have felt the person next to them as a sister. "You feel Christ more alive when you pray as a family."he confesses. The task of his group is to make this moment an authentic encounter with God for the young people who attend: "we accompany with beautiful music, but not labored by hours of rehearsal but by praying together as we sing.". That's the key: Worship is not a musical show but a privileged moment of encounter with Jesus Christ.

Read more
The Vatican

Pope Francis: "The Gospel asks us to take a new look at ourselves and at reality".

Pope Francis reminded us, after praying the Angelus in St. Peter's Square, that "with God there is always hope for new shoots, even in the most arid terrain."

David Fernández Alonso-June 13, 2021-Reading time: 3 minutes

Pope Francis prayed the Angelus from the window of the Apostolic Palace and addressed a few words to the faithful gathered in St. Peter's Square: "Through the two parables that the Gospel presents to us this Sunday," the Holy Father began, "we return to the liturgical season 'Ordinary'. The parables are inspired precisely by ordinary life, and reveal the attentive and profound gaze of Jesus, who observes reality and, through small everyday images, opens windows onto the mystery of God and human history. In this way, he teaches us that even the things of everyday life, those that sometimes seem all the same and that we carry on with distraction or weariness, are inhabited by the hidden presence of God. Therefore, we need attentive eyes to know how to "seek and find God in all things", as St. Ignatius of Loyola liked to say".

The reflection on the Kingdom of God was at the heart of Francis' words: "Today Jesus compares the Kingdom of God, his presence that dwells in the heart of things and of the world, to a mustard seed, the smallest seed there is. Yet, thrown into the earth, it grows into the largest tree (cfr. Mc 4,31-32). This is what God does. At times, the hustle and bustle of the world and the many activities that fill our daily lives prevent us from stopping and glimpsing how the Lord is guiding history. And yet - the Gospel assures us - God is at work, like a small good seed that silently and slowly germinates. And, little by little, it grows into a leafy tree that gives life and sustenance to all. Even the seed of our good works may seem little; but all that is good belongs to God and, therefore, humbly and slowly, it bears fruit. Let us remember that good always grows in a humble, hidden and often invisible way.

"Dear brothers and sisters, with this parable Jesus wants to instill confidence in us. In fact, in many situations in life it can happen that we become discouraged when we see the weakness of good in comparison with the apparent strength of evil. And we can let discouragement paralyze us when we realize that we have made efforts but have not obtained results and it seems that things never change. The Gospel asks us to take a new look at ourselves and at reality; it asks us to have big eyes that know how to see beyond, especially beyond appearances, in order to discover the presence of God who, as humble love, is always at work in the field of our life and in the field of history".

"And this is our confidence," said the Pope, "this is what gives us the strength to go forward every day with patience, sowing the good that will bear fruit. How important this attitude is to come out of the pandemic well! Cultivate the confidence of being in God's hands and, at the same time, let us all strive to rebuild and begin again, with patience and constancy".

Before concluding, he recalled that "even in the Church the weeds of discouragement can take root, especially when we witness the crisis of faith and the failure of various projects and initiatives. But let us never forget that the results of our sowing do not depend on our abilities: they depend on God's action. It is up to us to sow with love, effort and patience. But the strength of the seed is divine. Jesus explains it in today's other parable: the farmer throws the seed and then does not know how it produces fruit, because it is the seed itself that grows spontaneously, during the day, at night, when he least expects it (cf. vv. 26-29). With God there is always hope of new sprouts, even in the most arid lands".

Read more
Integral ecology

"It is not alarmist to talk about the seriousness of the ecological crisis."

Joshtrom Issac Kureethadam, director of the Vatican's Office of Ecology and Creation, Dicastery for the Service of Integral Human Development, told Omnes. "Civil society and governments around the world have recognized the seriousness of the ecological crisis," he says.

Rafael Miner-June 13, 2021-Reading time: 5 minutes

"Laudato Si' has been something of a watershed not only for the Church but for the whole world. The influence it has had on the Catholic Church is evident in the many initiatives that have arisen in many local communities in the area of care for creation," says el Fr. Joshtrom Issac Kureethadam, director of the Office of Ecology and Creation of the Vatican Dicastery for the Service of Integral Human Development, in an interview that will be published in full in Omnes magazine next July.

"This year's Laudato Si' Week showed in some ways how the Encyclical has entered the mainstream of our Catholic communities around the world. Participation was colossal for the online plenary events each day and there have been hundreds and hundreds of local events around the world during Laudato Si' Week," adds Fr. Joshtrom Kureethadam, a Salesian religious.

In his opinion, "Laudato Si' is important especially for its focus on integral ecology. It is not only an environmental text, but also a social encyclical," says the director of the Vatican's Office of Ecology and Creation, who refutes accusations of alarmism: "Civil society and governments around the world have recognized the seriousness of the ecological crisis.

"Unfortunately," he adds, "there are those who see climate change as a 'conspiracy' or think it is alarmist to talk about the crisis of our common home. This is a very unfortunate situation." "Climate science has grown significantly in recent decades and there is a unanimous consensus in the scientific community that the current ecological crisis in the case of climate and biodiversity crises is due to human activities." Fr. Kurethaadam assures that "Pope Francis was assisted by the world's top scientists, including members of the Vatican's Pontifical Academy of Sciences."

Beauty of Creation

At the start of the 10-day celebration of Laudato Si' Week (May 16-25), Catholics recalled the beauty of God's creation, but also the dangers faced by people around the world in taking action on behalf of our common home, recalled Tomás Insua, executive director of the Global Catholic Climate Movement, who summed up the Week in these 60 seconds 

A new species of screech owl was discovered deep in the Amazon rainforest of Brazil. The species was named Megascops stangaie in honor of Notre Dame de Namur nun Dorothy Stang, who was murdered in Brazil in 2005 while working for the Amazon and its people, Insua reports.

"This movement rejoices in the discovery of a new species, but we join the Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur and all people of faith in mourning the death of Sister Dorothy Stang and all environmental defenders around the world."

Top 5 of Laudato Si' Week

To learn more about what happened during Laudato Si' Week, five aspects that stood out during these days are highlighted below. Inspired by the slogan, "because we know that things can change," thousands of Catholics worked these days "with hope and with the fervent belief that together we can create a better future for all members of creation," notes the Global Catholic Climate Movement. These are the highlights of these days:

1. Pope Francis' leadershipwho once again led the way, inspiring and encouraging Catholics to participate in the celebration. Months before the event, the Pope encouraged the world's 1.3 billion Catholics to participate through a special video invitation. He repeated his invitation during on May 16The Pope then thanked the millions of people for their participation in the Special Anniversary Year of Laudato Si', and expressed his best wishes to those who had participated in the celebration by tweeting about #SemanaLaudatoSi. Laudato Si' Animators laudatosianimators.org/en/home-en/

2. Catholics and their institutions take action. At the local level, nearly 200 events were recorded in LaudatoSiWeek.org/en worldwide, a growth of more than 200 % compared to Laudato Si' Week 2020. Here are some examples of how Catholics inspired their communities:

- In Trinidad and TobagoIn the midst of an increase in local Covid-19 cases, Catholics served as a light and hope for all the peoples of the Caribbean by virtually uniting them for prayer, reflection and dialogue.

- Fiji's Catholics staged a Daily Laudato Si' Challenge which included planting hardwood fruit trees and flowers to help their food security and reduce the amount of carbon in the atmosphere.

- In Kenya, Bangladesh, India, Brazil, Australia, the United States, Mexico, East Timor, Vietnam and other countries, Catholics gathered online and in person to share the ways they are living Laudato Si' and to inspire each other to do more for creation.

- In South Korea and the Philippines, week-long activities led to Catholics celebrating Laudato Si' Masses, promoting climate justice projects and participating in climate demonstrations.

Catholics in Latin America organized webinars that focused the attention of the entire region on internal displacement, the plight of farmers during the climate crisis, and the Escazú Agreement, the region's first international treaty on the environment.

- In Italy, graduated Laudato Si' Animators organized about 700 projects, which included time for prayer and immersion in creation.

3. Laudato Si' Dialogues. The Pentecost Prayer Meeting/Missionary Outreach, led by Cardinal Luis Antonio Tagle, prefect of the Congregation for the Evangelization of Peoples, took place on May 23 around the world and was followed by tens of thousands of people on YouTube and Facebook. Throughout the week, as Catholics organized events at the local level, the Laudato Si' Dialogues challenged everyone to examine how we can do more for our common home.

4. Fossil fuel divestment. During Laudato Si' Week 2021, dozens of institutions from 12 countries pledged to divest from fossil fuels. Last year, on the occasion of the fifth anniversary of Laudato Si', the Vatican issued environmental guidelines that frame investment in fossil fuels as an ethical choice, on par with other important ethical choices. Fr. Joshtrom Issac Kureethadam has stated that divestment is a physical, moral and theological imperative. On the other hand, Cardinal Jean-Claude Hollerich, Archbishop of the Diocese of Luxembourg and President of the Conference of Catholic Bishops of EU States (COMECE), pointed out that institutions that choose not to divest risk making their other work ring hollow.

5. Laudato Si' Platform for Action. On May 25, the Vatican officially launched the Laudato Si' Platform for Action, which will empower Catholic institutions, communities and families to implement Laudato Si'. The Pope's initiative invites the entire Catholic Church to achieve total sustainability over the next seven years, as reported by Omnes.

Culture

Promoting a pro-life and free university in the 21st century

The Free International University of the Americas (ULIA), was founded in 2001 in San Jose (Costa Rica), with an ideology in defense of the dignity of every human life, and a commitment to free education. The University offers regulated courses, and the LDVM platform, free seminars to thousands of people. All online.

Rafael Miner-June 12, 2021-Reading time: 7 minutes

Can there be an education with an ideology based on scientific excellence in defense of human life, and a philosophy of real gratuity, which is offered at a distance through the Internet, and which offers on a platform hundreds of thousands of meditations and video talks free of charge, available to educational institutions, parishes or families?

Are we dreaming? No. It is real. In the 21st century, this academic center, which is probably the first and perhaps the only one in the world, exists, and it is based on the Anglo-Saxon tradition of its own degrees. All its studies are offered at a distance through the Internet and its degrees are not endorsed by any State, nor do they aspire to be.

This is the Free International University of the Americas (ULIA), founded in 2001 in San José (Costa Rica) by a group of people who, after a series of meetings in summer universities, translated their concern "to launch a winter university, so to speak, a full course, and to adopt an ideology in defense of the dignity of human life and the philosophy of gratuity," explains José Pérez Adán, Professor of Sociology, Rector of ULIA, and author of numerous publications, some of which are about to be released these days under the title 'Economy and Social Health. Beyond Capitalism', with the participation of authors from six countries. ULIA has already trained about 1,750 people since its foundation.

An education that is a gift

Omnes has spoken with the Rector, José Pérez AdánBefore entering into practical matters, we address the founding ideas: "The pro-life ideology was in our intentions, to have among the programs and degrees that were dictated some studies that somehow had to do with the defense of life. In fact, one of our oldest programs is the diploma in bioethics, and on the other hand there is the master's degree (masters), development. Both are intimately related and that is something very peculiar to this University," the professor points out.

On the other hand, "all of us who work at ULIA do it pro bono, that is, free of charge, and we think that this is the best way to give strength to the initial idea we had, the commitment to the defense of life, also because we think (we all work more or less in education), that the future of education is an education without borders, and as far as possible, an education that is fundamentally a gift," he points out.

ULIA, Anglo-Saxon tradition

Some wonder how it is possible that ULIA degrees have no official recognition, and this is another reason for reflection. "This is not so rare," comments the professor. "In Latin countries, much of the administrative system is Napoleonic, as some jurists say. In the sense that it is thought that the State must guarantee certain areas of entrepreneurship, among which is education".

"This is not the case in Anglo-Saxon countries. In this sense, ULIA is like Harvard, the degrees we issue are our own degrees, they are not guaranteed by any State. In Spain and in many other countries, when you receive your university degree, it says on the diploma: the Head of State or the first authority of the country, and in his name the Ministry, grants you the title of doctor in psychology. This is unthinkable in the Anglo-Saxon tradition".

The Rector expands here on the notion of gift, which permeates the character of ULIA, and which gives it "a sense of community." "The objective of the people who come to ULIA is the search for knowledge. One comes to this (networked) University to learn, to enlighten oneself. And also to initiate or continue a chain of gift. Because what makes this University continue over time is that what you receive for free, you feel motivated to give for free. That is why many of the tutors and many of the professors of the University have been their students before. That is very nice to see. We could say that this generates a community, not only in a synchronic sense, but also genuinely in a diachronic sense, it becomes a community through time. I receive a gift and I give it to someone else later. This ensures the survival of the community. This is what happens, for example, in the family".

Freedom and globalization

The topic of freedom could not be left out of the conversation. Even more so when the university is called "free". What do you mean when you say "Free University"? The Rector answers: "Yes, we assume that freedom is a very important human value, but we also mean that it is free from interference by governmental powers. Freedom in the university is fundamental. It is essential for universities to be free, and it is not common".

In most countries, a large part of the university system is dependent on government bodies, says José Pèrez Adán. But in his opinion, "the future does not point in that direction. The future points to government undertakings being less and less present in education. Just as they are less and less present now, for example, in the postal service. Governments have less and less presence in this service. The same will happen in education, to the extent that civil society matures, becomes more responsible, and takes on the task of educating future generations, to that same extent governments will see that their task there perhaps does not have the meaning it had in other times, and they will dedicate themselves to other things".

Could it be said that ULIA is the only university in the world based on volunteerism? "That's right," says the Rector, but "At first many people didn't understand this. It was unique, and also rare, unthinkable. Today, however, it is not. We are in a much more globalized world than at the beginning of our century. And this globalization is also knocking on the doors of education. The future of education is a future in which borders will count for less and less. There is, for example, the rise of family education, homeschoolingand others that are going to be carried out worldwide, also at the university level. I can add that ULIA is not a confessional university. Although most of us who started this university have a Christian, Catholic commitment and lifestyle, we have had people who have collaborated with us from other Christian denominations".

University and politics: different spheres

Another question of interest is whether it is up to Science to make the policy proposal. "This is an old debate. What we scientists aim to do is to understand, to comprehend, and as a consequence, to enlighten, to teach. The commitment of politicians to management adds a different characteristic to university work. In fact, many universities now teach management, governance, for example. And at ULIA we also have a diploma on management of non-profit organizations. But from a scientific point of view, what is really important is the task of understanding, of comprehension, and then enlightenment," says José Pérez Adán.

Regulated courses

Finally, we turn to the practical. "Our approach is humble," says the Rector, before offering some information about the University's regulated courses and the LDVM seminars. Among the first are the expert course in Catholic communication, or the diplomas in school religious education, in bioethics, in education in virtues through cinema, and so on.

"The ULIA courses are dated. They are regulated courses and a Diploma is awarded at the end. They all start on January 1 of each year, except those that are biannual, every two years, which are the master's degrees or masters. Enrollment just opened on May 25. People can apply for the one they want in the training offer. However, those who wish to take a course must fill in the forms of the registration process that is on the website ulia.org. They are studied, answered, and we ask that a small donation be made for the computer support of the course," says the Rector.

Admissions are closed in October-November, when the group for each course is full. ULIA reports that it tries to close the courses at 20 students per program, although there are some exceptions. For example, a school in Paraguay requested that all the teachers take the religious education course, and there were 102 registrations.

LDVM Seminars

Although ULIA was born first, later, in order to give it a more stable legal seat, the ULIA was launched. Inter-American Science and Life Foundationregistered in the Valencian Community. One of the Foundation's projects, the first one, was the University, and then came Catholic Voices España, which we founded here in Valencia, at the initiative of Catholic Voices Englandwho are the first. Jack Valero was here in Valencia, also Austen Ivereigh, co-founder".

What was it like to launch the LDVM platform? Professor José Perez Adán offers two insights into the intrahistory: "Once the first two or three Catholic Voices programs were done at ULIA, the need arose right there. We had a lot of material to supply to all the people who do our program, and to ULIA alumni who have to do with spirituality. We are also going to create a platform, LDVM, within the Foundation, to cover the spectrum that ULIA does not have, because ULIA is not confessional, but LDVM is. So we created LDVM, which has its own flight.

The LDVM seminars They don't have dates, they are always available for anyone who asks for them, says José Pérez Adán. "Any of the LDVM seminars are already recorded. Anyone who wants to attend sends the request, and we give them the key. Access is immediate. There is no exchange of any kind. Just send an email to [email protected] or to [email protected]  The keys are changed periodically.

LDVM currently has 35 priests posting their talks and a quarter of a million meditations available. There is an Australian priest who in 24 hours has 500 downloads, says José Pérez Adán. The person who has the most meditations on ivoox.com/podcast-podcast-podcast-podcast-podcast-podcast-podcast-podcast-meditations-father-ricardo-sada_sq_f1476531_1.html is Mexican priest, Father Ricardo Sada.

Congress on transhumanism

The annual meeting is usually held in person, says the Rector. With the pandemic, the Congress of this year 2021 will be held in the online modality, from July 29 to 31, and will be about Human dignity in the face of the challenge of transhumanism. A multidisciplinary reflectionorganized by ULIA, the Center for Bioethics Studies and Research (CEIB), (ceibmx.com/), based in Mexico, and the ICES School of Philosophy. "We were going to do it in Guadalajara (Mexico), in person, but in the end it will be online. Let's see if next year, in 2022, we can do it in person; it would be in Puerto Rico," concludes José Pérez Adán.

Spain

Ángel Lasheras, new Rector of the Torreciudad Sanctuary

This priest, a native of A Coruña, succeeds Pedro Díez-Antoñanzas, who joined in October 2016 and will continue his pastoral duties in Zaragoza.

Maria José Atienza-June 12, 2021-Reading time: < 1 minute

The new Rector of the Sanctuary of TorreciudadÁngel Lasheras holds a degree in Medicine and Surgery from the University of Santiago de Compostela and a Doctorate in Ecclesiastical Philosophy from the University of the Holy Cross in Rome, with a thesis on the Metaphysics of Beauty in Saint Thomas Aquinas.

After finishing his medical studies in 1978, he lived in different cities of Galicia - Santiago de Compostela, Vigo, Ferrol - until 1991, when he moved to live and study in Rome, where he remained until January 1998.

Lasheras was ordained Deacon in Torreciudad in the summer of 1997, and received priestly ordination from Bishop Javier Echevarría, Bishop and Prelate of Opus Dei, on September 21, 1997.

He has carried out his priestly ministry as Vicar of the Delegations of Valladolid and Galicia of the Opus Deifrom 1999 to 2019.

In August 2019 he moved to live in Madrid, where he has exercised his pastoral work in the Centers of the Prelature and in the work of the Priestly Society of the Holy Cross.

Read more
The Vatican

Holy See updates governance of international associations of the faithful

With this decree, the Dicastery for the Laity, Family and Life regulates the duration and number of terms of office of the governing bodies, as well as the representativeness of the governing bodies. 

Maria José Atienza-June 11, 2021-Reading time: 3 minutes

The decree of the Dicastery for the Laity, the Family and Life published today regulates the duration and number of terms of office of the governing positions, as well as the representativeness of the governing bodies, "in order to promote a healthy rotation and avoid appropriations".

This decree, which will apply to international associations of the faithful recognized or erected by the Apostolic See and subject to the direct supervision of the Dicastery, arises from the observation of "very diversified practices in the management of leadership responsibilities," as noted in the accompanying explanatory note, and this "experience has prompted a study and discernment aimed at the good conduct of governance within these aggregations."

The Decree regulates two main areas: the regulation of the mandates of the governing bodies at the international level and the representativeness of the latter. As the note points out, "the General Decree promulgated today - which has the specific approval of the Supreme Pontiff - regulates these mandates as to their duration and number and, for associations, the participation of members in the constitution of the central governing bodies".

Key points of the Decree

with reference to international associations of the faithful recognized or erected by the Apostolic See and subject to the direct supervision of the Dicastery, the following.

The terms of office in the central governing body at the international level may have a maximum duration of five years each.

The same person may hold office in the central governing body at the international level for a maximum period of ten consecutive years.

Art. 2 § 2. - After the maximum limit of ten years, re-election is only possible after a vacancy of one term of office.

Art. 2 § 3. - The provision in Art. 2.2 does not apply to a person who has been elected moderator, who may exercise this function regardless of the number of years he/she has held another office in the central governing body at the international level.

Art. 2 § 4 - A person who has served as moderator for a maximum of ten years shall not be eligible to hold this office again; however, he/she may hold other offices in the central governing body at the international level only after a vacancy of two terms in these offices.

Art. 3. - All members pleno iure shall have an active voice, directly or indirectly, in the constitution of the bodies that elect the central governing body at the international level.

Art. 4 § 1. - Associations in which, at the time of the entry into force of this Decree, the positions in the central governing body at the international level are vested in members who have exceeded the limits set forth in Articles 1 and 2, shall provide for new elections within a maximum period of twenty-four months from the entry into force of this Decree.

Art. 4 § 2. - Associations in which, at the time of the entry into force of this Decree, the positions in the central governing body at the international level are held by members who exceed, during the current term of office, the limits set forth in Articles 1 and 2, shall provide for new elections within a maximum period of twenty-four months from the attainment of the maximum limit imposed by this Decree.

Art. 5. - The founders may be dispensed from the norms of articles 1, 2 and 4 by the Dicastery for the Laity, the Family and Life.

Art. 6. - The present dispositions do not refer to the offices of government which are connected with the application of the norms proper to clerical associations, institutes of consecrated life or societies of apostolic life.

Art. 7. - The present Decree applies, with the exception of the norm of Article 3, also to other entities not recognized or erected as international associations of the faithful, which have been granted juridical personality and which are subject to the direct supervision of the Dicastery for the Laity, the Family and Life.

Art. 8. - From the entry into force of this Decree and until the approval of possible modifications of the statutes by the Dicastery for the Laity, the Family and Life, what is established abrogates any norm contrary to it that may be foreseen in the statutes of the associations.

Article 9 - This Decree, promulgated by publication in the Official Journal of the L'Osservatore RomanoThe Decree shall enter into force three months after the day of its publication. The Decree will also be published in the official commentary of the Acta Apostolicae Sedis.

The Supreme Pontiff Francis, in the Audience granted on June 2, 2021 to the undersigned, Cardinal Prefect of the Dicastery for the Laity, the Family and Life, has specifically approved the present General Decree, which has the force of law, together with the Explanatory Note that accompanies it.

Given in Rome, at the offices of the Dicastery for the Laity, the Family and Life, on June 3, 2021, Solemnity of the Most Holy Body and Blood of Christ.

Card. Kevin Farrell
Prefect

P. Alexandre Awi Mello, I.Sch.
Secretary

The Vatican

Monsignor Lazarus You Heung-sik appointed Prefect of the Congregation for the Clergy

He succeeds Cardinal Beniamino Stella who will remain at the head of the Congregation until the new prefect takes office.

Maria José Atienza-June 11, 2021-Reading time: < 1 minute

Lazarus You Heung-sik, current Bishop of Daejeon, as Prefect of the Congregation for the Clergy.

A native of Nonsan-gun Chungnam, 69-year-old Monsignor Lazarus You Heung-sik succeeds Cardinal Beniamino Stella, prefect since 2013 and who will remain at the head of the Congregation until the new prefect takes office.

Lazarus You Heung-sik will become Archbishop Emeritus of the Korean diocese of Daejeon, of which he has been titular archbishop since 2005.

The family, the place you leave, the place you come back to

Let us return, then, to the place not only of where we are, but to the place "that we are", to the divine and human family of which we are a part, and let us do so with all its consequences.

June 11, 2021-Reading time: 3 minutes

The place to which one returns. This is how the philosopher Rafael Alvira defines the family. This is the title of a book of reflections that, despite being some years old, continues to be a reference for understanding what is happening today with the family institution and, above all, how to recover its value.

We return to the family, sooner or later. More or less consciously, but we return. We are children of the blood that runs through our veins. In spite of all the genetic madness we see today, it will never be possible to empty ourselves of our genetics and replace it with another: the limitation of being creatures, the fruit of "other people's work" is what makes us be us. Therefore, when we speak of the family of all Christians, of the children of God, we are not theorizing about a more or less friendly level of coexistence, but about the same blood, the same flesh, just like that, without hot air.

We return to the family, with our body and with our soul. We see it all the time in those elderly people who remember their childhood more clearly than the day before. Returning to the family (if we are talking, obviously, about a family rooted in love and respect) is nothing more than the natural response of each one of us to the environment in which we are loved for what we are, not for what we have.

The opening pages of the aforementioned book by Alvira contain a few brief but profound strokes about the vital infinitude of the family: "in it we are conservative, since we wish to maintain it, we have a reason to conserve it; we are social, since it is there that we learn to appreciate others; we are liberal, since each one acquires his own personality in it; we are progressive, since it is the institution of growth, and in which we invent in order to offer something good to others".

The job of everyone: young, old, adolescent or unborn is, unfailingly, to play their place within the family. To weigh on the family is to think about "the whole" of our life. Therefore, to ask a father, a mother or a child to choose between "work or family" is a direct attack against the basic right of every person. Moreover, such a choice does not exist: one cannot be put on the same level as the other.

The Year of the Family is every year, even though, in particular, we are in this year Amoris laetitia YearThe family, for example, is part of a global reflection on the family and, in particular, on the Christian family.

This is also a time to reflect on how we value and respect my neighbor's family, that of my subordinates or colleagues....

Mª José Atienza

Certainly, it never hurts to reflect on the family. On ours, yes. To consider how we care for, value and respect each of its members. Also, this is a year to think about the family of others. A time to reflect on how we value and respect the family of my neighbor, that of my subordinates or colleagues... because perhaps, dragged by this hedonistic and utilitarian world we can fall into being one of those who, far from facilitating and proclaiming the joy of love and family, come to ask those around us to choose between work, livelihood, projection, leisure... and family.

So let us return to the place not only where we are from, but to the place "that we are", to the divine and human family of which we are a part, and let us do so with all its consequences. We have a year, or two, or rather, a lifetime.

The authorMaria José Atienza

Director of Omnes. Degree in Communication, with more than 15 years of experience in Church communication. She has collaborated in media such as COPE or RNE.

Read more
The Vatican

Pope asks Marx to remain Archbishop of Munich

Francis does not accept the resignation of Cardinal Marx to continue as Archbishop of Munich-Friesingen, and affirms that, as he asks, "it is urgent to 'ventilate' this reality of the abuses and how the Church proceeded".

David Fernández Alonso-June 10, 2021-Reading time: 5 minutes

Cardinal Marx's recent resignation presented to Pope Francis, which we reported on in Omnes and which you can read hereThe letter, in which the cardinal expressed his desire to leave the leadership of the diocese of Munich and Freising because of the scandal of child abuse in Germany, in a gesture of denunciation so that the Church would assume responsibility, has given rise to abundant speculation about the situation. Now comes the Holy Father's response in a letter published today, June 10, 2021.

Cardinal Marx has always been a promoter of the fight against abuse, as is shown by his interest in setting up a foundation in Munich dedicated to this. As president of the Bishops' Conference, he also promoted the synodal path to address the lack of credibility of the German Church due to these scandals.

His harmony with Pope Francis is manifest, as evidenced by the fact that the Holy Father called him to join the Council of Cardinals, which seeks to assist the Pontiff in the governance of the Church and reform the Roman Curia, Pope Francis also appointed him President of the Council for the Economy.

Reinhard Marx was appointed archbishop of Munich-Friesland on November 30, 2007, and a cardinal since 2010, created by Pope Benedict XVI on November 20, 2010. He received the title of Cardinal Presbyter of St. Corbinianus. At that time, he was the youngest member of the College of Cardinals. In 2020 he announced his decision not to renew his mandate as head of the Episcopal Conference.

We reproduce below the full letter of Pope Francis:

Dear brother,

            first of all, thank you for your courage. It is a Christian courage that does not fear the cross, does not fear to be humbled before the tremendous reality of sin. This is what the Lord did (Phil 2. 5-8). It is a grace that the Lord has given you and I see that you want to assume it and guard it so that it may bear fruit. Thank you.

You tell me that you are going through a moment of crisis, and not only you but also the Church in Germany is going through it. The whole Church is in crisis because of the abuse affair; moreover, the Church today cannot take a step forward without assuming this crisis. The ostrich policy leads nowhere, and the crisis has to be assumed from our paschal faith. Sociologisms and psychologisms are useless. To assume the crisis, personally and communally, is the only fruitful way because we do not come out of a crisis alone but in community and we must also keep in mind that we come out of a crisis better or worse, but never the same.1.

You tell me that since last year you have been reflecting: you set out on a journey, seeking God's will with the decision to accept it, whatever it may be.

I agree with you in describing as a catastrophe the sad history of sexual abuse and the way the Church dealt with it until recently. To become aware of this hypocrisy in the way of living the faith is a grace, it is a first step that we must take. We have to take charge of history, both personally and as a community. We cannot remain indifferent in the face of this crime. To assume it supposes to put ourselves in crisis.

Not everyone wants to accept this reality, but it is the only way, because making "resolutions" to change one's life without "putting the flesh on the grill" does not lead to anything. Personal, social and historical realities are concrete and should not be assumed with ideas; because ideas are discussed (and it is good that they are) but reality must always be assumed and discerned. It is true that historical situations must be interpreted with the hermeneutics of the time in which they occurred, but this does not exempt us from taking charge and assuming them as the history of the "sin that besieges us". Therefore, in my opinion, every Bishop of the Church must assume it and ask himself what should I do in the face of this catastrophe?

The "mea culpa" in front of so many historical errors of the past we have done it more than once before many situations although we personally have not participated in that historical conjuncture. And this same attitude is what we are being asked to adopt today. We are asked for a reform, which - in this case - does not consist in words but in attitudes that have the courage to put themselves in crisis, to assume the reality whatever the consequences may be. And every reform begins with oneself. The reform in the Church has been made by men and women who were not afraid to enter into crisis and let themselves be reformed by the Lord. This is the only way, otherwise we will be nothing more than "reform ideologues" who do not put their own flesh at stake.

The Lord never accepted to make "the reform" (allow me to use the expression) neither with the Pharisee or the Sadducee or the Zealot or the Essene project. He did it with his life, with his history, with his flesh on the cross. And this is the way, the way that you yourself, dear brother, assumed when you presented your renunciation.

You rightly say in your letter that burying the past leads to nothing. Silences, omissions, giving too much weight to the prestige of the Institutions only lead to personal and historical failure, and lead us to live with the burden of "having skeletons in the closet", as the saying goes.

It is urgent to "ventilate" this reality of abuses and of how the Church proceeded, and let the Spirit lead us to the desert of desolation, to the cross and to the resurrection. It is the path of the Spirit that we must follow, and the starting point is humble confession: we have made a mistake, we have sinned. Neither the polls nor the power of the institutions will save us. We will not be saved by the prestige of our Church, which tends to conceal its sins; we will not be saved by the power of money or the opinion of the media (so often we are too dependent on them). We will be saved by opening the door to the Only One who can do it and confessing our nakedness: "I have sinned", "we have sinned"... and weeping, and stammering as best we can that "depart from me, for I am a sinner", a legacy that the first Pope left to the Popes and Bishops of the Church. And then we will feel that healing shame that opens the doors to the compassion and tenderness of the Lord who is always close to us. As Church we must ask for the grace of shame, and may the Lord save us from being the shameless prostitute of Ezekiel 16.

I like the way you end your letter: "I will gladly continue to be a priest and bishop of this Church and I will continue to be involved in pastoral work as long as I consider it sensible and opportune. I would like to dedicate the future years of my service in a more intense way to pastoral care and to commit myself to a spiritual renewal of the Church, as you tirelessly request".

And this is my answer, dear brother. Continue as you propose, but as Archbishop of Munchen and Freising. And if you are tempted to think that, by confirming your mission and not accepting your resignation, this Bishop of Rome (your brother who loves you) does not understand you, think of what Peter felt before the Lord when, in his own way, he presented him with his resignation: "Depart from me, for I am a sinner", and listen to the answer: "Shepherd my sheep".

With fraternal affection.

FRANCISCO

Notes
  1. There is a danger of not accepting the crisis and taking refuge in conflicts, an attitude that ends up suffocating and preventing any possible transformation. Because the crisis possesses a germ of hope, the conflict - on the contrary - of despair; the crisis involves ... the conflict - on the other hand - entangles us and provokes the aseptic attitude of Pilate: "I am innocent of this blood. It is your business" (Mt. 27:24) ... which has done and is doing us so much harm.
Photo Gallery

The Sacred Heart of Jesus illuminated by the moon

The moon envelops the statue of the Sacred Heart of Jesus that can be seen in the town of Wolxheim (Wolixe), France. The image was taken on February 20, 2019 during a full moon. 

Maria José Atienza-June 10, 2021-Reading time: < 1 minute
The Vatican

Synodal paths, the new processes

In recent years, much has been said about this process, which does not have a normative configuration, but rather arises from the experience - or the problems - of a given national territory, at the initiative of the bishops of those lands.

Giovanni Tridente-June 10, 2021-Reading time: 3 minutes

There is an effervescence in the Church around a topic that very often excites more the "insiders" and protagonists than the whole faithful people. And yet it is a process, if we want to call it institutional, at the end of which opinions emerge on questions concerning the life of the Church in general and the state of evangelization in particular.

We speak, in case it was not understood, of those Assemblies that generally receive the name of Synod, which are held in various stages and with different cadences, both in the universal Church and in the particular Churches.

There are the Synods...

The best known are the Synods of Bishops generally convoked every two or three years by the Pope to reflect on matters of general interest in the Church (priesthood, catechesis, vocation of the laity, etc.), urgent or not, but also on particular aspects concerning, for example, a geographical area or a territory. The last one, for example, was on Amazonia, which generated the Apostolic Exhortation Dear Amazonia of Pope Francis.

The Code of Canon Law only attributes the name Synod to another type of assembly, which is that of the priests and other faithful of a diocese who meet to assist the bishop - and his convocation - in matters affecting that particular Church. It is not by chance that it is called "Diocesan Synod".

... and then the Synodal Pathways

In recent years and months, there has been much talk of another process that does not have a normative configuration, but rather arises from the experience - or the problems - of a given national territory, at the initiative of the bishops of those lands. Let us think, for example, of the "synodal path" - as we can see, a different name that does not configure the institution of the Synod properly speaking - that is taking place in Germany, and which is generating a very strong debate in the Church in general.

It is not the case to go into the specificities of this local path, and of the issues that are being addressed also with not a few polemics. Suffice it to recall what Pope Francis himself wrote exactly two years ago, on June 29, 2019, in a Letter to the people of God on pilgrimage in Germany.

Beware of temptations

On that occasion, the Pontiff invited us to beware of the possible temptations that can creep into our lives. synodal journeyAmong them is that of "thinking that, in the face of so many problems and shortcomings, the best response would be to reorganize things, to make changes and especially "patches" that would allow the life of the Church to be put in order and in harmony, adapting it to the present logic or that of a particular group".

The risk, on the other hand, would be to find ourselves with "a good ecclesial body, well organized and even 'modernized' but without evangelical soul and novelty; we would live a 'gaseous' Christianity without evangelical bite".

A Road to the Jubilee of 2025

A similar path is being pursued in Italy, even if the needs and problems are different from those in Germany. Here, for example, there is not an excessive distancing of the faithful from religious practice, but rather a certain stillness and a settling down that also leads to a loss of enthusiasm.

On several occasions, meeting with the bishops of the Italian Episcopal Conference, Pope Francis had urged this synodal journey, which would take up the historical and cultural roots of the country and rekindle in the people the joyful flame of a faith lived at the service of the common good, as it was for so many charismatic figures in past decades. Priests, committed lay people and politicians...

After several resistances, during the last General Assembly of the Italian Bishops, opened also by the presence of the Holy Father as in previous years, a "letter of intent" was signed on this synodal journey that should involve all the national dioceses for the next 4 years, until the Jubilee of 2025.

The first stage, in 2022, will concern the involvement of the people of God with moments of listening, research and proposals in the dioceses, parishes and ecclesial realities, "from the bottom up", as the Pontiff defined it. Then, in 2023, it will be the turn of the stage "from the periphery to the center", in which there will be a dialogue with all the expressions of Italian Catholicism. In 2024 there will be a synthesis of the road travelled and the delivery of shared pastoral guidelines, "from top to bottom". The Jubilee should be the occasion for a general verification of the process carried out.

A time of rebirth

The Italian bishops want to foresee a time of rebirth that passes through the recovery of the reading of the Words, of the eschatological aspect of the Christian faith, of catechesis lived as a path of ongoing formation, of a rediscovery of the value of the family, of solidarity, of charity and of civil commitment.

General participation will be necessary, but the journey has just begun. And many insights will surely emerge as we "walk".

The Vatican

Pope reminds that "a prayer that is alien to life is not healthy".

Pope Francis reflected on perseverance in prayer during the general audience on Wednesday, June 9, in the courtyard of St. Damasus.

David Fernández Alonso-June 9, 2021-Reading time: 3 minutes

Pope Francis dedicated the penultimate catechesis on prayer to talk about perseverance in prayer. "It is an invitation, indeed, a commandment that comes to us from Sacred Scripture. The spiritual journey of the Russian pilgrim begins when he encounters a phrase of St. Paul in his first letter to the Thessalonians: "Pray constantly. In everything give thanks" (5:17-18). The Apostle's words touch this man and he wonders how it is possible to pray without interruption, given that our life is fragmented into many different moments, which do not always make it possible to concentrate. From this questioning begins his search, which will lead him to discover the so-called prayer of the heart. This consists in repeating with faith: "Lord Jesus Christ, Son of God, have mercy on me, a sinner". A prayer that, little by little, adapts to the rhythm of breathing and extends to the whole day. In fact, breathing never ceases, not even while we sleep; and prayer is the breath of life".

"How is it possible to always maintain a state of prayer," Francis asked. "The Catechism offers us very beautiful quotations, taken from the history of spirituality, which insist on the need for continuous prayer, which is the fulcrum of Christian existence. I quote some of them.

Referring to St. John Chrysostom, a pastor attentive to concrete life, the Pope paraphrased those words of his that say: "It is fitting for a man to pray attentively, whether he is sitting in the marketplace or taking a stroll; it is fitting for him who sits at his desk or spends his time at other tasks to lift up his soul to God; it is fitting for a rowdy servant or one who wanders about, or one who is serving in the kitchen" (n. 2743). Prayer, therefore, is a kind of musical stave on which we place the melody of our life. It is not contrary to daily work, it is not in contradiction with the many small obligations and encounters, if anything it is the place where every action finds its meaning, its reason and its peace.

The Holy Father is aware that putting these principles into practice is not easy: "A father and a mother, busy with a thousand tasks, can feel nostalgic for a period of their life when it was easy to find time for prayer and prayerful moments. Then there are children, work, the chores of family life, parents who grow old... One has the impression of never being able to reach the top of everything. So it is good to think that God, our Father, who must take care of the whole universe, always remembers each one of us. Therefore, we too must remember Him!

The example of monasticism can help us, the Pope suggested in the audience: "We can recall that in Christian monasticism work has always been held in great esteem, not only because of the moral duty to provide for oneself and others, but also for a kind of inner balance: it is risky for man to cultivate an interest so abstract that he loses contact with reality. Work helps us to remain in touch with reality. The monk's clasped hands bear the calluses of those who wield shovel and hoe. When, in Luke's Gospel (cf. 10:38-42), Jesus tells St. Martha that the only thing really necessary is to listen to God, he does not at all mean to belittle the many services she was doing with such commitment".

Almost at the end, he warned against the danger of allowing oneself to be carried away by work and neglecting the time for prayer: "In the human being everything is "binary": our body is symmetrical, we have two arms, two eyes, two hands... So work and prayer are complementary. Prayer - which is the "breath" of everything - remains the vital background of work, even in the moments when it is not explicit. It is dehumanizing to be so absorbed in work that we no longer find time for prayer.

Finally, he recalled that "a prayer that is alienated from life is not healthy. A prayer that alienates us from the concreteness of life becomes spiritualism, or ritualism. Let us remember that Jesus, after showing his disciples his glory on Mount Tabor, did not want to prolong that moment of ecstasy, but went down the mountain with them and resumed his daily journey. Because that experience had to remain in their hearts as the light and strength of their faith. Thus, the times dedicated to being with God enliven faith, which helps us in the concreteness of life, and faith, in turn, nourishes prayer, without interruption. In this circularity between faith, life and prayer, the fire of Christian love that God expects from each one of us is kept burning.

Read more
Spain

Bishop Rico Pavés, new bishop of Assidonia - Jerez

 José Rico Pavés is the new bishop of the Spanish diocese of Jerez de la Frontera. His inauguration will be on July 31 at 11:00 a.m. in the cathedral of Jerez de la Frontera. 

Maria José Atienza-June 9, 2021-Reading time: 2 minutes

The auxiliary bishop of Getafe succeeds Bishop Jose Mazuelos in the See of Asidon. Jerez was vacant after Bishop Mazuelos took office as bishop of the Canary Islands last October.

The Holy See announced at noon this afternoon the appointment of  Msgr. José Rico Pavés as the new bishop of the Spanish diocese of Jerez de la Frontera. 

The inauguration of Bishop Rico Pavés as Bishop of Jerez will take place on July 31 at 11:00 a.m. in the Cathedral of Jerez.

Rico Pavés has collaborated with Omnes on several occasions in both its print and digital versions with writings on Pope Francis, such as The gestures of Pope Francis o Teachings of the Pope: For the Greater Glory of God.

During the press conference held by the new bishop of Jerez, he said that during his teenage years he lived in Cadiz and there he lived "the time of the decisive questions".

Brief biography

Bishop José Rico Pavés was born on October 9, 1966 in Granada. He completed his ecclesiastical studies at the seminary of Toledo between 1985-1987 and 1989-1992. From 1987 to 1989 he followed a course in spirituality and another in ecclesiastical languages. He was ordained a priest on October 11, 1992. He holds a degree in Dogmatic Theology (1994) and a doctorate in Patristic Theology (1998) from the Pontifical Gregorian University in Rome.

He carried out his priestly ministry between Granada and Toledo, combining his pastoral work with teaching. At the time of his episcopal appointment, he was the director of the secretariat of the Episcopal Commission for the Doctrine of Faith of the Spanish Episcopal Conference, a position he held from 2001 to 2013.

He was appointed auxiliary bishop of Getafe on July 6, 2012 and received the episcopal consecration on September 21 of the same year at the Shrine of the Sacred Heart of Jesus, in Cerro de los Angeles.

In the EEC he is in charge of the Catechumenate area of the Episcopal Commission for Evangelization, Catechesis and Catechumenate from March 2020. 

Initiatives

Fundación CEU launches 'Haciéndote Preguntas', to analyze the big issues of the day

National experts from different fields analyze and give arguments about the major issues that concern today's society, from euthanasia, educational freedom to pornography or the use of screens and video games.

Maria José Atienza-June 9, 2021-Reading time: < 1 minute

The project, led by the San Pablo CEU Foundation and ABC, aims to "recover certain issues of concern to society that are not present in the public debate", as pointed out by Alfonso Bullón de Mendoza, president of the San Pablo CEU University Foundation, who states that "there was no proposal of this type in the education sector and we felt it was very necessary".

Among the interviewees who will be interviewed in this program we find reference names such as Marian Rojas, Jesús Muñoz de Priego, Alonso García de la Puente, Pilar García de la Granja, Luis Chiva or Toni Nadal, among others.

In the first episode, Alonso García de la Puente, director of the psychosocial team at the Hospital de Cuidados Laguna de Madrid, will answer questions from citizens of different ages about euthanasia and palliative care. Each week a preview will also be available for viewing and commenting on social networks, with the hashtag #Haciendotepreguntas.

Sunday Readings

Readings for the XI Sunday in Ordinary Time

Andrea Mardegan comments on the readings of the XI Sunday in Ordinary Time

Andrea Mardegan-June 9, 2021-Reading time: 2 minutes

Commentary on the readings of Sunday XI

Jesus is in Capernaum, by the lake, and goes to teach by the sea. The crowd is so great that he has to get into a boat, and from there he tells parables explaining the mysteries of the kingdom of God. We read two brief parables of this discourse, after a passage from the second Letter to the Corinthians where Paul repeats twice the expression "full of good cheer": "Brethren, we are always full of good cheer, even though we know that while we dwell in the body we are in exile away from the Lord [...], full of good cheer.". It is trust in God that gives us grace and sows in us the beginning of his kingdom, and guarantees its growth. 

The first parable is proper only to Mark. "The kingdom of God becomes like a man casting seed on the ground.". Jesus speaks of great supernatural mysteries using simple human images. Thus we understand that the kingdom of God is hidden in our normal life, and that in created realities we discover supernatural mysteries: creation and redemption are the work of God. "The earth spontaneously produces first the stalk, then the ear, then full wheat in the ear."in Greek, the word is automàtê, spontaneously: the inner power of divine grace that leads to growth. "Sleep or watch, night and day, the seed sprouts and grows. How, he himself does not know". The farmers who listen to Jesus recognize themselves in his words: theirs was the gesture of sowing; then, the seed grows without counting on them. 

These words can give much peace and serenity to those who have received the seed of baptism. It is a parable to memorize and teach, overcoming the fear that it may be too soft or may favor spiritual quietism. On the other hand, it is a guide to trust and abandonment in God. It can be an effective antidote against spiritual Pelagianism, which is always lurking. "When the fruit is ripe, immediately send forth the scythe, for the harvest has come."This vision of the end of life or of history can instill a lot of confidence. The final call of death comes when maturation has taken place, when we are ready. 

The second parable focuses on the contrast between the smallness of the beginning-the mustard seed, according to the popular opinion of the rabbis, was "the smallest of all the seeds of the earth"-. and the result of growth: Jesus' listeners know that the mustard plant on the shores of Lake Tiberias reaches up to three meters in height and birds can nest there. Such is the Kingdom of God, the Church, which Jesus is sowing as a small seed, and such is the seed of the Kingdom in each of those who listen to him. It will grow, bear fruit and shelter.

Spain

The reform of the Vatican penal system, theme of the Omnes Forum

The Secretary of the Pontifical Council for Legislative Texts, is the speaker at the Omnes Forum to be held on June 10 at 7:30 p.m. (UTC+2) live on the Omnes Youtube channel.

Maria José Atienza-June 9, 2021-Reading time: < 1 minute

Bishop Juan Ignacio ArrietaSecretary of the Pontifical Council for Legislative Texts, is the speaker at the Forum Omnes, which will be held at the end of October. June 10 at 19:30h. (Spanish time) and will be broadcast live on Omnes' Youtube channel.

The forum, which will be conducted by the priest and doctor in Canon Law, Ricardo Bazanprofessor at the University of Piura, will address the main points of reform that have been submitted to the Book VI of the Code of Canon Law through the Apostolic Constitution Pascite Gregem Deiwhich is dated May 23, 2021, but was announced on June 1.

Bishop Arrieta was in charge of presenting this renewal of the Code of Canon Law. A work that has meant "a collegial work, which has involved many people around the world. And it has also been a somewhat complex work, because being a universal law, it had to be adapted to the demands of very diverse cultures and concrete situations" as he acknowledged in the interview that the Secretary of the Pontifical Council for Legislative Texts granted to Omnes on this occasion.

https://youtu.be/0CRxn62XNdA

This forum counts with the collaboration in the production of Rome Reports and the sponsorship of Banco Sabadell, Centro Académico Romano Foundation and UMAS Insurance.

Read more
Family

Healing wounded loves

The goal of pastoral accompaniment is to integrate into the full life of Jesus and his Church, by means of a path or process of purification, through concrete and effective help that is adapted to the different family situations. 

José Miguel Granados-June 9, 2021-Reading time: 4 minutes

A broken family

 "Dealings under the firm of Dombey and son: wholesale, retail and export" (Dombey & son): is the full and meaningful title of one of the saddest stories of the brilliant novelist Charles Dickens. Mr. Paul Dombey lives with the obsessive pretension of prestige based on his social renown and the success of his company. He subordinates all the members of his family to this egomaniacal intention, to the point of becoming lamentably incapable of loving, causing serious wounds in the people around him -in his daughter Florence, in his wife Edith- and in himself.

Only when his life and his family are broken and ruined will he recognize his grave mistakes. In the end, after much suffering, the compassion and boundless tenderness of his daughter will be able to offer comfort and peace to her father and his wife.

Dombey and son

AuthorCharles Dickens
Year: 1846-1848

The art of accompaniment

Pope Francis states in the exhortation Amoris laetitiae that "the Church must accompany with attention and care her most fragile children, marked by wounded and misplaced love, giving them confidence and hope again, like the light of a harbor lighthouse or of a torch carried among the people to enlighten those who have lost their way or are in the midst of the storm". (AL, n. 291).

The Church is mother, teacher and educator, and also acts as a house of health and "....field hospital. Evangelizing action refers mainly to the construction and rehabilitation of individuals and communities, with the many tools that the Lord has left us so that we may have abundant life.

The accompaniment personal and ecclesial constitutes a art and a virtue. It requires the acquisition of a set of human and Christian skills: knowledge, wisdom, love, prudence, trust, humility, faith, hope, patience, etc. Like all helping relationships, pastoral care requires recognition of the dignity of each person, for no one should be discriminated against because of his or her condition or behavior. To accompany means to be at the side of those who sufferto take charge of their situation, of their ruptures, of their yearnings.

The normal gradual in the stages of growth, healing and reconstruction. In this gradual process of human and Christian maturation, the aim is to ensure that individuals come to discover and accept -by themselves, with the help of the Holy Spirit. the light of revealed truthThe goal of pastoral accompaniment is to help them understand the meaning of self-giving and fidelity as something that is within each one of them: the dreamed realization of their marriage and family project, the divine promise hidden in their deepest desires. The goal of pastoral accompaniment consists in integrate in the full life of Jesus and his Church, by means of a path or process of purification, formation and sanctification.

The following are to be to offer concrete and effective support. It is essential that people find all the ecclesial support to rebuild their lives according to the Gospel: various groups of faith life and pastors who are approachable, cordial, with a human and supernatural sense; Christian families who are welcoming and open; Church centers specialized in family care. It is a question of walk a pathThe person in need of human and ecclesial help, step by step, including, when necessary, the specialized attention of professionals in psychology, law, medicine, social assistance, etc., who possess the right ecclesial criteria.

The true love, described in the beautiful Pauline hymn to charity (cf. 1 Cor 12,31-13,13), it appears as fundamental key to interpretation of evangelizing action in the area of marriage and the family (cf. AL89-119). The true mercy leads to a life according to the Christian covenantThe rights and duties arising from personal and family identity and status.

Pedagogy of grace

– Supernatural moral law, inscribed in the conscience, taught in the Gospel and handed down by the Church, is a don of God that shows the way to the fullness of life. Indeed, with the help of grace the commandments can be observed, whose summit is the new mandate of Christian love. Evangelization must embrace the greatness of man redeemed in Christ, called to holiness in every state and circumstance of life. For this reason, it is necessary to affirm: "It is possible tobecause this is what the Gospel demands" (cf. AL, 102).

Francis proposes the formula of giving "small steps" in the "path of grace and growth". Little by little, the person who prays, listens to the Word of God, lives in the Christian community, exercises the works of charity and mercy, is formed in the faith of the Church, etc., comes to understand the truth of the Gospel as good news, becomes capable of living it, grows in desire for communion, and becomes attuned to the mind of Christ and to his heart.

This process consists in leading gently, as on an inclined plane, towards virtuous connaturality with the good. The situation of the concrete person must be taken into account; the person must be accompanied - to use a simile - in the ascent of the steps towards a higher life; the Christian's path must be made pleasant; the attractiveness and joy of the evangelical life must be shown. This pastoral form constitutes an authentic human and Christian pedagogy.

Evangelizing families, bearers of hope

It is the whole Church that which accompanies people in precarious family situations. The always valid pastoral formula proposed by St. Paul consists of exercising "charity in truth". (cf. Eph 4:15). People who have suffered family breakdown should be helped to be convinced that their life, with its concrete circumstances, is also a space of grace, a history of love and salvation: that they can do much good by remaining firm in the faith in the position they occupy; that their perseverance is a reference point and a treasure for their children and for the whole Church; that their pain is salvific and fruitful; that they can improve; that the hope human and supernatural can always be reborn.

Read more
Initiatives

Skate Hero: A wave of hope

In the musical "Skate Hero" Ignacio's heart beats in the hearts of the fifty young people who want to follow Ignacio Echevarría's example. 

Javier Segura-June 9, 2021-Reading time: 2 minutes

It is difficult to talk about something when you are part of that history. But I can't help but recall with gratitude what we experienced this Saturday, June 5, at the premiere of the musical 'Skate Hero'. A musical made in honor of Ignacio Echeverría, who died four years ago in a bomb attack. jihadist in London, when he was defending a young stranger with his skateboard.

After a few months of excited work, we were able to represent the musical we had been working on first to perform in Wales, and then, at the request of Ignacio's own family, in his hometown, Las Rozas.

There were two sessions, in order to reach the maximum number of people, but there could have been many more. The capacity for these two sessions was filled in just twenty minutes when the box office opened. Everything was foreshadowing what we were about to experience. And it was not for less. The figure of Ignacio, his heroic gesture that four years ago moved the whole world, is still alive today, perhaps more alive than ever.

And the media echoed the simple tribute that this group of young people wanted to pay to Ignacio. Magazines, newspapers and even television surprised us with their interest in the story and helped many more people to get to know him.

People... and institutions, because the City Council was involved in the organization of the event and with the presence of its mayor, Mr. José de la Uz. We were also able to count on the presence of the Cardinal of Madrid, Mr. Carlos Osoro, and even the King and Queen of Spain wanted to be present, in some way, sending words of welcome and support!

Emotions intensified between rhythms of songs, recalling the last twenty-four hours of Ignacio's life, faithfully following the information in his own father's book, 'This was my son Ignacio, the skateboard hero'.  Emotions that reached their climax at the final moment, when Ignacio's parents thanked us for the musical, read the message of the Kings and gave us a skateboard of Ignacio, so that we could keep it.

What can I tell you? Well, I have the feeling of being part of something big, much bigger than ourselves. That Ignacio's life, in some way, continues to beat in these young people who took the stage yesterday to sing and tell that it is worth giving one's life for love.

That is why the words of Guillermo, Ignacio's friend, at the tribute paid to him by the City Council of Las Rozas after the attack, have come true again. Guillermo emotionally shouted then, as the skateboarders held up their skateboards, that the terrorists had not killed Ignacio. 'Look, look what you have achieved. This wave of hope.

I think there is no better expression to tell what we live. A wave of hope. The hearts of these young people vibrate to the rhythm of music, skateboarding, surfing. But also to the rhythm of dedication, friendship and faith. It beats to the same rhythm as Ignacio's heart.

That is why it is not an empty, merely sentimental hope. Ignatius' heart beats now in the hearts of the fifty young people who have put the best of themselves on the stage and who want to follow Ignatius' example, to give their lives for love, day by day. His death was not in vain. The life of Ignatius has multiplied. Truly a wave of hope arose in Las Rozas.

Read more
Latin America

The U.S. Supreme Court could reverse Roe v. Wade

If the United States changes the doctrine established in 1973, which enshrined the right to abortion in that country, we may find ourselves in the future with a process that could reverse the legislation that made the so-called right to decide prevail over the right to life.

Santiago Leyra Curiá-June 9, 2021-Reading time: 2 minutes

On May 19, Texas Governor Greg Abbott, a Republican, signed into law one of the most restrictive abortion laws in the United States, which prohibits abortion after six weeks of gestation, when in many cases women do not even know they are pregnant. This law joins a series of laws protecting the right to life of the unborn child that have been passed in various states of the country in recent years.

The initialing of this language comes after the U.S. Supreme Court announced two days earlier that it will consider a case restricting this procedure in Mississippi. The Mississippi case will mark the first occasion in which the Supreme Court will rule on a state law restricting abortion with a possible change in approach with unknown repercussions.

The High Court is now composed of 9 justices, 5 of whom are Catholic (John Roberts, Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito, Brett Kananaugh, Sonia Sotomayor and Amy Coney Barret), Elena Kagan and Stephen Breyer are Jewish and Neil Gorsuch is Protestant. And of those, a solid majority are considered to be pro-right to life and Sonia Sotomayor, Elena Kagan and Stephen Breyer are not.

If the United States changes the doctrine established in 1973 on the occasion of the famous Roe versus Wade ruling, which enshrined the right to abortion in that country, we may find ourselves in the future with a process that could reverse the legislation that made the so-called right to decide prevail over the right to life. 

And this would happen during the presidency of a Catholic who has legislated and spoken out in favor of abortion throughout his already extensive political career. Joe Biden has stated before and after his election that he is "committed" to the protection of the right to abortion in the country and that regardless of the decision that the SC will soon adopt, he is committed to protect "Roe v. Wade". This affirmation has been ratified by the facts, since one of his first measures as president was to revoke the prohibition to finance foreign organizations that perform abortions.

Precisely for this reason, the Episcopal Conference of the United States decided to recall in a document that Catholic politicians who are publicly in favor of the right to abortion should not receive Communion. When the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith was consulted on the matter, it replied that it would be preferable first to have the consensus of all the bishops, to dialogue with these Catholic politicians to help them form their conscience and to avoid the impression that "abortion and euthanasia alone constitute the only serious matters of Catholic social doctrine that demand the highest level of responsibility on the part of Catholics". In any case, it is advisable to frame such a statement within the broader framework of the dignity of receiving Holy Communion on the part of all the faithful and not just a category of politicians.

The authorSantiago Leyra Curiá

Corresponding member of the Royal Academy of Jurisprudence and Legislation of Spain.

Integral ecology

Jesuit Migrant Service and chaplains question the CIEs

The Centers for the Internment of Foreigners are not necessary, as demonstrated by the Covid-19 pandemic, during which they have remained closed for several months. This is the denunciation made by the Jesuit Migrant Service (SJM) and chaplains such as Antonio Viera, from the CIE of the Canary Islands.

Rafael Miner-June 8, 2021-Reading time: 4 minutes

The Jesuit Migrant Service reiterated at the end of last week in the Spanish Senate "its commitment to accompany and defend the people interned in the CIE", and once again called for "their closure and the search for legal and political alternatives for people who fall into irregularity".

The concluding proposals of its report on 2020, entitled Legal reason and no political reason, point out the need to "at least improve prevention and health care, if not suspend internment in pandemics. In their opinion, it is still necessary to correct situations of violated rights, and to take into account the complaints of torture or the internment of vulnerable profiles such as minors and asylum seekers.

The SJM report on 2020, directs the gaze towards internment in times of coronavirus, with particular attention to insufficient health care. "The CIEs closed their doors before the declaration of the state of alarm in March 2020, in an initially uncoordinated and chaotic manner, although the legal basis and clear decisions of the Police and the Prosecutor's Office were then perceived." However, they resumed their activity from September, "with insufficient preventive anti-covid measures and severe isolation for infected people, with the consequent climate of anguish and anxiety for the inmates," says the study.

In 2020, according to the report, a total of 2,224 persons were interned in CIE, the vast majority (79 %) for reasons of refoulement after irregular entry, followed by reasons of expulsion (16 %). On the other hand, 42 minors were identified, almost 2 % of the total number of inmates, "a figure too high but lower than the real one, as it calls into question the reliability of the age determination tests", points out the SJM, whose coordinator is Carmen de la Fuente.

An important fact, in the opinion of the report's editors, is that "it reflects the unnecessary suffering to which the inmates are subjected: of the total number of persons returned to Spain (1,904), only 28 % were from CIE, and of the total number of expulsions (1,835), 38 % were from CIE. 47 % of the inmates were finally released for various reasons because their forced repatriation could not be carried out".

In addition, the courts admitted last year "the patrimonial responsibility of the State in the case of the death of Samba Martine, in Madrid in December 2011. An act of justice and reparation, the result of almost a decade of judicial and social struggle on the part of the family and close social organizations", the vicissitudes of which were recounted by lawyer Cristina Manzanedo.

Rescuing from invisibility

Antonio Viera, chaplain of the CIE of Barranco Seco, in Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, agrees with the diagnosis of the Jesuit Service, and has prefaced his report with a text entitled "People to rescue from the sea of invisibility". The chaplain affirms the "unnecessary existence of the CIE", because, among other reasons, "it is well known that the CIE systematically violates the human rights of the people held", by "lacking access to basic services", such as health services or legal advice, for example. The report addresses numerous issues, writes Antonio Viera, "making it clear that Spain survives empty CIEs".

In statements to Omnes, the chaplain explains that in the CIE of Barranco Seco there are "currently eight people: there are the Moroccans who are going to be deported to Morocco, and they will be released soon, because the maximum time of stay in the CIE is 60 days".

"The logical thing to do is to close the CIEs," he adds, "because they also waste taxpayers' money. They have no reason to exist. Here they have handled health care well during the pandemic. What these people need is psychological support, because they arrive devastated after the crossing of the Atlantic," he tells Omnes.

"The people in this CIU have restricted family visits, because of Covid, and the only ones who attend to them are the chaplain and the Red Cross volunteers," he says.

Migrants in the Canary Islands

The Canary Islands is one of the places where more immigrants have entered in recent months, in addition to Ceuta. "The Canary Islands cannot be a new Lampedusa. The Canary Islands is Spain, and whoever arrives in Spain is already free to transit throughout the State. José Mazuelos, bishop of the Canary Islands and president of the Episcopal Subcommission for the Family and the Defense of Life of the Spanish Episcopal Conference, in a meeting with journalists on the occasion of the Plenary Assembly of the EEC. This is how he reflected it Omnes

In that meeting, Bishop Mazuelos recalled the pastoral letter signed by the bishops of the islands, denouncing the situation of thousands of people arriving at the Canary coasts and who were in subhuman conditions. Furthermore, the bishop of the Canary Islands emphasized that "this is a problem of the central government that it has to assume and fix. The autonomous government of the Canary Islands is helping a lot; Caritas is overwhelmed: there are people sleeping in the street, the number of meals given per day has tripled".

Projects

In the near horizon, according to the SJM, it has been confirmed "the project of a new CIE in Botafuegos, Algeciras, with an investment of almost 27 million euros between 2021 and 2024". In addition, the funding proposed in the General State Budget of 2021, added to those already published in previous years, brings the figure to more than 32.5 million for the period 2019-2024. The new center of Algeciras cup most, but the other 6 million are intended for the reform and refurbishment of existing centers, which demonstrates a clear political intentionality, says the SJM.

In the presentation in the Senate, Carmen de la Fuente pointed out that currently the CIEs of Valencia and Algeciras are closed for works, while Josetxo Ordóñez added that "in Barcelona last year there were exactly 200 days without internments, from May 6 to September 23". Josep Buedes, another author of the report, made special emphasis on the fact that "Interior does not give us the information we request".

Meanwhile, the chaplain of the CIE of Barranco Seco in Las Palmas, Antonio Viera, recalls a message of Pope Francis on the occasion of the World Day of Peace in 2016: "I would like to invite you to review the legislation on migrants, so that it is inspired by the will to welcome, in the respect of reciprocal duties and responsibilities, and can facilitate the integration of migrants".

Read more

Reform of canon law

The reform carried out during the pontificate of Francis is an instrument "to respond adequately to the needs of the Church throughout the world.

June 8, 2021-Reading time: 3 minutes

The Church, like any institution, needs a set of juridical norms to conduct itself. The first Code of Canon Law was promulgated in 1917 by Pope Benedict XV and the current one was promulgated by St. John Paul II in 1983. Last May 23, Pope Francis promulgated the Apostolic Constitution Pascite gregem Dei which reforms Book VI of the Code of Canon Law on penal sanctions in the Church, a modification that will enter into force as of December 8 of this year. 

In the above-mentioned Apostolic Constitution, the Holy Father emphasizes that "since apostolic times, the Church has been giving herself laws for her way of acting which, in the course of the centuries, have come to form a coherent body of binding social norms, which give unity to the People of God and for the observance of which the Bishops are responsible". Norms that link "the mercy and correction of the Church" and that "need to be in permanent correlation with social changes and with the new demands that appear in the People of God, which at times oblige them to be rectified and adapted to changing situations". The Pope reveals in Pascite gregem Dei that "canonical sanction also has a function of reparation and salutary medicine and seeks, above all, the good of the faithful".

canon law code

It is not easy to elaborate a juridical text applicable to the universal Church. Today, a certain cultural ethnocentrism is spreading throughout much of our world, leading us to think that one's own culture is superior to other cultures that should be covered by the same juridical umbrella. In fact, the Pope recalls that Benedict XVI launched this revision in 2007 and since then it has been maturing. 

As Monsignor Juan Ignacio Arrieta, Secretary of the Pontifical Council for Legislative Texts, has recently emphasized, among the main novelties of these revisions we find that they determine with greater precision the behavior to be adopted by those responsible for the observance of these norms and the criteria to be followed for the application of penalties. Another relevant aspect is the communitarian aspect, that is, that the criminal law is also important to preserve the community of the faithful, to remedy the scandal caused and to repair the damage. The text also provides the authority with tools to reorient behaviors in time and, consequently, to avoid damage.

The President of the Pontifical Council for Legislative Texts, Monsignor Filippo Iannone, has highlighted the emergence of new penalties such as reparation or compensation for damages. The penalties are listed in greater detail. Some penalties that were previously only foreseen for priests are extended to all the faithful. The statute of limitations for crimes has been revised and some new ones have been introduced. With regard to the abuse of minors, the seriousness of the crimes and the attention given to the victims are highlighted. Also noteworthy is the emphasis on transparency and good management of resources. 

It is certain that this reform will be an important instrument "to respond adequately to the needs of the Church throughout the world," taking into account "the context of the rapid social changes we are experiencing," as Pope Francis points out in Pascite Gregem Dei

The authorCelso Morga

Archbishop emeritus of the Diocese of Mérida Badajoz

The World

Canada's "missing" people

The discovery of the remains of 215 children in the province of British Columbia, Canada, is a dramatic event and a call "for us to walk together in dialogue, mutual respect and recognition of the rights and cultural values of all of Canada's daughters and sons."

Fernando Emilio Mignone-June 8, 2021-Reading time: 4 minutes

Pope Francis said at the Angelus prayer on Sunday that he is following "with sorrow the news from Canada about the gruesome discovery of the remains of 215 children, students of the Kamloops Indian Residential Schoolin the province of British Columbia. I join the Canadian bishops and the entire Catholic Church in Canada in expressing my closeness to the Canadian people, traumatized by this shocking news. The sad discovery heightens our awareness of the pain and suffering of the past. May the political and religious authorities of Canada continue to work with determination to shed light on this sad event and humbly engage in a path of reconciliation and healing.

These difficult times are a strong call for all of us to move away from the colonizing model and also from the ideological colonizations of today, and to walk together in dialogue, mutual respect and recognition of the rights and cultural values of all the daughters and sons of Canada.

We commend to the Lord the souls of all the children who died in Canada's residential schools and pray for the grieving families and Native Canadian communities. Let us pray in silence.

"The Church indisputably erred in implementing a colonialist government policy that resulted in the devastation of children, families and communities." So publicly apologized on June 2 by Archbishop Michael Miller of Vancouver, British Columbia. 

In the city of Kamloops, 350 km northwest of Vancouver, the remains of about 215 unmarked and "unburied" indigenous people have been discovered buried next to the former Kamloops Residential School, a Canadian government institution founded in 1890 and closed in 1978, and from its founding until 1969 run by the Missionary Oblates of Mary Immaculate.

Archbishop Miller, whose diocese included Kamloops until 1945, promised to do everything possible to try to find out the identities of the minors buried there.

Local natives discovered what they say are human remains using a small penetrating radar, technology now literally at their fingertips. Many natives already knew or suspected that deceased youths had been buried not only there but also in other of the 130 Canadian boarding schools, now closed, so often without warning family members or recording the cases.

Kamloops Bishop Joseph Nguyen (who as a young man escaped from Vietnam by boat and took refuge in Canada) said, "No words of sorrow could describe this horrific discovery". The president of the Conference of Bishops and Archbishop of Winnipeg Richard Gagnon expressed his great sorrow on behalf of the Canadian bishops (they number more than 80) and called for the truth to come out. 

Already on April 29, 2009, Pope Benedict XVI had personally apologized, in a private audience at the Vatican, to a group of Canadian indigenous chiefs when they visited him in Rome, for the "deplorable" treatment that indigenous wards received in Catholic-run boarding schools. (There were 73 of the 130 institutes).

Often the children were forcibly separated from their parents and taken to these boarding schools: sometimes they did not see each other for years (or ever again); they were assimilated into the dominant culture and thus lost their roots; they suffered psychological, physical and even sexual abuse. 

For three decades, requests for forgiveness - also, of course, by civilian authorities, starting with the country's prime ministers - for so much tragedy have been multiplying and repeating themselves. And for cause: so many have not even been documented. It is estimated that some one hundred and fifty thousand indigenous students lived in the boarding schools set up by the federal government in the mid-19th century; the last of them were closed only at the end of the 20th century. Many of these schools were in inhospitable locations and were poorly subsidized; there could be food shortages and contagious diseases. It is not known for certain how many children died in these institutions and from what: at least 4,000 are estimated. 

The discovery in Kamloops is raising awareness among the Canadian public. Attempts are going to be made to document the past better, also with grants that the federal government has just offered to indigenous people so that they can dig more about their missing.

But this awareness in this country is not a recent development. As early as 1991, the Canadian bishops and superiors of religious orders who participated in the residential schools declared: "We deeply regret the pain, suffering and alienation that so many (indigenous people) have experienced. We have listened...and we want to be part of the healing process." That same year the Oblates of Mary Immaculate included this in their very long repentance: "We ask forgiveness for the part we played in the cultural, ethnic, linguistic and religious imperialism that was part of the mentality with which the people of Europe first encountered Aboriginal peoples and which has consistently been hidden in the way the Native peoples of Canada have been treated by civil authorities and churches."

The process of reconciliation in recent years has included hundreds of meetings between Christians and indigenous people in Canada to try to heal the wounds. (It is possible that half of Canada's indigenous people are Catholic, and many others are Christian. Out of nearly 40 million people, almost 2 million are indigenous). 

Raymond de Souza, a well-known priest and journalist, makes reference to the National Post to John Paul II, who in the Bull Incarnationis mysterium (November 29, 1998) called for "the purification of memoryThe Pope said: "We cannot fail to recognize the faults committed by those who have borne and continue to bear the name of Christian". Also to his homily at St. Peter's on March 12, 2000: "We cannot but acknowledge the unfaithfulness to the Gospel committed by some of our brethren".

In this dramatic setting, it is perhaps worth remembering that many Canadians pray to the Patroness of the Western Hemisphere, the indigenous Virgin of Guadalupe. And to St. Kateri (Catherine) Tekakwitha, who died in 1680 in Montreal at the age of 24; here [I write from Montreal] are her remains. Her Algonquin mother, a Christian, was kidnapped by the Iroquois and married to a Mohawk chief. At the age of 4 Kateri lost her parents during a smallpox epidemic that left her half blind. At 11 she was introduced to the faith and at 20 she was baptized by Jesuit missionaries. She had to suffer great abuse for her faith, being rejected by her relatives; so in 1677 she fled on foot more than 300 km. until she reached a Christian village. She was very penitent and very devoted to the Eucharist. She was canonized in October 2012, at the end of the Benedictine pontificate.

Note from the author: On May 14, 1976, my sister Monica, 24 years old, was kidnapped by the military in Buenos Aires. We were never told what happened to her.

Photo Gallery

Corpus Christi celebration in Poland

A girl dressed in traditional costume in the Corpus Christi procession through the streets of Warsaw. The Polish capital celebrated the Solemnity of the Body and Blood of Christ on Thursday, June 3, 2021.

Maria José Atienza-June 7, 2021-Reading time: < 1 minute
The World

The resignation-denunciation letter of Cardinal Marx

The author reflects, based on a text by Joseph Ratzinger, on the letter of resignation written by Cardinal Reinhard Marx, in which he asks Pope Francis to resign as Archbishop of Munich.

Jaime Fuentes-June 7, 2021-Reading time: 4 minutes

The news "bombshell" exploded in Munich on Friday, June 5, with the publication of the letter of its archbishop, Cardinal Reinhard Marx, in which he asks Pope Francis to resign him from that position in the Church.

I have lost count of the number of times I have read and reread the letter, trying to understand the arguments presented by the archbishop to justify his unexpected decision. Why so many times? Because the letter is not only about resignation, but also about denouncing what is going wrong in the whole Church. By resigning, the cardinal thinks that his gesture will serve as an example. "for a new beginning of the Church and not only in Germany".

He also says that we find ourselves in the Church in "a stalemate"The Pope believes that the only way out of this impasse is to follow the "synodal path".

Both the diagnosis and the proposed therapy give and will give plenty of food for thought. Here I would just like to contribute an old text by Professor Joseph Ratzinger which, in my opinion, sheds light on the current problem, and not only in Germany.

In 1970, after the end of the Second Vatican Council in which he participated as an "expert" and as professor of dogmatics in Regensburg, Ratzinger broadcast five lectures on the radio that were published in Munich, precisely, with the title "Faith and Future". In the last of these he deals with this topic: "What will the Church look like in the year 2000?".

To answer the question, Professor Ratzinger turns to history, the teacher of life (nihil sub sole novum) and analyzes in depth some of the crises that the Church has suffered. Finally, he concludes with the text which I now transcribe in its entirety (underlining is mine):

This is what Ratzinger wrote in Faith and future:

"The future of the Church can and will only come, even today, from the strength of those who have deep roots and live from the pure fullness of their faith.. It will not come from those who only give prescriptions. It will not come from those who only accommodate themselves to the present moment. It will not come from those who criticize only others and accept themselves as the infallible norm. 

Therefore it will not come either from those who choose only the most comfortable way, those who avoid the passion of faith, and consider as false and overcome, as tyranny and legality, everything that demands of man, that which hurts him, that which obliges him to renounce himself. Let us say it positively: the future of the church, also now, as always, is to be newly minted by the saints.

By men, therefore, who perceive something more than the phrases that are precisely modern. By men who can see more than others, because their life has greater flights. The detachment that frees men, is only achieved by the small daily renunciations to oneself. In this daily passion, by which alone man can experience in what manifold ways his own self binds him, in this daily passion and only in it, man opens himself up inch by inch.

Man only sees as much as he has lived and suffered.. If today we can hardly perceive God, it is because it is very easy for us to escape ourselves, to flee from the depths of our existence into the slumber of comfort.. Thus what is deepest in us remains unexplored. If it is true that one can only see well with the heart, how blind we all are!

[Let us go a step further. From today's Church will come out also this time a Church that has lost much. It will become small, it will have to start completely anew. It will no longer be able to fill many of the buildings constructed at the most propitious juncture. As the number of its followers diminishes, it will lose many of its privileges in society.. It will have to present itself, in a much more accentuated way than up to now, as a voluntary community, which can only be reached through a free decision. As a small community, it will need the initiative of its individual members to a much greater extent. It will also undoubtedly find new forms of ministry and will consecrate priests to proven Christians who remain in their profession: in many small communities, for example in homogeneous social groups, normal pastoral care will be carried out in this way. Alongside this, the priest, fully dedicated to the ministry as he has been until now, will continue to be indispensable.

But in all these changes that can be conjectured, the Church will have to find again and with all decision what is essential to her, what she has always been its centerFaith in the Trinitarian God, in Jesus Christ, the Son of God made man, the assistance of the Spirit that endures until the end of time.

You will find again its true core in faith and prayer and will experience again sacraments as divine worshipnot as a problem of liturgical structuring. It will be an internalized church, not claiming its political mandate and flirting as little with the left as with the right. It will be a difficult situation. Because this process of crystallization and clarification will cost it many valuable forces.

It will impoverish it, transform it into a church of the little ones.. The process will be all the more difficult because both narrow sectarian bias and boastful obstinacy will have to be suppressed. It can be predicted that all this will take time. The process will be long and arduous. [...] But after the ordeal of these tears, a great strength will emerge from an internalized and simplified Church.. For the men of a total and fully planned world will be unspeakably lonely. When God has completely disappeared for them, they will experience their total and horrible poverty. And then they will discover the small community of believers as something completely new.

Like a hope that comes their way, like an answer that they have always sought in the occult. So it seems certain to me that very difficult times are ahead for the Church. The real crisis has not yet begun. There are serious shocks to be reckoned with. But I am also completely sure that will remain until the endnot the Church of political worship, but the Church of faith. It will no longer be the dominant power in society to the extent that it has been until recently. But it will flourish again and will become visible to men as a homeland that gives them life and hope beyond death".

The authorJaime Fuentes

Bishop emeritus of Minas (Uruguay).

Read more