Friday, April 03, 2026

Bishop 'bitterly disappointed' with King Charles's decision not to release Easter message and warns monarch of 'missing public mood'

A Bishop shared he is "bitterly disappointed" with King Charles's decision not to issue an Easter message this year, warning the monarch of "missing the public mood".

Buckingham Palace confirmed yesterday that the King will not release an Easter message this year.

Bishop Ceirion H Dewar, who recently sent a letter to the Palace outlining his concerns with the suppression of Christianity, shared with the People's Channel his feelings that "Christians have been let down".

He said: "I am bitterly disappointed. There isn't a royal precedent for releasing a message, but since coming to the throne, Charles has chosen to do so every year.

"Having just issued a Ramadan and Eid Mubarak message for the Islamic community, choosing not to give an Easter message is bitterly disappointing.

"It does not meet the expectations you would expect from the monarch."

The bishop feels that either the King or his advisors have "missed the mood of the public" by neglecting an Easter message.

He said: "Christians will be heartbroken, having learnt the defender of the faith has ignored them.

"Whoever has made the decision has got it wrong - Christians will feel let down by the King, and that is evident by the public mood. I've had messages from across the Commonwealth concerned that the King won't release an Easter message.

"Even if he wants to be the 'defender of faiths' like his position was when he was Prince of Wales, you are not equally defending each faith by missing out Christianity."

Bishop Ceirion previously spoke to the People's Channel about his letter to the monarch, in which he touched on the King including other religions in his messages for Christian holidays.

However, he feels that the monarch's decision to simply not issue an Easter message is "1,000 times worse".

He said: "To not even acknowledge Christianity, rather than include other religions, and ignore one of the two most important weekends with Christ, is so much worse.

"I stand by my letter. I do feel this decision has not been thought about wisely and has not measured the public mood.

"I really think that this was a bad, bad decision, and my letter has been truly justified."

The Bishop initially sent the letter to His Majesty outlining his worries, which he later published openly, receiving thousands of signatures supporting his message.

Over 8,400 people have signed the letter, which has been viewed more than two million times on his personal X page and viewed by over six million across numerous platforms.

The Bishop's key message that he previously told the People's Channel was: "My expectation is you made a vote to protect and defend the protestant form of religion, which in the United Kingdom is increasingly and acceleratingly under attack.

"You need to fulfil your oath, and you need to be far more vocal in your defence of the f​aith, like Queen Elizabeth II."

Leo XIV calls for an end to the wars in Israel and Ukraine and demands a "just and lasting" peace

On Good Friday, as the Church commemorates the Passion of the Lord, Pope Leo XIV has held telephone conversations with the presidents of Israel and Ukraine, in which he insisted on the urgency of ending armed conflicts and advancing toward a stable peace based on respect for international law and the protection of the civilian population.

Call to the President of Israel: Reopen Dialogue

According to information from the Holy See, the Pontiff spoke with the President of the State of Israel, Isaac Herzog, on the occasion of the Easter celebrations.

During the conversation, the need to reopen “all possible channels of diplomatic dialogue” to end the serious ongoing conflict and achieve a “just and lasting” peace in the Middle East was reiterated.

Likewise, the Pope emphasized the importance of protecting the civilian population and promoting respect for international and humanitarian law, in a context marked by violence and suffering.

Ukraine: Closeness to the People and Humanitarian Urgency

The Holy Father also held a telephone conversation with the President of Ukraine, Volodymyr Zelensky, to whom he conveyed his best wishes for the Easter season and expressed his closeness to the Ukrainian people.

During the dialogue, both addressed the humanitarian situation arising from the war, highlighting the urgency of ensuring that the necessary aid reaches those suffering the consequences of the conflict.

Release of Prisoners and End of Hostilities

In the conversation with the Ukrainian president, reference was also made to ongoing initiatives to promote humanitarian actions, especially regarding the release of prisoners.

The Pope also expressed his hope that, with the commitment and cooperation of the international community, the cessation of hostilities can be achieved as soon as possible and a “just and lasting” peace can be reached.

Pizzaballa, in a nearly empty Holy Sepulchre due to the war: “If we do not allow ourselves to be loved by Christ, we will have no part with Him”

Following the restrictions imposed by Israel on access to the Basilica of the Holy Sepulcher - which provoked international criticism - the celebrations of the Easter Triduum in Jerusalem have taken place this year with the presence of a very reduced group of faithful and broadcast via streaming. 

In that exceptional context, Cardinal Pierbattista Pizzaballa, Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem, centered his Holy Thursday homily on a direct warning: without accepting Christ’s way of loving - a love that humbles itself and serves - there is no communion with Him.

A Holy Sepulcher Closed Amid the Conflict

The liturgy was celebrated in the very place where Christ conquered death, but with an unusual image: restricted access, doors practically closed, and a community gathered amid the tension sweeping through the Holy Land.

“We are here as in a womb of peace, while around us the world is tearing apart,” the Patriarch affirmed at the beginning of his homily, clearly describing the fracture between the interior of the basilica and the surrounding context of war.

Christ Does Not Flee: He Humbles Himself

The core of the preaching revolved around the washing of the feet, which Pizzaballa presented not as a simple exemplary gesture, but as the concrete form of Christ’s Passover.

Recalling the parallel with the book of Exodus, he explained that “girding” one’s waist is the gesture of one preparing to depart. However, in Jesus, that gesture takes on a radically different meaning: He does not gird Himself to leave, but to kneel.

“Jesus transforms the gesture of one who departs into the gesture of one who serves,” he emphasized. The true exodus, in God’s logic, does not consist in escaping the world, but in entering it to the extreme, even assuming the condition of a servant.

Peter’s Rejection: Not Accepting a God Who Humbles Himself

Peter’s reaction occupies a central place in the homily. His refusal - “You shall never wash my feet” - is not just discomfort, but rejection in the face of a love that humbles itself.

Christ’s response is blunt: “If I do not wash you, you have no part with me.” For the Patriarch, here lies the decisive point: it is not enough to follow Jesus or admire Him; it is necessary to accept His way of loving.

“There is no communion without allowing oneself to be served,” he insisted.

Eucharist and Service: Inseparable

Pizzaballa recalled that the Eucharist and the washing of the feet are not two distinct realities, but two expressions of the same mystery. The body that is given on the altar is the same one that bends down before the disciples.

Separating worship from service means emptying both realities of content. Therefore, the liturgy is not limited to being contemplated: it demands a concrete response in life.

A Small Church, Called Not to Defend Itself

The Patriarch applied this message to the situation of the Church in the Holy Land: a reduced, weary community constantly put to the test.

“We are not a strong or numerous Church,” he acknowledged, but he made it clear that the key is not in strength, but in “having part with Christ.”

This implies renouncing the temptation to protect oneself and accepting to share His humiliation, remaining faithful amid fragility and without pretending to dominate history.

The Question That Reaches Us

The homily concluded with a direct challenge that also affects us: whether we are willing to accept a love that humbles itself, that touches our wounds, and that holds nothing back.

“Only one who has allowed himself to be washed can learn to wash,” the Patriarch recalled.

In an almost empty basilica and a Holy Land marked by war, the message of Holy Thursday takes on particular clarity: the Christian is not called to impose himself, but to remain alongside Christ in His way of loving, even when that path passes through humiliation and service.

Cardinal Sarah denounces the Church's drift: «It is not an NGO, it has forgotten its mission»

In an interview given to the program Le Club Le Figaro Idées, Cardinal Robert Sarah has offered an uncompromising diagnosis of the situation of the Church and the West. 

The African cardinal warns of a deep crisis of faith in Europe, denounces the reduction of the Church to a social organization, and emphasizes that without God, Western societies are doomed to disappear.

The West, a civilization that has forgotten Christ

Cardinal Sarah expressed his main concern about the spiritual evolution of the West. In his view, the societies that for centuries transmitted the Gospel have stopped considering Jesus Christ as a vital reference.

“We have the impression that the West is no longer interested in Christ,” he stated, warning of a loss of identity that puts at risk not only Europe but also the young Churches. Even so, he recalled that the Church will not disappear: Christ remains with it until the end of time.

“The Church is not an NGO”

One of the central axes of the interview was his criticism of the Church’s drift toward exclusively social issues:

“It gives the impression that for some time now the Church only talks about ecological change, migrants, peace… But the Church is not an NGO! It is not the role of the Church to speak only about social issues. It must put man in relation to God”

For Sarah, when the Church loses its orientation toward God, it stops fulfilling its essential mission.

A “too noisy” liturgy centered on man

The cardinal also denounced the current state of the liturgy, pointing out a loss of the sense of the sacred:

“The Church has damaged the liturgy of the Mass. It is too noisy! It is as if we were celebrating ourselves. It has become a moment of fellowship, when we are there to worship God; we need a liturgy that worships God. We no longer speak of salvation or the soul!”

In his view, the liturgy has stopped leading to God to focus on man.

Vocations: the solution does not involve eliminating celibacy

On the shortage of priests, Sarah clearly rejected proposals to reform celibacy:

“It is not by suppressing the celibacy of priests that the Church will foster more vocations. Look at Anglicanism: it is in full decline, and yet priests can marry. Above all, the priest represents Christ himself. Therefore, priests must imitate Christ in his concrete life, and He did not marry”

Euthanasia: “an inhuman law”

The cardinal was equally forceful when referring to euthanasia laws:

“By authorizing euthanasia, France goes beyond its power; it is an inhuman law. No one can decide who should die or who should live, whether a life is worth it or not, except God. Killing someone is barbaric”

Islam and identity crisis: a call to awaken

On the growth of Islam in the West, the cardinal issued a clear warning:

“Islam can awaken Christians. Muslims pray five times a day; God occupies a fundamental place in their existence. We are only asked to go to Mass on Sunday, but do we do it? If we do not awaken spiritually, with their numbers increasing they will impose their law and their culture”

Saint Pius X Brotherhood: warning about disobedience

The cardinal also addressed the possible ordination of bishops without pontifical mandate:

“The decision to ordain bishops without the agreement of the Holy See and the Holy Father is a grave decision that will tear and break the Church again, that will tear the tunic of Christ; it will make Christ suffer. Souls are not saved in disobedience”

The West without God: a civilization without roots

Overall, the interview draws a clear diagnosis: a civilization that has forgotten God loses its foundation.

Sarah warns that material well-being is not enough to sustain a society and that without its spiritual root, the West runs the risk of emptying itself. At the same time, he insists that only a return to God will allow the Church and society to recover their meaning.

“If I then, the Lord and the Teacher, have washed your feet, you also ought to wash one another’s feet.”

On the afternoon of Holy Thursday, Pope Leo XIV officiated the Mass in Coena Domini in the Basilica of St. John Lateran, marking the beginning of the Paschal Triduum with a homily centered on the meaning of Christian service and, in particular, the priestly ministry.

During his preaching, the Pontiff recalled that the gesture of the washing of the feet performed by Christ cannot be understood solely as a moral example, but as the concrete manifestation of the way God acts. Jesus, by assuming the attitude of a servant, reveals a logic different from the usual one, in which greatness is not measured in terms of power or dominion, but of self-giving.

In this context, Leo XIV took up an idea already formulated by Benedict XVI, according to which man tends to imagine a God who confirms his expectations or guarantees him success, while the Gospel presents a God who serves. 

From there, he emphasized that the priest is also called to assume this logic, not partially, but with the totality of his life.

“We are called to serve the People of God with our entire life,” he affirmed, insisting that the ordained ministry implies a personal self-giving that goes beyond mere function. 

In that sense, he recalled that God’s love precedes man’s response and does not depend on his merits, but is the starting point that makes any conversion possible.

The Pope also placed this message in the current context, pointing out that, in the face of the multiple forms of violence and suffering present in the world, the Christian is called to adopt a concrete attitude of closeness. 

“If humanity is on its knees because of brutality, we too must kneel alongside the oppressed,” he affirmed, in direct reference to Christ’s gesture.

The celebration included the traditional washing of the feet of twelve priests, in continuity with the usual practice of this day. 

At the end of the Mass, the Most Holy Sacrament was transferred to the place of reservation, according to the liturgy proper to Holy Thursday.

With this celebration, the Pope began the central days of the liturgical calendar, in which the Church commemorates the Passion, Death, and Resurrection of Christ.

Easter Message 2026 from Bishop William Crean

“From darkness into light”

My friends,

Our spiritual journey through Holy Week leads us to think about Jesus’ last days. 

His experience in the face of betrayal, deceit, a show trial and torture to the point of execution, manifests the darkness and evil that so many innocent people today are subject to. In those last days Jesus on the other hand washed the feet of the apostles as an example of service and care. 

In the midst of his agony, he experienced the compassion of the women of Jerusalem and Veronica wiped the sweat and blood from his disfigured face.

The joy of Easter comes from knowing that darkness, evil, hate, even death do not have the last word. 

That’s our hope, our joy and our peace. Jesus’ sacrifice reveals God’s love for the world and for us today as so many innocents suffer the affliction of war.

Bishop McGuckian: ‘suffering of Christians in the Holy Land must be our concern’

Over these days, as we anticipate the celebration of the Passion, Death and Resurrection of our Saviour, Jesus Christ, our thoughts turn to the people of the Holy Land. These days – the highpoint of the Christian year – the fear and suffering of Christians in the Holy Land must be our concern too. 

We have a duty to stand in solidarity with Christians in the Holy Land as they endure violence and potential displacement due to illegal Israeli settlements.

While the Middle East is very much in the news over recent weeks due to yet another unjust war, the suffering of the people of the West Bank has not received the attention it deserves. There, people – including Christians – continue to endure violence and attempts by Israeli settlers to drive them off their lands.

In recent days, the Parish Priest of Taybeh, the last entirely Christian village in the West Bank, has reported targeted violence against his people, including the seizure of land, attacks on property and on other forms of economic life.

Last week, privately owned land near a quarry and cement factory was seized. This comes in addition to attacks on agricultural holdings, private motor vehicles and on areas adjoining the ruins of the fifth-century Byzantine Saint George’s church in the town in July of 2025.

Such a situation is not acceptable under any circumstances. Father Bashar Fawadleh, the local Parish Priest, called on Christians throughout the world to show ‘not only for compassion, but solidarity’. He continued: ‘Our mission is to help people remain in their land, to live with dignity, and to keep the Christian presence alive in the Holy Land.  Our presence here is a living testament to the roots of Christianity- where it all began’.

Taybeh is the location of the biblical village of Ephraim, a place where Jesus and His followers went to rest just before His entry to Jerusalem and His Passion (cf John 11:54). In these days, as we turn our gaze to the suffering of Jesus, let us recall the words of Pope Leo XIV on Sunday last, Palm Sunday, when he said, “Christ, King of Peace, cries out again from his cross: God is love! Have mercy! Lay down your weapons! Remember that you are brothers and sisters!”

May these words be our own during this Holy Week and Easter, remembering in a special way the suffering Christians of the Holy Land, and people everywhere.

Thursday, April 02, 2026

Chrism Mass 2026 - Killaloe Diocese

Tonight we gather in this sacred season of Holy Week for the Chrism Mass, one of the most beautiful and profound liturgies of our year. 

In these days, the Church walks with the Lord toward Calvary, and here, in this Cathedral of Sts. Petr and Paul, we pause at the heart of that journey to contemplate the mystery of Christ, the Anointed One.

The word “Christ” means “Anointed.” 

In the synagogue at Nazareth, as recorded in the of Gospel of Luke, Jesus reads from the prophet Isaiah: “The Spirit of the Lord is upon me, because he has anointed me.” 

In that moment, he reveals himself as the One consecrated by the Father, filled with the Spirit, sent to bring good news to the poor, sight to the blind, freedom to the oppressed.

Consecration of Sacred Oils

This evening, that same Spirit moves among us as we bless the Oil of the Sick, the Oil of Catechumens, and consecrate the Sacred Chrism. These oils are not mere symbols. They are signs through which Christ continues to touch, heal, strengthen, and consecrate his people.

Oil of the Sick

The Oil of the Sick will be carried to hospital rooms, nursing homes, private houses, and bedsides. Through it, Christ consoles those who suffer, strengthens those who are frail, and reminds the dying that they are never alone.

Oil of Catechumens

The Oil of Catechumens will be placed upon those preparing for Baptism, fortifying them for the spiritual struggle and welcoming them into the household of faith.

Oil of Chrism

And Sacred Chrism—richly perfumed, solemnly consecrated—will mark the newly baptized, seal the confirmandi, anoint the hands of priests, and consecrate altars and churches. Through this oil, the Church proclaims that every Christian shares in Christ’s mission as priest, prophet, and king.

Renewal of Priestly Promises

My dear brother priests, tonight you will renew the promises you made on the day of your ordination. You were anointed with Chrism so that your lives might be conformed to Christ the Head and Shepherd. In parishes large and small, in schools, hospitals, chaplaincies, and hidden places of faithful service, you preach the Gospel, celebrate the sacraments, and shepherd God’s people with generosity and love. I thank you for your fidelity—often unseen, sometimes costly, always precious in the sight of God.

Ministries and Apostolates

To our Volunteer Ministers, religious sisters and brothers, seminarians, and all who serve in voluntary ministries—catechists, readers, musicians, sacristans, pastoral volunteers, those who serve the poor, those who maintain our churches, those who serve on councils and committees—I offer heartfelt gratitude. The Church’s mission does not rest on the shoulders of a few, but is carried by the many. Your quiet dedication, your hidden sacrifices, your readiness to say “yes” when called upon—these are also anointed by the Spirit.

That all may be One

Tonight is a moment of unity. From this cathedral, the oils will be taken to every parish and community of our diocese. In this way, the sacramental life of each local church flows from and returns to this altar. We are one body in Christ. The same oil consecrated here will sanctify in every corner of our diocese. The same Spirit who descended upon Christ in the Jordan continues to descend upon his people.

As we move more deeply into the Paschal Mystery, we recall that we are an anointed people. At Baptism and Confirmation, the Spirit was poured into our hearts. We are not spectators of Christ’s work; we are participants in it. The world still longs for good news. It still aches for healing. It still needs the fragrance of hope.

May the oils blessed and consecrated this night be instruments of grace in the year ahead. May our priests be renewed in zeal, our people strengthened in faith, our sick comforted in suffering, our catechumens courageous in their journey. And may all of us, anointed by the Spirit, bear witness to Christ with lives that are faithful, joyful, and holy.

Entrusting ourselves to the intercession of the Blessed Virgin Mary, Mother of the Anointed One, we continue our pilgrimage through these sacred days, confident that the One who was anointed for our salvation will bring to completion the good work he has begun in us.

Amen.

Bishop Niall Coll uses oil imagery to reflect on war and faith at Chrism Mass

It’s a great privilege for me to be present here today as a priest again of the Diocese of Raphoe, as the new bishop gathered with the presbyters and many representatives of the lay faithful and Religious of the diocese for the first time to celebrate the Chrism Mass.

Because of the nature of this celebration, not least in relation to the renewal of priestly promises, some of my comments now will be directed to the priests but will hopefully have a resonance for all present.

If you have ever crossed the Atlantic, you may have smiled – perhaps winced – at American humour about Irish cooking which many Americans knew well because of their Irish grandmothers: food boiled to death they would joke! Some even jest that in hell, the Irish will do the cooking, to complete the punishment. A sense of humour is required by us Irish in the face of such provocation!

And yes, we might admit: the “traditional salad” of my childhood, and maybe for many still today (who knows?) would do little to dissuade that American impression – dried up lettuce, a tired tomato, a hard-boiled egg and a stubborn dollop of salad cream. No oil. No sheen. No life.

But things have changed you may well respond. Surely, over more recent generations we have learned something of flavour, of richness, of the quiet glory of olive oil.

Travel through the Mediterranean region and you will understand. There, the olive tree endures – ancient, patient, shimmering in the light. Field after field, silver-green, strong yet supple. From it comes the oil of gladness, the oil that makes the face shine, as the Psalmist sings.

And yet, just now, some of those same lands are deeply troubled. Olive groves which have stood for centuries in the Holy Land and Lebanon now lie in the shadow of brutal conflict. The earth that yields oil of a different type (better known as petroleum) also trembles under the weight of war (think of the Strait of Hormuz). Oil so vital to the life of nations – has become a source of anxiety, of rising costs, of uncertain futures. What once spoke simply of abundance now reminds us how fragile peace and prosperity can be, how interwoven the life of the world truly is.

Today, we stand in a long living tradition. With generations before us in Raphoe – bishops, priests, Religious, faithful – we bless oil and consecrate chrism: olive oil mingled with balsam, fragrant and set apart. Oil for the year ahead. Oil for the sacraments. Oil for the life of the Church.

And the Gospel draws us deeper still. Christ stands and declares: “The Spirit of the Lord is upon me, because he has anointed me.” Not with oil seen by the eye, but with the invisible, living anointing of the Holy Spirit.

Oil runs like a hidden thread through all of Scripture. Jacob pours it upon the stone at Bethel. The Good Samaritan bends low and pours oil and wine into wounded flesh. The Psalmist rejoices: “You anoint my head with oil; my cup is overflowing.”

All these anointings find their fulfilment in Christ, the Alpha and the Omega – and from him, they flow to us.

This is what today’s Chrism Mass proclaims with quiet power: that what was his has become ours. Through the sacraments, the life of Christ – his mission, his suffering and death, his resurrection – flows into us like oil poured out, not sparingly, but abundantly.

Every Catholic is anointed through the ministry of the priest and bishop. In baptism the first touch of that sacred oil. In confirmation, its strengthening seal. In sickness, its healing tenderness. In ordination, its consecrating fire upon the hands of the priest.

Yes – the Catholic “salad,” if you will, is never to be dry. It is richly, gloriously anointed.

But oil in all its different manifestations – think also of the ever-useful WD-40 variety – at home, on the farm, in factories is never idle. It soothes. It strengthens. It heals. It loosens what has grown stiff. It quiets what grinds and strains. It brings movement where there was resistance, life where there was friction.

So too the Holy Spirit – the true Oil of God. As St Irenaeus reminds us: the Father anoints, the Son is anointed and the anointing itself is the Holy Spirit.

This Spirit at baptism makes of us a people anointed – a royal people, a priestly people, a prophetic people. And from among us, some are called to the ministerial priesthood: not apart from the anointing, but for its service.

The Spirit anoints us so that we in turn may anoint others. He fills us so that we may overflow in sharing God’s grace and blessing.

And perhaps never more than now do we sense how much the world needs that anointing. In a time of war and fear, of fragile economies and anxious households when the price of oil (the petroleum kind) can unsettle nations, hearts too can grow tight, weary, uncertain. The human spirit, like dry ground, begins to crack.

Without this anointing, the Christian life becomes thin, mechanical – a duty without delight, a journey without fire. And priesthood itself risks becoming what Pope Francis warned against: ‘function without unction’.

But where the Spirit is, there is fragrance. There is movement. There is sheen. There is joy. There is mission.

Today, then, we pray for a deeper awareness of this anointing – baptismal and priestly alike. That it may not remain merely an idea but become a living certainty within us.

So that in our preaching, dear brothers, there is engagement and fire. In our sacraments celebrated, there is conviction and tenderness. In our ministry to all, especially the poor and marginalised, there is compassion and assistance. In our daily lives – whether in family, in work, in quiet acts of care – there is the unmistakable trace of the Spirit at work. This is the grace we especially pray for in this Chrism Mass. This is the vision entrusted to us.

That all of us – laity, clergy, Religious – may bear one another’s burdens, and so carry forward the mission of the Church. That the holy oils blessed in this liturgy for use this year throughout our Diocese may not remain sealed in vessels but may seep into the world of everyday life.

That through us and our shared priestly ministry, a dry and weary world – wounded by conflict, strained by uncertainty, adrift because of a lack of purpose and direction in so many hearts – may taste again the richness of God.

And so may we – especially the ordained here present – continue to be for others, a pouring-out of healing, of strength, of quiet, radiant joy drawn from the eternal Olive Tree: Christ crucified, risen and glorified. Amen.

 

+ Niall Coll

Bishop of Raphoe

Pope Leo revives traditional Holy Week ritual of washing feet of priests

Pope Leo XIV has washed the feet of 12 priests in the traditional Holy Thursday ritual, restoring a tradition his predecessor had broken by including laypeople and non-Christians in ceremonies at prisons, juvenile detention halls and centres for asylum seekers.

The priests included 11 ordained by Leo last year, along with the Rev Renzo Chiesa, the director of the Rome Diocese’s primary seminary.

Leo poured water from a golden pitcher over the priests’ feet before drying them with a white cloth and bestowing a kiss, in what the pontiff in his homily called a “gratuitous and humble gesture” that demonstrates “the true omnipotence of God”.

“Indeed, through this act, Jesus purifies not only our image of God – from the idolatry and blasphemy that have distorted it – but also our image of humanity,” Leo said in his homily inside the Archbasilica of St John Lateran, the official ecclesiastical seat of the pope as the bishop of Rome.

“For we tend to consider ourselves powerful when we dominate, victorious when we destroy our equals, great when we are feared,” said the pontiff, who has been outspoken against war. “In contrast, as true God and true man, Christ offers us the example of self-giving, service and love.”

The Holy Thursday foot-washing ceremony is a hallmark of every Holy Week and recalls the foot-washing Jesus performed on his 12 apostles at the Last Supper together before he was crucified.

Francis revolutionised the ritual for the Vatican by insisting, from his first Holy Thursday as pope in 2013, that it include women and people of other faiths among the 12. Previously, popes performed the ritual on Catholic men only at the basilica in Rome.

Leo’s decision to restore the prominent place of priests during the ritual is both a return to tradition and a gesture consistent with what seems to be his effort to encourage Catholic clergy and reinforce his appreciation of their service.

Pope Francis often criticised priests and what he called the “clerical” culture that places priests on a pedestal, above the laity. Francis believed such an attitude was responsible for the abuses of power and authority epitomised by the clergy sexual abuse crisis.

Leo, though, has spoken out about the need to protect priests’ rights. He devoted his April prayer intentions to priests in crisis, those who have lost hope because of loneliness, exhaustion or doubt.

“Let them feel they are not mere functionaries or lonely heroes, but beloved sons, humble and cherished disciples, and pastors sustained by the prayer of their people,” Leo said in the prayer intentions released this week by the Vatican.

He asked for God to teach the faithful to care for their priests, “to listen without judging, to give thanks without demanding perfection”, and accompany them with prayer.

Leo, the first US pope, emerges as pointed Trump critic

Pope Leo last May became the first US leader of the global Catholic Church, but for the initial ‌10 months of his tenure he mostly avoided comment about his home country and never once mentioned president Donald Trump publicly.

That era has come to an end.

In recent weeks the pope has emerged as a sharp ​critic of the Iran war. He named Trump, for the first time publicly, on Tuesday in a direct appeal urging the president to end the expanding conflict.

It is a significant shift in tone and approach that experts said indicated that the pope wanted to serve as a counterweight on the world stage to Trump and his foreign policy aims.

'Soft on Trumpism'

"I don't think he wants the Vatican to be accused of being soft on Trumpism ​because he's an American," said Massimo Faggioli, an Italian academic who follows the Vatican closely.

Leo, known for choosing his words carefully, urged Trump to find an "off-ramp" to end the war, using an American colloquialism the president and ⁠administration officials would understand.

"When (Leo) speaks, he's always careful," said Faggioli, a professor at Trinity College Dublin. "I don't think that was an accident."

Chicago Cardinal Blase Cupich, a close ally ‌of ‌Leo, ​told Reuters the pope was taking up the mantle of a long line of pontiffs who have urged world leaders to turn away from war.

"What is different ... is the voice of the messenger, for now Americans and the entire English-speaking world are hearing the message ⁠in an idiom familiar to them," said the cardinal.

Pope says God rejects prayers of war leaders

Two days before appealing to Trump directly, Leo said God rejected ​the prayers of leaders who start wars and have "hands full of blood", in unusually forceful remarks for a Catholic pontiff.

Those comments were interpreted by conservative Catholic commentators as aimed at US defence ‌secretary Pete Hegseth, who has invoked Christian language to justify the ​joint US-Israeli strikes on Iran that initiated the war.

They also led to one of the Trump administration's first direct responses to a comment by Leo.

"I don't think there ⁠is anything wrong with our military leaders or with the president calling ⁠on the American people to pray for our ​service members," White House spokesperson Karoline Leavitt said, when asked about the pope's remarks.

Marie Dennis, a former leader of the international Catholic peace movement Pax Christi, said Leo's most recent comments and his direct appeal to Trump "reflect a heart broken by unrelenting violence".

"He is reaching out to all who are exhausted by this unrelenting violence and are hungry for courageous leadership," she said.

Pope ramping up criticism for weeks

Leo had previously taken aim at Trump's hardline immigration policies, questioning whether they were in line with the Church's pro-life teachings. 

In those comments, which drew backlash from conservative Catholics, he refrained from naming Trump or any administration official directly.

The pope also carried out a major shake-up of US Catholic leadership in December, removing Cardinal Timothy Dolan as archbishop of New York. 

Dolan, seen as a leading conservative among the US bishops, was replaced by a relatively ⁠unknown cleric from Illinois, Archbishop Ronald Hicks.

Leo has been ramping up his criticism of the Iran war for weeks.

He said on March 13th that Christian political leaders who start wars should go to confession and assess whether they are following the teachings of Jesus. On March 23rd, Leo said military airstrikes were ‌indiscriminate and should be banned.

Cardinal Michael Czerny, a senior Vatican official, said the pope's voice would carry weight globally because "everyone can perceive that he speaks ... for the common good, for all people and especially the vulnerable".

"Pope Leo's ​moral voice is credible, and the world wants desperately to believe that peace is possible," said the cardinal.

Leo on Thursday ​began four days of Vatican events leading up to Easter Sunday when he will deliver a special blessing and message from the balcony of St Peter's Basilica.

One of the most closely watched appointments on the Vatican's calendar, the Easter speech is usually a time when the pope makes a major international appeal.

Bishop of Antwerp slates opera production with lesbian nuns on roller skates

The Bishop of Antwerp Johan Bonny has criticised opera production “Sancta,” calling it inappropriate to “grotesquely trample on Christianity.” 

In “Sancta,” lesbian nuns on roller skates are shown walking to church naked.

Several young Roman Catholics brought the performance to the attention of the Bishop of Antwerp Johan Bonny, who published an opinion piece in Flemish daily De Standaard on Wednesday. In it, he said it was “grotesque to trample on Christianity.”

Speaking on VRT TV he added: “Young people, who mean well, let me know that they wanted to protest against the performance. I then looked at the images the organisation is using to promote the show and decided that their protest is justified.”

“I have nothing against naked women floating through the air. What matters to me is the identification with religious life. The actresses are all wearing nun’s veils, which makes it clear that it is a religious community offering the spectacle,” explains Bonny.

“If any group can laugh, it’s Christians and Catholics. When it comes to nudity, go to the cathedral. There’s been more than enough of that hanging there since Rubens’s time. We do have a sense of humour; this is about respect for people.”

“All these elderly nuns won’t react; they can’t go out onto the streets anymore, but it’s too easy to make money and sell a show at their expense.”

The Bishop of Antwerp misses a logic in the protection of religious beliefs: "The Jewish community here in Antwerp is sent police and the army to combat the slightest hint of possible anti-Semitism. For the Muslim community, extreme vigilance is exercised to ensure Ramadan proceeds peacefully. And rightly so; we support that as well. But psychological mockery is also a form of violence,” Bonny concludes.

Let’s not fall into a witch hunt

Jan Vandenhouwe, artistic director of the Opera Ballet Vlaanderen, refutes the bishop’s comments. “We shouldn’t exaggerate the situation either. We’ve now received about 10 emails, all from the same source: a student association that was also active in Germany regarding this production. It’s an ultra-conservative Catholic movement that staged a pro-life protest in front of our building just a few months ago.”

He believes that the Catholic Church is not deliberately targeted in the performance. 

“The visual language of the Catholic faith has shaped our Western art history. When you visit museums and churches, you see those images of the Descent from the Cross, violence, and blood as well. It is those images with which Holzinger (the Austrian choreographer) engages in dialogue.”

Above all, Vandenhouwe does not want society to fall back into “a kind of witch hunt against art that is critical or feminist, or that touches on difficult themes.”

And Bishop Bonny is always welcome to come and see the performance, says the artistic director. “We’ll save a seat for him; I’d love to talk with him afterwards.”

Bonny thanks him politely: “I won’t be attending out of respect for my dignity. My thoughts this week are with the suffering and death of Jesus Christ, and all the people who are going through that in the world today.”

Survivors claim Spanish Jesuits used Bolivia as ‘dumping ground’ for paedophile priests

Abuse survivors in Bolivia claimed the Society of Jesus in Catalonia used the country as a “dumping ground” for paedophile priests. 

The Bolivian Survivors’ Community (CBS) requested that the Catalan ombudsman and parliament investigate alleged cases of abuse involving approximately 1,000 victims and about 20 Jesuits. 

Some had criminal records or complaints regarding their suspected abuse at schools in Spain before they were sent to the “missions” in Bolivia. 

Alejandro Klock, legal representative in Spain for the CBS, told the EFE news agency that the Tarraconense (Catalan) Province was the “mother province” for the Jesuits’ Bolivian mission. 

“They created a criminal system which was perpetuated for 69 years and still has not been overcome today,” he said. 

Most of the Jesuits accused of abuse are now dead, including Alfonso Pedrajas, who left a diary – published in the Spanish daily El Pais in 2023 – detailing his abuse of children while he was headteacher of a school in the Cochabamba region of central Bolivia. 

A second Jesuit, Lucho Roma abused 70 indigenous girls between 1994 and 2005. 

A report from the CBS stated that the Tarraconense Province “had not only administrative, hierarchical and financial control over every level of the mission in Bolivia, it completely dominated it at every level”. 

It said the Catalan Jesuits had the authority to “transfer priests with criminal records for sexual abuse” to Bolivia, which became “a dumping ground for paedophiles”. 

“The Bolivian mission was used to hide aggressors and distance them from justice in Spain, exposing a vulnerable civil population to new abuses,” it said. 

The CBS asked the Catalan spokesman and parliament for an “institutional response” to “the biggest case of paedophilia in Latin America”.  

Last year Bolivian courts sentenced two Spanish former Jesuit provincials in Bolivia to a year in prison for covering up the abuse.

A paedophile priest conducted my mum’s funeral. It was three decades ago, but the nauseating stench of violation still lingers (Contribution)

It was my mother who ushered me away from childhood sectarian leanings in bigotry-blighted Ballymena during the mid-1970s. 

She was, not surprisingly, an influential role model. 

This is the woman whom I once saw embrace both the Rev Ian Paisley (our family home was next door to his father’s church and backed onto the manse) and Cardinal Cahal Daly (her childhood friend from Loughguile) on the same day.

She brought us up to believe you can be devout within your own particular strand of Christianity, while displaying empathy and respect to those espousing a different one.

Unfortunately for her, any devotion this onetime altar boy had garnered as a kid lapsed long before my teenage years ended, partly fuelled by rumours of paedophilic priests supposedly operating in places far enough away from Ballymena.

One of these cockroaches, however, crawled into our home after my mother’s passing and prior to conducting her funeral.

Obviously we didn’t know it at the time; the trauma came four months later when this debauched, depraved creature — that’s you, Daniel Curran — was charged with indecently assaulting two young boys at his house.

This was followed by similar charges involving nine others aged between 11 and 14, and a subsequent seven-year jail sentence — the first of several convictions as the poisonous, Savile-style drip-feed gamut of Curran’s depravity over several decades emerged.

None of that relatively welcome news removed the psychological stain this deviant left on us but, frankly, it’s nothing in comparison to what Curran’s many victims suffered, and has no doubt continued to haunt them.

There remains, nevertheless, an indelible feeling of violation, even for those like me who wouldn’t think of placing themselves anywhere near the same level of victimhood as those who suffered sexual abuse, yet can still feel duped and maligned by creeps like Curran.

That mephitic dog in a dog collar was in our midst at my family’s most vulnerable time, offering sympathy, piety and prayers for the repose of a decent, respectable, popular and God-fearing woman, even when he was busy wrecking young lives elsewhere.

It’s something I recall with remorse when my mum’s anniversary comes round every November, but it also came to mind last week when reading about how Stephen Mccullagh had been a regular visitor to the shattered home of Natalie Mcnally’s dignified, grieving family, having brutally murdered the 32-year-old.

He inveigled himself into their irreversibly devastated lives, being unwittingly welcomed as the father of pregnant girlfriend Natalie’s child and therefore someone supposedly suffering similar loss and anguish.

By appearing heartbroken, these debased fiends install themselves as victims rather than suspects, with appearances at wakes, vigils and funerals part of their sociopathic, de haut en bas pursuit of control.

As someone with a daughter I love more than life itself, I can only begin to imagine what the McNallys were already going through, without having to subsequently deal with the callous, murdering b ***** d himself hiding in plain sight — and lurking, knowingly, in their house.

These rancid individuals are the dregs of the sewers, and Mccullagh’s hardly the first to prey on a victim’s family for his own depraved ends.

Think, for instance, of the recently deceased Ian Huntley, murderer of 10-year-olds Holly Wells and Jessica Chapman and who, as school caretaker, engaged with the national media, purporting to be a concerned member of a shocked community, having already disposed of the bodies of his innocent young victims in the most undignified of ways.

Perhaps, in the throes of the brutal and ultimately lethal attack on him in HMP Frankland last month, that scumbag finally grasped the profound meaning in Matthew 26:52: “all they that take the sword shall perish with the sword”.

The UK’S most prolific serial killer, Dr Harold Shipman, took morbid pleasure in exploiting the grief of his victims’ families.

He was an insatiable narcissist who enjoyed playing God, often killing patients before ‘comforting’ their relatives, having insisted on being the one to inform them of the death.

In keeping with that ‘spirit’, police ensured that those bereaved by Shipman’s breathtaking litany of crime were among the first to be told that this cold-blooded impenitent monster had hanged himself in Wakefield Prison.

Daniel Curran wasn’t a murderer, but nevertheless revealed himself to be an arrogant, apathetic, emotionless destroyer of people’s lives.

Those who knew this lowlife described him as a loner who rarely associated with fellow clergy — apart from another notorious paedophile priest, Brendan Smyth — but preferred to regularly feed both his alcohol habit and voracious sexual appetite for vulnerable young boys.

He told police that, due to heavy drinking sessions, he struggled to remember who many of his victims were.

Unfortunately, they will never forget him. Neither did my father, who’d already gone off “Fr Curran” long before my mum’s funeral, following what he saw as the priest’s agitated, apathetic emergency bedside performance of the last rites to his beloved wife of 40 years.

As Dad would later ask: “I’m wondering what other plans he was forced to cancel that night.”

‘Daniel Curran was not a murderer, but was nevertheless a detached destroyer of young lives’

CHRISM MASS - HOMILY OF POPE LEO XIV


 St Peter's Basilica

Holy Thursday, 2 April 2026

_______________________________________


Dear brothers and sisters,

We are now on the threshold of the Easter Triduum. Once again, the Lord will lead us to the culmination of his mission, so that his passion, death and resurrection may become the heart of our mission. What we are about to relive, in fact, possesses the power to transform what human pride generally tends to harden: our identity and our place in the world. Jesus’ freedom changes hearts, heals wounds, refreshes and brightens our faces, reconciles and gathers us together, and forgives and raises us up.

In this, my first year presiding over the Chrism Mass as Bishop of Rome, I would like to reflect with you on the mission to which God calls us as his people. It is the Christian mission, the very same as Jesus’, not another. Each of us takes part in it according to our own vocation in a deeply personal obedience to the voice of the Spirit, yet never without others, never neglecting or breaking communion! Bishops and priests, as we renew our promises, we are at the service of a missionary people. Together with all the baptized, we are the Body of Christ, anointed by his Spirit of freedom and consolation, the Spirit of prophecy and unity.

What Jesus experiences at the culminating moments of his mission is foreshadowed by the passage from Isaiah, which he quoted in the synagogue at Nazareth as the word that is fulfilled “today” (cf. Lk 4:21). Indeed, at the hour of Easter, it becomes definitively clear that God consecrates in order to send.  “He has sent me” (Lk 4:18), says Jesus, describing that movement which binds his Body to the poor, to prisoners, to those groping in the dark and to those who are oppressed. We, as members of his Body, speak of a Church that is “apostolic,” sent out, driven beyond itself, and consecrated to God in the service of his creatures. “As the Father has sent me, so I send you” (Jn 20:21).

We know that being sent entails, first and foremost, a detachment, that is, the risk of leaving behind what is familiar and certain, in order to venture into something new. It is interesting that “with the power of the Spirit” (Lk 4:14), who descended upon him after his baptism in the Jordan, Jesus returned to Galilee and came “to Nazareth, where he had been brought up” (Lk 4:16).  It is the place he must now leave behind. He moves “as was his custom” (v. 16), but to usher in a new era. He must now leave that village for good, so that what has taken root there, Sabbath after Sabbath, through faithful listening to the word of God, may come to fruition. Likewise, he will call others to set out, to take risks, so that no place becomes a prison, no identity a hiding place.

Dear friends, we follow Jesus who “did not regard equality with God as something to be exploited, but emptied himself” (Phil 2:6-7). Every mission begins with that kind of self-emptying in which everything is reborn. Our dignity as sons and daughters of God cannot be taken from us, nor can it be lost, but neither can the affections, places, and experiences at the start of our lives be erased. We are heirs to so much good and, at the same time, to the limitations of a history into which the Gospel must bring light and salvation, forgiveness and healing. Thus, there is no mission without reconciliation with our past, with the gifts and limitations of the upbringing we have received; but, at the same time, there is no peace without setting out, no awareness without detachment, no joy without risk. We are the Body of Christ if we move forward, coming to terms with the past without being imprisoned by it: everything is restored and multiplied if it is first let go, without fear. This is a fundamental secret of mission. It is not something that is experienced just once, but in every new beginning, in every new sending forth.

Jesus’ journey reveals to us that the willingness to lose oneself, to empty oneself, is not an end in itself, but a condition for encounter and intimacy.  Love is true only when it is unguarded; it requires little fuss, no ostentation, and gently cherishes weakness and vulnerability. We struggle to commit ourselves to a mission that exposes us in this way, and yet there is no “good news to the poor” (cf. Lk 4:18) if we go to them bearing the signs of power, nor is there authentic liberation unless we free ourselves from attachment. Here we touch upon a second secret of the Christian mission. After detachment comes the law of encounter. We know that throughout history, mission has not infrequently been distorted by a desire for domination, entirely foreign to the way of Jesus Christ. Saint John Paul II had the clarity and courage to recognize that “because of the bond which unites us to one another in the Mystical Body, all of us, though not personally responsible and without encroaching on the judgment of God who alone knows every heart, bear the burden of the errors and faults of those who have gone before us.” [1]

Consequently, it is now a priority to remember that neither in the pastoral sphere nor in the social and political spheres can good come from abuse of power. The great missionaries bear witnesses to quiet, unobtrusive approaches, whose method is the sharing of life, selfless service, the renunciation of any calculated strategy, dialogue and respect. It is the way of the Incarnation, which always takes the form of inculturation. Salvation, in fact, can only be received by each person through his or her native language. “How is it that we hear, each of us, in our own native language?” ( Acts 2:8). The surprise of Pentecost is repeated when we do not presume to control God’s timing, but place our trust in the Holy Spirit, who “is present, even today, as in the time of Jesus and the Apostles: is present and at work, arriving before us, working harder than us and better than us; it is not for us to sow or awaken him, but first and foremost to recognize him, welcome him, go along with him, make way for him, and follow him. He is present and has never lost heart regarding our times; on the contrary, he smiles, dances, penetrates, engulfs, envelops, and reaches even where we would never have imagined.” [2]

To establish this harmony with the transcendent, we must go where we are sent with simplicity, respecting the mystery that every person and every community carries within them. As Christians, we are guests. This is also true if we are bishops, priests, or men and women religious. To be hosts, in fact, we must learn to be guests ourselves. Even the places where secularization seems most advanced are not lands to be conquered or reconquered: “New cultures are constantly being born in these vast new expanses where Christians are no longer the customary interpreters or generators of meaning. Instead, they themselves take from these cultures new languages, symbols, messages and paradigms which propose new approaches to life, approaches often in contrast with the Gospel of Jesus… It must reach the places where new narratives and paradigms are being formed, bringing the word of Jesus to the inmost soul of our cities.” [3]  This happens only if we walk together as the Church, if mission is not a heroic adventure reserved for a few, but the living witness of a Body with many members.

There is also a third dimension, perhaps the most radical, of the Christian mission. The dramatic possibility of misunderstanding and rejection, which is already seen in the violent reaction of the people of Nazareth to Jesus’ words. “When they heard this, all in the synagogue were filled with rage.  They got up, drove him out of the town, and led him to the brow of the hill on which their town was built, so that they might hurl him off the cliff” (Lk 4:28-29). Although the liturgical reading has omitted this part, what we are about to celebrate this evening calls on us not to flee, but to “pass through” the trial, just as Jesus did. Jesus “passed through the midst of them and went on his way” (Lk 4:30). The cross is part of the mission: the sending becomes more bitter and frightening, but also more freeing and transformative. The imperialist occupation of the world is thus disrupted from within; the violence that until now has been the law is unmasked. The poor, imprisoned, rejected Messiah descends into the darkness of death, yet in so doing he brings a new creation to light.

How many “resurrections” are we called to experience when, free from a defensive attitude, we immerse ourselves in service like a seed in the earth! In life, we may face situations where everything seems to be over. We then ask ourselves whether the mission has been in vain. While it is true that, unlike Jesus, we also experience failures that stem from our own shortcomings or those of others, often from a tangled web of responsibilities of light and shadow, we can make the hope of many witnesses our own. I recall one who is particularly dear to me. A month before his death, in his notebook for the Spiritual Exercises, the holy Bishop Óscar Romero wrote: ‘The nuncio in Costa Rica has warned me of an imminent danger this very week… These unforeseen circumstances will be faced with God’s grace. Jesus Christ helped the martyrs and, if the need arises, I shall feel him very close when I entrust my last breath to him. But, more than the final moment of life, what matters is to give him one’s whole life and to live for him… It is enough for me, to be happy and confident, to know with certainty that in him is my life and my death; that, despite my sins, I have placed my trust in him and I shall not be disheartened, for others will continue, with greater wisdom and holiness, the work for the Church and for the homeland.”

Dearest sisters and brothers, the saints make history. This is the message of Revelation: “Grace to you and peace from him who is and who was and who is to come, and from the seven spirits who are before his throne” (Rev 1:4).  This greeting encapsulates Jesus’ journey in a world torn apart by the powers that ravage it. Within it arises a new people, not of victims, but of witnesses. In this dark hour of history, it has pleased God to send us to spread the fragrance of Christ where the stench of death reigns. Let us renew our “yes” to this mission that calls for unity and brings peace. Yes, we are here! Let us overcome the sense of powerlessness and fear! We proclaim your death, O Lord, and we proclaim your resurrection, as we await your coming.

 _______________________________________

[1] John Paul II, Bull of Indiction of the Great Jubilee of 2000 Incarnationis Mysterium (29 November 1998), 11.

[2] C.M. Martini, Three Tales of the Spirit, Milan 1997, 11.

[3] Francis, Apostolic Exhortation Evangelii Gaudium (24 November 2013), 73-74

Chrism Mass 2026, St Mary’s Cathedral – homily of Archbishop Farrell

Today is the Day We Have—God’s Mystery is Happening Among Us Today

“Today, this scripture has been fulfilled in your hearing.” (Luke 4:21) The key word here for us this morning is today. Today is the day Christ brings good news to the poor. Today is the day he is sent to proclaim liberty to captives, … to let the oppressed go free, and to proclaim a year acceptable to the Lord. (see Luke 4:18–19)

The radical hope of Isaiah, which Jesus makes his own, can blind us to its presence in our lives, and in the life of the Church. Prophecies must, by their nature, be clear and clear-cut. However, their outworking is rarely as clear-cut. That which is proclaimed by Jesus, and is fulfilled in him, is not fulfilled in one fell swoop. The Good News does not happen with the linearity of a ‘feel-good’ story.

Is this not the mystery into which we enter in these days of Holy Week—the paradox and contradictions of God’s way with us and all his creatures? It is that mystery, with all its contradictions, that unfolds in the ministry of the Church and in our ministry. What Christ prophecies is not some vague future, but is, and has been, the story of our lives.

The Powerlessness of Christ

In these days of Holy Week, we not only celebrate a Christ “who rose victorious from the grave” (as we sing in the Exsultet), but we also remember him who joins us in death, who is with all of humanity in our ultimate place of helplessness. Christ is in the place of our ultimate powerlessness, and makes of it, the place of our salvation.

Christ has made our helplessness his own. The chaos of the Passion—its twists and turns, its betrayals and abandonments, is not just Christ’s; it is also ours, as is his isolation and aloneness. Christ not only looks upon our helplessness, but he has also entered right into its heart.

This is also the place of our ministry. Yes, we celebrate and mark the high-points of life—the marriages, the births, we proclaim good news, but like Christ himself, we are also in life in its lowest ebb. It is there that we are ministers of God’s presence and God’s hope—God’s abiding hope for us that enables us to act in ways that we did not think possible (see Matt 5:38–42).

This not some polished future; this is our today. It is in this place that we pray with Christ, “Father, if this [cup] cannot pass unless I drink it, thy will be done.” (Matt 26:42)

The Realm of the Real

Christ’s story is the story of the ministry of the Church, where, in our poverty, the Good News is made flesh in the life of every person; there the wounds of the wounded are bound up. For all our imperfections, and all our mistakes, this is place where God is acting, and is acting today, to create in all people the image of his Son, so that, in the words of Rowan Williams a few days ago, “the human world may see possibilities for transformation that would otherwise be in the realm of fantasy. (Rowan Williams “How to be an Archbishop of Canterbury,” The Tablet (21.03.26): 6, emphasis mine)

This is real priesthood; this is real ministry. This is our priesthood; this is our ministry. You do not need me to tell you that this is not “the realm of fantasy.” And this is where we need to be—even more so today, in this time of war and cynical violence, we need to be in the realm of the real, in the place where God’s Kingdom is close at hand (see Matt 4:17, cf. 26:45).

The Challenge of Ministry in a Weakened Church

The powerless Christ during Holy Week, brings home to us that to minister is not to be involved in some “success story,” but to be so permeated and filled by the compassion and attention of Christ that his life flows into everything we do, so that, day-in-day out, “it is no longer we who minister, but Christ who ministers in us.” (cf. Gal 2:20)

“At the Last Supper,” says Cardinal Timothy Radcliffe, “Jesus had lost control of his life. He had been sold by Judas to his enemies; Peter was about to deny him… The Church begins in this moment of utter collapse. …. [As people of faith,] we have nothing to fear from crises. The Church was born in one and is renewed through them…” (see Timothy Radcliffe OP, “Power and Powerlessness in the Church: The Chance for Renewal” in Austen Ivereigh (ed.), Unfinished Journey: The Church 40 Years after Vatican II. (Continuum, 2003), 119–34; here 120)

Our ministry—both as priests and as lay people—is not just some activity of ours, it is much more. It is our permitting what we do to be the place where the healing and presence of Christ touches the concrete lives of people in their everyday, and in extremis. We are still called to be active in what we do. As Pope Leo said to the clergy of Rome ‘we are not merely inserted into the river of tradition as passive executors of some predefined pastoral plan but, on the contrary, with our creativity and our gifts, we are called to collaborate with the work of God.’ (19th February 2026)

This is not easy today! The sheer magnitude of the changes which have transformed our country and our society, which touch every community and every parish, also require a capacity for change on the part of the Church, ordained ministers and laity alike.

Not Resignation, but Acceptance and Renewal

While Christ was distraught by the enormity of what was unfolding before him on Holy Thursday, it did not paralyse him. He acts: he leads his disciples to the Garden, he prays, he witnesses to who he is before the Sanhedrin, he is himself before Pilate, he carries his cross, he cries his prayer abandonment from the cross. He gives his life. He is the model, not of resignation, but of acceptance. There is a world of difference between those two places. Resignation results in bitterness, a type of living death. Acceptance leads to peace, to healing, and a renewed life.

In the crisis in which the Church now finds itself we are being renewed. As God called Christ to enter his passion, so God is calling us to enter this new time. In Gethsemane, Christ discovered a deep acceptance within himself, a renewed trust in his Father, and the strength to travel the road that was being asked of him. It was the next stage of “This is my body, given for you.” By his life, by his passion and death, Christ calls us too to our next stage of “This is my body, given for you.” To follow him does not mean that we will not fall, but it does mean that we will try, and that resignation, despair, and defeatism, are not given the upper hand. Nobody knows what the Church in Dublin will look like in 10 years’ time. But neither did Pope John XXIII know what the renewed Church would look like when he announced the Second Vatican Council! The future of the Church is in God’s hands! How we welcome that future is in ours!

God’s Future for Us

Christ’s future was in God’s hands. That is the meaning of the Resurrection. But Christ trusted his Father; he welcomed his future, difficult and all as it would be. The call for us, as we bless these oils, is whether, in our ministry, we can welcome God’s future for us in a Christ-like way, with his trust in his Father, and his hope in the One who sent him into world. The future that God is giving his Church is a future that is already visible in people who seek a way of working with each other for the sake of the little ones. The future God is giving us is already charactered by lives that are taken up into the mystery that is Christ, by lives that are drawn into the One who is the light of the world. This is the future, which already unfolds among us. A living faith, that trust which Jesus had in his Father, is a faith that welcomes that future by the way we now live. It is not a question of age, it is not a question of numbers; it is question of our willingness still to be servants of our ever-living Lord in this new time.

“May the eyes of our hearts be enlightened, that we may know the hope to which he calls us.” (cf. Eph 1:18)

+Dermot Farrell

Archbishop of Dublin

Disgust after litter discarded at Dunfanaghy church

THIS is one of the many  photos of rubbish left at the gates of Holy Cross Church in Dunfanaghy.

The incident has sparked upset within the local community.

Cathaoirleach of Glenties Municipal District, Councillor Michael McClafferty has appealed to people to desist from littering the grounds of the church.

“Many people over the years have helped Father Martin Doohan and all the previous priests prior to that to leave it a nice chapel and grounds and surrounds for all to either visit, attend or simply go for a peaceful walk.

“I would appeal to people to take their rubbish home. Don’t throw it outside Holy Cross Chapel in Dunfanaghy.”

Chrism Mass as a pretext to hunt rebellious priests

One of the most discussed issues since the publication of Traditionis custodes, promulgated by Francis on July 16, 2021, is whether bishops can use the concelebration of the Chrismal Mass in the reformed rite as a test of communion for priests linked to the 1962 missal. 

The short answer is that Rome did not dictate a universal obligation worded in those terms, but it did offer bishops a disciplinary criterion that, in practice, has served in not a few places as a tool to detect resistances, measure adhesions, and, if necessary, withdraw permissions.

The so-called Responsa ad dubia on Traditionis custodes were not presented publicly by a cardinal, a group of bishops, or an episcopal conference identified by name. 

The official text of the Holy See states only that “some questions” had arrived “from various quarters” and “with greater frequency,” and that, after examining them and informing the Roman Pontiff, the most recurrent responses were being published. 

In other words: the Holy See did not make public the identity of those who raised those doubts. The document is dated December 4, 2021, but it was published by the Holy See Press Office on December 18, 2021. 

Later, a rescriptum ex audientia of February 20, 2023, disseminated on February 21, further reinforced its practical authority by confirming that dispensations regarding the use of parish churches and the erection of personal parishes were reserved to the Dicastery for Divine Worship.

The key to the matter lies in one of those responses. The official text of the dicastery expressly addresses the case of priests who are granted permission to celebrate with the 1962 missal, but who, according to the dicastery, “do not recognize the validity and legitimacy of concelebration” and therefore refuse to concelebrate the Chrismal Mass with the bishop on Holy Thursday. 

The response is negative and adds that, before revoking that concession, the bishop must engage in fraternal dialogue and accompany the priest toward an understanding of the value of concelebration, “particularly in the Chrismal Mass.” 

The official text can be read on the Vatican website: “Responsa ad dubia on certain provisions of the Apostolic Letter Traditionis custodes”. 

There it is, in essence, the foundation that many bishops have since wielded.

The formulation is not trivial. Rome did not merely recall that the Chrismal Mass expresses the unity of the presbyterate with the bishop, something known for decades, but effectively linked the refusal to concelebrate with a deeper suspicion: the possible non-acceptance of the legitimacy of the liturgical reform and the post-conciliar magisterium. 

Media with very different sensitivities thus understood the scope of the response. 

America Magazine, for example, summarized at the time that, according to the Vatican, refusal to concelebrate the Chrismal Mass could lead to the withdrawal of permission to celebrate the traditional liturgy. 

From a more critical canonical perspective, Vaticanist Edward Pentin would later recall in the National Catholic Register that, outside of a few cases provided for by liturgical law, requiring concelebration affects the freedom of priests recognized in canon 902.

The clearest and best-documented case in France was that of Dijon. 

Even before the Responsa, a head-on clash had already occurred there between Archbishop Roland Minnerath and the Priestly Fraternity of Saint Peter. 

In June 2021, CNA/EWTN reported that the fraternity’s priests would be removed from Fontaine-lès-Dijon after years of tensions. 

Father Hubert Perrel explained at the time that the archbishop wanted them to concelebrate the Chrismal Mass during Holy Week, something they had not done for years due to their charism and their way of living the liturgy. 

The same idea reappeared later in the National Catholic Register, which directly cited that dispute over Chrismal concelebration as one of the triggers of the conflict. 

It was no longer a theoretical discussion about rubrics or liturgical sensitivity, but a concrete disciplinary collision between a diocesan ordinary and an institute born precisely under the protection of Ecclesia Dei.

Dijon was not an isolated episode or a mere local eccentricity. 

In 2024, the same National Catholic Register returned to that precedent and presented it as a consolidated example of the new praxis: Archbishop Minnerath, the article said, expelled members of the Priestly Fraternity of Saint Peter because they did not want to concelebrate Masses, “specifically the Chrismal Mass in the ordinary form,” and had not done so for years. 

The importance of this point lies in showing how the concelebration of the Chrismal Mass has ceased to be perceived in certain episcopal circles as a recommended gesture to become, in practice, a disciplinary boundary between the priest considered fully aligned and the priest under suspicion.

Soon after came another decisive piece of data, this time from Rome and with a clearly more general scope. 

After Francis’s audience with members of the French episcopate on April 21, 2022, several media outlets reported that the Pope had insisted that all priests accept concelebration, at least in the Chrismal Mass. 

The formulation was attributed to the Archbishop of Reims and President of the French Episcopal Conference, Monsignor Éric de Moulins-Beaufort. 

It was reported, among others, by Famille Chrétienne, which cited that papal insistence as part of the message transmitted to the French bishops. 

Although it was not a normative document with legislative value, it did have an evident effect: it confirmed that the Roman line did not see the issue as a secondary detail, but as a relevant sign of visible communion.

The Priestly Fraternity of Saint Peter, for its part, obtained in February 2022 a singular papal decree that confirmed for its members the use of the 1962 liturgical books, in their own churches or oratories and, outside of them, with the consent of the local ordinary. 

The text can be consulted on the fraternity’s own website: “Decree of Pope Francis confirming the use of the 1962 liturgical books”. 

That decree was presented by the fraternity as a confirmation of its charism, but it did not fully resolve the issue of concelebration. 

In fact, precisely because the Pope reaffirmed their right to use the 1962 books without derogating from the general architecture of Traditionis custodes, the tension remained open between the recognition of a proper liturgical identity and the episcopal pressure for that identity to manifest itself as compatible with certain gestures of the reformed rite, especially in the diocesan framework.

That tension has continued to surface. 

In 2025, the Valence conflict brought the issue back to the forefront. 

The National Catholic Register reported that Bishop François Durand was withdrawing the Priestly Fraternity of Saint Peter from its apostolate in Valence and Montélimar, and emphasized that one of the points of friction was the FSSP’s refusal to concelebrate, “including the Chrismal Mass.” 

According to that information, for the diocesan authorities, such refusal was a sign of lack of ecclesial communion. 

Once again, the same pattern emerges: the Chrismal Mass ceases to be simply a great annual celebration of the diocesan clergy and begins to function as a visible test of adhesion to the post-conciliar liturgical and ecclesial framework.

From a strictly legal point of view, exaggerations must be avoided. 

There is no universal law that says, with that literalness, that “priests from ex Ecclesia Dei communities are obliged to concelebrate the Novus Ordo in the Chrismal Mass under penalty of automatically losing their ministries.” 

That would be inaccurate. 

What does exist is something more complex and, in a certain sense, more effective: a chain of texts and decisions that has allowed bishops to interpret refusal to concelebrate as an indication of a supposed deeper doctrinal or ecclesiological problem. 

First came Traditionis custodes; then, the Responsa of December 2021, with its explicit reference to the Chrismal Mass; later, the disciplinary reinforcement of the February 2023 rescriptum. 

On that basis, several ordinaries have acted very harshly, taking advantage of the framework to seek out suspects.

The real debate, therefore, does not revolve solely around a rubric or presbyteral courtesy toward the bishop. 

What is being discussed is whether the ecclesial communion of a traditional priest can legitimately be measured through a liturgical act that, for him, is not incidental but problematic for reasons of liturgical conscience, the history of his institute, and understanding of the priesthood. 

The more restrictive bishops respond yes, because the Chrismal Mass sacramentally expresses the unity of the presbyterate and because anyone who rejects even that minimal gesture places himself, in fact, in an anomalous ecclesial position. 

The sectors most linked to tradition respond that this demand turns a sign of communion into an ideological test, and that the pressure to concelebrate the Novus Ordo precisely in the Chrismal Mass has ended up operating as a detector of “rebels” within the traditional clergy.

This explains why the expression does not sound disproportionate to many of those affected. 

In light of the Roman texts and the cases of Dijon and Valence, it can be argued with foundation that the concelebration of the Chrismal Mass has been used in certain dioceses as a touchstone to separate traditional priests considered integrable from those considered reluctant.