Friday, June 05, 2026

Illinois diocese asks court to block law requiring it to hire nonbelievers

A Catholic diocese and a pregnancy center in Illinois are asking a federal appeals court to strike down a state law that they say would force them to hire workers who disagree with their religious and pro-life missions.

The Diocese of Springfield in March 2025 had filed suit against the state alongside the Pregnancy Care Center of Rockford. Both parties had argued that the Illinois Human Rights Act “dictates how religious employers must speak and act about employees’ voluntary reproductive decisions like abortion, contraception, and sterilization.”

That law “prohibits employers from disciplining or refusing to hire employees” regarding their decisions about abortion and further “requires employers to grant employee accommodations” regarding abortion, the lawsuit said.

A district court dismissed the lawsuit in March, claiming the plaintiffs lacked standing to sue. On June 3 the Alliance Defending Freedom, which is representing both the diocese and the pregnancy center, said it had filed suit in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 7th Circuit over the dispute.

The district court had ruled that the alleged religious liberty violations were “speculative,” according to the filing; the appeals brief called the courtʼs conclusion “erroneous.”

“The ministries currently engage in constitutionally protected conduct that the [the state law] arguably proscribes, and the state has repeatedly refused to disavow enforcement,” the filing says.

The suit argues that the dispute “would be no different if a pro-life state government was forcing abortion clinics to hire pro-life employees and speak pro-life messages.” In either case, “the First Amendment doesn’t allow [it].”

Springfield Bishop Thomas Paprocki said in the Alliance Defending Freedom press release that the diocese "proclaims, teaches, and encourages Catholics to live out all the teachings of the Church, including the dignity and value of human life.”

“Our employees represent the diocese and are expected to uphold our standards of conduct to ensure they align with the doctrine and moral teaching of the Catholic Church," the bishop said.

Under the Illinois law "we cannot hire or retain employees based on our deeply held religious beliefs on pro-life teachings without being subject to disciplinary action," the bishop continued, adding: "We must have the freedom to follow and express our convictions without government interference.”

‘Still opportunity’ to amend mother and baby home inquiry Bill, says Stormont speaker

There is “still opportunity” to make further amendments to the mother and baby home inquiry Bill, the Stormont speaker has said.

Edwin Poots made the remarks in the Assembly on Tuesday after concern was expressed at the apparent rejection of an amendment extending the time frame for eligibility for redress payments.

The passing of the Inquiry (Mother and Baby Institutions, Magdalene Laundries and Workhouses) and Redress Scheme Bill will allow the opening of a public inquiry into the former institutions in Northern Ireland, as well as a redress scheme for victims and survivors.

More than 14,000 women and girls are thought to have passed through institutions, which were run by the Catholic Church, religious orders, some Protestant denominations, and the state.

Many were found to have been mistreated, held against their will and forced to give up their children for adoption.

A payment of £10,000 is proposed to be made to eligible claimants and a £2,000 payment to eligible family members on behalf of a loved one who has died since September 29th, 2011.

Poots made a statement on the Bill after concern was expressed at the apparent rejection of an amendment to the legislation which would have allowed those who died before September 2011 the equal right to redress.

A group of survivors, Birth Mothers And Their Children Together, have queried the move.

Poots said while speakers did not give reasons for their decisions by convention, he would make remarks in “recognition of the sensitivity of these issues”.

He told MLAs it was for the Speaker to decide which amendments proposed to a Bill, if any, were debated.

“Often this involves complex issues and requires the Speaker to make balanced judgments,” he said.

“I fully acknowledge that I approach these matters both from a perspective of my experience as a minister and developments around legislation in recent years.

“I have previously told the House that I take a rigorous and cautious approach to my decisions, and members will be aware that the marshalled list for consideration stage of the Bill didn’t issue unusually until a Saturday, and that is because I went through those amendments in detail, over and over again, before I reached the decision.”

Poots said: “I want to be clear to the House that the fact that the committee amendment removing clause 31 of the Bill was not selected for the consideration stage should not be interpreted as meaning that a different amendment proposing an alternative date or approach cannot be tabled or selected at further consideration stage.

“Before the consideration stage, there was a positive and constructive engagement between the committee and the Executive Office, and this included ministers bringing forward amendments in response to the committee’s views and the committee agreeing to withdraw its amendments in support of those proposed by ministers.

“Members will also be aware that at further consideration stage, it is the last opportunity to bring forward amendments to a Bill, therefore normal that ministers bring forward amendments at that stage to tidy up changes to a Bill in order to ensure they are practical and effective, as well as to ensure that there is a coherent statue book.”

He added: “It would therefore be preferable for any attempt to address the concerns of victims and survivors in relation to the posthumous date to be taken forward by a ministerial amendment from the Executive Office, that is a matter for ministers to consider, and I am sure that the committee will be active in encouraging them to do so.

“It is also right that the committee and any other members should continue to engage with the department on the details and technicalities of any further amendments.

“I make these remarks today to emphasis that the passage of the Bill is not yet complete and therefore remains the ability to amend it in line with the principles agreed at second stage.

“I have gone further than a Speaker normally would before a Bill returns to the House. I hope that this helps clarify and manage expectations around just what is possible from my perspective.”

Inside a Benedictine monastery, nuns raise lambs whose wool is for the pope

For months, two newborn lambs become part of the daily rhythm of life inside a Benedictine monastery in Rome. 

The sisters of St. Cecilia feed the lambs, care for them and gently shepherd them through an ancient ritual whose final destination reaches all the way to the pope. 

In a tradition dating back hundreds of years, the lambs' shorn wool is used for a vestment known as a pallium, a woolen band worn over the shoulders. 

It is bestowed on the pope at his inauguration Mass, and on metropolitan archbishops during a sacred annual ritual: the June 29 solemnity of Sts. Peter and Paul.

The tender relationship between the sisters and lambs — at once practical, affectionate and deeply symbolic — lies at the heart of a new Italian documentary, "Agnus Dei" ("Lamb of God"), which offers a rare glimpse into a cloistered world where this centuries-old tradition endures.

What follows throughout the film's 73 minutes is a quietly commanding, hypnotically mesmerizing and visually arresting film that follows the animals from birth to their formal blessing and then subsequent time with the Benedictine nuns of the monastery of St. Cecilia in Trastevere, Rome.

One of the two lambs featured in the new Italian documentary film "Agnus Dei" who become part of an ancient ritual whose final destination reaches all the way to the pope (Riccardo Ghilardi)

The film's narrative arc may seem simple. But equally important is the symbolic power of the Christ story, with the lambs representing purity and innocence, sacrifice and redemption. 

Along the way, Italian director Massimiliano Camaiti distills the quiet, sacred, almost timeless world within the sisters' monastery with uncommon care, love and respect.

Without any narration — an intentional decision — Camaiti told GSR, the viewer is "entering a parallel world," one that focuses on storytelling solely through images.

And what images they are: Birth. Blessings. Ritual. Solemnity. The love found in the Benedictine community, the tenderness shown by the sisters to the vulnerable lambs. The climax of seeing the vestments worn by Pope Leo XIV and a group of metropolitan archbishops.

The new Italian documentary film "Agnus Dei" follows the lives of the Benedictine nuns of the monastery of St. Cecilia in Trastevere, Rome, seen here in preparation for the blessing of two lambs whose wool will be used in the creation of vestments known as pallia. (Riccardo Ghilardi)

For the filmmakers, the experience was like "being a fly on the wall, but that helps the audience live the experience," said producer Giovanna Nicolai, who joined Camaiti in a May 29 interview at the Walter Reade Theater in New York.

There, "Agnus Dei" was shown this past week at its North American premiere, featured as part of Film at Lincoln Center's "Open Roads: New Italian Cinema" festival. 

The documentary was originally premiered at the Venice Biennale, has had a successful release in Italy and has been picked up by several international film festivals, including Open Roads. 

The film was also selected for production by Biennale College Cinema, which the director and producer call a prestigious workshop, based in Venice, Italy, for first- and second-time filmmakers. 

Four projects from hundreds of applications were awarded with 200,000-euro grants for film production. 

"The trick," Nicolai said, "is that no other funds could be added," meaning the four films had to be completed within the set budget.

'A kind of revelation' 

In a director's statement provided by the Lincoln Center festival, Camaiti said his discovery of the ancient tradition actually "happened by chance," when he walked past the basilica in Trastevere, a Rome neighborhood located just south of Vatican City, on the celebration day of St. Agnes in January 2021. 

"Seeing two lambs covered in flowers, joyfully celebrated by the nuns before being blessed by a priest, was a kind of revelation," he writes. "That's when the idea was born to follow the journey of the two animals: from birth to the completion of the ritual that transforms their wool into a vestment destined to be worn by the pope."

The lambs, he said, "opened the doors to a secret world, marked by a different rhythm, a different breath, one that not even the sudden intrusion of history could disturb."

History takes different forms. Several times, the camera looks upward, catching the image of a plane amid the clouds, suggesting a frenetic globalized world beyond the monastery's still and quiet walls.

But more concretely, viewers find themselves watching as the sisters hear radio reports of Pope Francis' declining health and then, finally, the pope's death on April 21, 2025, the day after Easter.

Though sadness is apparent, and "as the nuns' activities were paused for only a few hours," Camaiti recalled, he captures the indelible reality that life in the monastery quietly "resumed, unchanged and unchanging, as it has always been through the centuries."

"They are used to moving on," Nicolai said of the sisters. "They do what they do no matter who is the pope," noting they must deliver the pallia on time.

The film ends memorably: The sisters watch the Sts. Peter and Paul service on television — with a new pontiff, Pope Leo XIV, presiding, and the sisters' careful craftsmanship on full display. They react both with pride and with characteristic modesty.

"The fruit of our labor," one of the sisters remarks.

"They are happy to be in the background," Camaiti said.

Relationship with the sisters 'built over time'

Another scene is of a family reunion. Much of the film focuses on Sr. Vincenza Portaluri, who is the lambs' primary caretaker but who, as the viewers learn, entered religious life after being married and then widowed. 

At one point the camera shows her smiling while lovingly holding faded photographs of her and her late husband in earlier times.

But also captured is Portaluri meeting her family, including her son and grandchildren, for a family dinner at the monastery — a meal marked by memories, jokes and friendly banter. 

It is a moving reminder that while sisters are members of chosen communities, they are also tied to family, lineage and kin.

Camaiti said it took some doing to convince the sisters to agree to participate in the film, with his proposal greeted with an initial polite no.

But when Camaiti outlined his artistic vision and assured the sisters of a respectful portrayal of their lives, and after he showed them 20 minutes of initial footage, they agreed and cooperated fully.

The film was shot over 25 days spanning six months in 2025, from January to June.

The sisters "trusted us, but it was a relationship we had to build slowly, over time," Nicolai said, adding that now "we're like family."

"They just got used to our presence, and it became very natural."

Camaiti attended Catholic schools, but like many Italians, fell away from the church. Still, he said the experience of making the film has brought him closer to the church and a recognition of the importance of spirituality in the contemporary world.

That shows in the film — which Camaiti proudly notes the sisters have seen and praised.

As for the blessed lambs, "they are back home now," he said, returned to the farm where they were born and are now fully grown. 

"I like to think that there is a flock of blessed sheep somewhere in the countryside just outside of Rome."

Ahead of papal visit, Spain pushes forward with reparations for church sex abuse victims

In the 1970s, in a devoutly Catholic Spain still ruled by dictator Francisco Franco, Paula Alonso-Pimentel was sent for catechism at age 8 to a religious school in the northern city of Valladolid.

There, she says, a Marist priest sexually abused her for a year in the school’s vestibule, placing her on his knees and lifting her skirt as students passed in and out. More than 50 years later, she is seeking reparations.

Spain’s long-delayed reckoning with sexual abuse within the Catholic Church entered a new phase this year with the launch of a reparations program for cases like Alonso-Pimentel’s that involve accused clergy members who have died and whose alleged crimes are too old to be prosecuted.

The Spanish bishops conference and Spain’s government approved the program months before Pope Leo XIV ’s planned visit starting Saturday to the once overwhelmingly Catholic nation of 50 million people. 

Notably, it gives the government the final word on payouts. Across the world, clergy sexual abuse and cover-up scandals have rocked Catholic dioceses, damaging the Church’s reputation and challenging the popularity of popes more than three decades after the crisis first erupted publicly in the West.

In Spain, some victims have been reassured; others remain skeptical, arguing that the window for reparations claims is too short and questioning whether it can succeed without enforceable, transparent payments.

The program gives victims a year to apply. So far, 420 people have done so. It follows years of controversy after newspaper El País revealed the scope of alleged abuse amid the church’s silence, as well as criticism of the church’s own attempt to compensate victims.

Alonso-Pimentel shares some skepticism, but hopes the abuse she has spent decades trying to overcome will finally be addressed.

“It must cost them, the Church,” she said. “It must cost them because this cannot come for free. It cannot be that they can continue doing it without paying a huge price.”

The Associated Press does not identify people who say they have been sexually assaulted unless they come forward publicly, as Alonso-Pimentel has done.

For years, she buried the memories. With time, she spoke about the abuse to friends, partners, psychologists and eventually to others who also said clergy had abused them.

After Pope Francis convened a global summit in 2019 on clerical abuse, Alonso-Pimentel wrote to the Marist order in Valladolid, seeking details about the priest she says abused her. 

All she received was his name. Following a brief period of communication, she felt mistrustful and cut off contact.

When the Spanish church launched its own extrajudicial program for abuse victims in prescribed cases, she did not apply, deterred by the institution’s attitude. 

Alonso-Pimentel hopes the new church-state model will be more equitable.

“I’m going to submit my report no matter what,” she said, “but I also want to see how they work.”

The new system calls for Spain’s ombudsman to review each case through an independent team of experts and propose compensation, whether symbolic, psychological or economic, that the church will then assess.

If no agreement is reached, the case will go to a joint committee with representatives from the church, the ombudsman’s office and victims groups. If that committee can’t agree, the ombudsman has the final word.

The long path to a deal

With El País’ creation in 2018 of a database of clergy sexual abuse cases, Spain began confronting a legacy of abuse by priests and cover-up by generations of bishops and religious superiors. 

It did so later than other Western countries, including the United States, Ireland and Australia.

As the database grew, so did public outrage, with Spain’s ombudsman tasked by Parliament to investigate how widespread the issue was. 

In 2023, the ombudsman delivered a damning 800-page report estimating there were hundreds of thousands of possible victims of church sexual abuse in Spain over decades — based on a survey of 8,000 people. 

The report also examined 487 known cases.

Spain’s bishops rejected the estimate, saying its own investigation had uncovered 728 sexual abusers within the church since 1945. Most of the crimes occurred before 1990, the bishops’ conference said, and 60 percent of the alleged perpetrators were now dead.

In 2024, the bishops unilaterally created a system to assist victims on a case-by-case basis. It came months after the Spanish government announced its intention to force the church to compensate victims, accusing the church of minimizing the problem. 

It said the church’s in-house system was ineffective in part because it lacked outside oversight.

For that reason, many victims, including Alonso-Pimentel, said they didn’t want to directly approach the church.

You can’t be a judge and a jury in your own case, Alonso-Pimentel said. “It’s as simple as that.”

Earlier this year, the bishops conference said it had paid around 2 million euros ($2.3 million) to victims, but understood some victims’ discomfort. It acknowledged the utility of the new state-church model.

“It’s opening a new door for the process that the church has already been developing for the past two years,” said Josetxo Vera, the conference’s communications director.

The Vatican has grown more explicit about compensating sexual abuse victims. In Leo’s first encyclical, he wrote that listening to victims of sexual abuse included “acknowledging the harm done” and “just reparation.”

Even so, Spain’s bishops have long denied that clerical abuse is systemic, pointing out that more sexual crimes take place outside the church.

“We believe that, indeed, human nature is flawed, that it has a propensity for evil, and that it needs a great deal of reconciliation and forgiveness. But I can’t say that it’s a systemic issue,” said Vera. “We are part of this society. We share some of its virtues, and we also share some of its vices and crimes.”

Some worry the new program shares weaknesses with the church’s

Other victims and advocates worry that Spain’s new plan still won’t be strong enough. A key concern: there is no scale for reparations based on the severity of the abuse, with the church and government agreeing to evaluate cases on an individual basis. Also, it isn’t legally binding.

“I see this protocol actually as being quite fragile,” said Anne Barrett Doyle, co-director of Bishop Accountability, a Boston-based nonprofit that researches child abuse by priests and the management of those cases by bishops, religious orders and the Vatican. “It has a very short time frame. It has no matrix to establish minimum awards for various categories of injuries. So will it be fair? Will it be consistent?”

Ahead of Leo’s visit, Spanish activist Miguel Hurtado has cited his own abuse case to highlight its potential weaknesses.

More than two decades ago, Hurtado says that a monk named Andreu Soler sexually molested him when he was a 16-year-old Boy Scout in a group led by Soler at the Montserrat Abbey, an 11th-century Benedictine monastery in the mountains outside Barcelona.

Initially, the monastery persuaded his parents not to report the alleged abuse to authorities, Hurtado said. He tried moving on with his life. 

But as Hurtado observed the reckoning around clerical abuse taking place years later, he went public with his accusations, including to El País.

The Montserrat Abbey, through an independent report in 2019, acknowledged multiple cases of sexual abuse committed by Soler over decades. 

But Hurtado said it did not assume any responsibility to formally compensate victims “because everything is time-barred, both criminally and civilly.”

Questioned by the AP, the monastery declined to comment on Hurtado’s case or whether it will cooperate with other cases that could emerge through the new reparations system.

Hurtado said he is disappointed that Leo will visit the monastery despite the abuse allegations, which he has detailed to the Vatican and other church authorities.

He fears the new system could leave many victims in the dark.

“The problem is that it’s built on sand,” Hurtado said.

Volunteer ousted after warning Church authorities of 'rogues' peddling 'fake relics', tribunal hears

A veteran church security volunteer was ousted by the Augustinian Order for warning that certain "rogues" were going to try and pass off "fake relics" for sale at its church in Limerick City, a tribunal has been told.

The allegation was aired during a preliminary hearing at the Workplace Relations Commission into a complaint under the Unfair Dismissals Act 1977 by Frank Purcell, challenging his alleged sacking from the Church of St Augustine on O'Connell Street, Limerick.

Lawyers acting for the holy order of friars objected this week to the tribunal holding a hearing into the substance of the dispute.

Its barrister, John Monaghan BL, appearing instructed by Pierre Sylvestre of Dundon Callinan Solicitors, argued Mr Purcell has no standing to pursue a complaint under employment legislation, given that he was never paid for his work.

"Where there is no consideration, there can be no employment," Mr Monaghan said - pointing out that Mr Purcell's WRC complaint form stated his gross weekly wages to be "€0.00".

"Under a letter issued to the respondent on 12 November 2024 by his solicitors at the time, it is noted that there's a suspension of his role as a volunteer at the church premises. He's a volunteer, he’s not paid by wages or any other form of remuneration," Mr Monaghan added.

Mr Purcell's representative, Frank McDonnell, countered that the Protected Disclosures Act "gives recognition to volunteers, particularly where there's penalisation".

"The proof of the penalisation of Frank Purcell was when he was summarily dismissed for doing his job; no right of appeal, no inquiry, nothing - just stepped down, that was it, after 16 years," Mr McDonnell said.

When adjudication officer Peter O'Brien said he would be looking for the complainant side to show him "evidence of compensation", Mr McDonnell said Mr Purcell was "more concerned about his standing in society" as he was "well-known" after his lengthy service as a volunteer for the Augustinians.

"It's obvious he's contributed to the Church over many years; he’s the best interests of the Church at heart trying to deal with certain issues he's alleged and pointed out over the years, but I'm not convinced this is an employment issue," Mr O'Brien said.

"I'll be blunt, I think it's more an issue between the parties that could hopefully be resolved by means other than an industrial relations or employment law tribunal," Mr O’Brien added.

Mr Monaghan said: "We appreciate the complaint Mr Purcell is making… but this is not the correct venue."

Mr McDonnell said Mr Purcell was "a guy that gave 16 long years of service" to the Augustinians.

"He made a disclosure to the Order that there was some not nice people going to arrive selling fake relics, and there was an altercation at the back of the church during Mass," Mr McDonnell said.

"Mr Purcell was very badly treated by a religious order, after giving them 16 loyal years of service, [there was] no explanation of what he was doing wrong. He was sacked for doing his job," he added.

Mr Monaghan objected to the submission.

"He turned up seven days a week and twice on Sunday. He felt obliged to warn the order that these rogues were coming in," Mr McDonnell submitted further.

Mr O’Brien invited legal submissions in writing on the respondent’s objection and closed the hearing.

‘Singing priest’ accused of helping notorious paedo Eamonn Cooke hide his crimes

The latest episode of RTE’s Pirate Predator also investigates the DJ’s ties to serial abuser Jimmy Savile.

The new podcast series, narrated by Peter Mulryan, tells the story of one of Ireland’s most prolific child sex beasts.

In the latest bombshell episode, new information details how Fr Michael Cleary was allegedly involved in burying a tape-recording accusing the disgraced presenter of child sexual abuse.

While Cooke attempted to protect his image and his station, the family of one of his 11-year-old victims recorded testimony detailing her abuse at his hands.

The victim tells the podcast how the tape was sent to a local Dublin priest with the help of DJ James Dillon, who was trying to expose Cooke’s activities.

Later, after a walkout by staff, Cooke offered Fr Cleary a presenting slot at the station.

The podcast claims Cooke used his influence over his newest recruit and “asked him for a favour to get the tape of allegations made back from the local priest, and he duly obliged”.

Former DJ Sean Meaney tells the podcast: “Fr Michael Cleary brought the tape back to Eamon Cooke, and that way they buried it.

“I always got the feeling that because of ‘holy Ireland’, that they didn’t want all that kind of information to get out.”

Sean’s account of the tape is backed up by retired Detective Sergeant Jerry Kelly – one of the key officers involved in eventually bringing Cooke to justice.

He said: “The tape disappeared. They went to the priest. Cooke used Fr Cleary to talk to the priest in Inchicore, but it just died a death.

“Fr Cleary, who was big into singing, and he was just known as the singing priest, his partner in crime was no less than Fr Tony Walsh, a prolific paedophile abuser.” 

The episode also delves into Cooke’s relationship with serial abuser Savile. It was during the summer of 1978 that predator Savile, when he was already a household name across the UK and Ireland, appeared to have first come into Cooke’s life, the narrator explains.

From 1967 through to the early ’80s, Savile came to Ireland to lead a huge annual charity walk for CRC, the Central Remedial Clinic in Dublin, a national charity that works with children and adults with disabilities.

“Jimmy Savile came to Radio Dublin at one stage,” Mr Meaney reveals. “I wasn’t there, but he came to the station. So there was definitely some kind of connection there.”

“It’s very likely Jimmy Savile abused women and children on his visits to Ireland, and that’s not just me saying it,” the narrator says. “One in Four, the sex abuse support group believes that too.

“When you put the two predators in the same place at the same time with access to children, there’s every chance they could have operated together, but, of course, we don’t know if that’s true – and we won’t know if it’s true unless victims come forward.”

New episodes of Pirate Predator drop every Monday. The series also airs on RTE Radio 1 on Sundays at 7.30pm.

Washington priest removed as exorcist after linking UFOs to work of demons

The Catholic archbishop of Washington DC on Wednesday removed a well-known priest as an exorcist of the archdiocese after he made public comments suggesting that UFO sightings were the work of demons.

Cardinal Robert McElroy said the archdiocese also was cutting ties with the St Michael Center for Spiritual Renewal, a Washington-based non-profit headed by the priest, Monsignor Stephen Rossetti.

The archbishop said Rossetti’s statements “linking UFOs to demonic presence and the Center’s recent use of social media gravely undermine the Church’s very precise teaching on the devil, demons and exorcism”.

“There’s a danger here,” Rossetti said in a 29 May video posted on his Facebook page addressing UFO sightings and the existence of aliens. “As an exorcist I wanted to raise that danger. And that is that demons like to hide … They don’t want us to know what they’re doing because they’re more effective when we don’t realize it.

“They can kind of get into your head, you know, and manipulate things in the world to influence us to do evil.

“It’s my personal belief that probably many if not most of these UFO sightings are in fact demons,” Rossetti added.

Rossetti also said that people can be good Catholics and believe there’s life on other planets, though he does not personally believe life exists elsewhere.

In a statement posted on the St Michael Center website, Rossetti said he was saddened by the action of the archdiocese.

“I ask forgiveness for any ways that I have not been faithful to the teachings of the Church’s Magisterium, particularly in the cited video on ‘aliens and the demonic’,” he said. “I believe it is of the utmost importance to be obedient to the Church and I will continue to endeavor to subject all that I do and the Center to be thus obedient.”

Rossetti, who has more than 148,000 followers on Instagram, is a prominent psychologist as well as an exorcist. His center has specialized in offering spiritual healing for priests troubled by various difficulties.

In 2023, he told the Associated Press there was increasing and renewed appetite for information about demonic possession and exorcism.

Pope Leo sends message of support to New Ross priests during meeting with Wexford couple — ‘I’m still asking myself if it was real’

A popular Wexford couple had the holiday of a lifetime as they were “hugely overwhelmed” to meet Pope Leo XVI at The Vatican.

Seán Connick, CEO of JFK Trust and Dunbrody Visitor Centre in New Ross, Wexford, and his wife, Lourde Connick, already had a reason to celebrate - not only were they on holidays abroad with friends, but one of Lourde’s most recent pieces of work in Power Ballad, in which she features as a film extra, starring Nick Jonas and Paul Rudd, was due to hit the big screens on Friday, May 29, having already enjoyed the premier a few days prior.

There was more excitement to come for the couple, on a level they “could never have imagined”, as they travelled around Rome and took a trip to The Vatican. 

Seán explained they had previously travelled to Rome on a few occassions, but they had never experienced The Vatican, and this was the their perfect opportunity.

Seán reached out to a local Wexford priest, Fr Richard Lawless, with the hope of being put in contact with Fr Billy Swan, who accepted a five-year post in 2025 to serve in the dicastery. 

When they were successfully put in contact with one another, they arranged to meet, and Fr Billy arranged passes to the Pope’s Udienza Generale di Sua Santita Leone XIV on Wednesday, May 27.

“They were general audience tickets, and we were delighted with that,” Seán said. 

He explained that as a wheelchair user, there would often be prioritised access at most events, and this being no exception, he and his wife were separated from their Wexford friends Dermot, Úna and Sophie Kehoe, Jas and Charlotte O’Callaghan, and David and Mary O’Brien, who were located in the front viewing area in St Peter’s Square, while Seán and Lourde were brought to a different section. 

“It was just after 7.30am and there were already thousands queueing to see Pope Leo, but then they showed us to our area and little did we know that we going to be placed directly beside the altar and podium where the Pope speaks from,” said Seán.

“Hearing the readings and the different languages and being just 20ft away from the Pope was an experience in itself,” Seán added.

Following the service, Pope Leo XVI spoke with some of the Bishops who were in attendance, but then made his way towards Seán and Lourde, where an unexpected conversation was held between them, making a bittersweet moment for them all as they fondly remembered a mutual friend, the late Fr John Hennebry, a former principal of the Good Counsel College in New Ross.

In late April, 2007, Pope Leo XVI (then Fr Robert Prevost) travelled to Wexford to meet with Fr Hennebry at the Good Counsel College, as he visited the Augustinian houses in Ireland, which he would’ve been obliged to do in his position as Prior General, making him their worldwide superior. He was known to some Wexford parishioners and students as Fr Bob.

“It was an extraordinary, overwhelming experience. I’m still asking myself if it was real,” Seán said.

“When I told him we came from New Ross, he recognised the name and then when we spoke about Fr Hennebry, he was visibly saddened. He nodded, and acknowledged that Fr Hennebry was no longer with us,” Seán continued.

“He then asked us to make sure we bring a message from him to the priests in New Ross. He said: ‘Tell them they have my continued support and best wishes, particularly my colleagues in the Augustinian Order.’ It’s just remarkable,” Seán said.

The conversation between the Pope and the Wexford couple moved on to the weather, as he acknowledged the significant difference between sitting in The Vatican at over 30 degrees Celsius, compared to the weather in the ‘sunny south east’ of Ireland.

“Before he left us, I thanked him for ever ything he does. He shook our hands again and continued to the next couple. It was so surreal. It was one of the proudest moments of my whole life. We were completely overwhelmed and emotional with the whole thing. It was just brilliant,” said Seán.

The encounter proved to be a whirlwind of emotions for the pair, particularly when they learned Fr Billy is yet to meet his Holiness, despite working in close proximity, and later that night, as they returned to their hotel, Seán said he “was like a celebrity”.

“When people found out I met the Pope they were coming up to shake my hand and everyone was so excited. I’m very proud to have been there as a New Ross man, and it was a great honour,” Seán concluded.

Archbishop of Valencia warns of the abandonment of Sunday Mass

On the occasion of the solemnity of Corpus Christi, the Archbishop of Valencia, Monsignor Enrique Benavent, has expressed his concern over the progressive distancing of many baptized persons from Sunday Eucharist and has warned of the spiritual consequences this situation entails for the life of faith and for ecclesial communion.

In a pastoral letter published by the Archdiocese of Valencia on the occasion of the celebration of Corpus Christi, Benavent recalls that the Eucharist constitutes the center of Christian life and laments that numerous Catholics have ceased to perceive the need to participate in Sunday Mass.

“Friendship with Christ gradually grows cold”

“One of the most worrying phenomena currently in the life of the Church is the abandonment of Sunday Mass by many of the baptized”

He explains that continued absence from the Eucharistic celebration causes a progressive interior distancing from Christ. 

“Their friendship with the Lord gradually grows cold until it dies,” he states.

The archbishop adds that this distancing affects not only the personal relationship with God, but also ecclesial belonging. 

Whoever ceases to participate in the Eucharist ends up feeling like a stranger within the Christian community and progressively loses the bonds that unite them to it.

To explain this reality, Benavent uses a family comparison: just as a person who stops gathering with their own gradually becomes emotionally distant from them, whoever abandons Sunday Mass runs the risk of losing the living relationship with Christ and with the Church.

The Eucharist, source of the Church’s life

The archbishop recalls that the Second Vatican Council placed particular emphasis on the centrality of the Eucharist for Christian life.

“In this sacrament is contained all the spiritual good of the Church: Christ, our Passover,” Benavent recalls, citing the conciliar decree on the ministry and life of priests.

The prelate’s reflection takes place in the context of the solemnity of Corpus Christi, one of the most important celebrations of the liturgical calendar, in which the Church publicly professes its faith in the real presence of Jesus Christ in the Eucharist.

The lesson of the disciples on the road to Emmaus

Benavent finds a particularly eloquent image of Eucharistic life in the Gospel episode of the disciples on the road to Emmaus.

Those disciples, he explains, discovered the presence of Christ in the breaking of the bread after having asked him to stay with them. 

The encounter with the Lord transformed their sadness into joy and prompted them to return immediately to Jerusalem to share the news with the other disciples.

For the archbishop, this experience continues to be repeated in every Eucharistic celebration. 

The desire to remain with the Lord finds its answer in the Mass, where Christ continues to make himself present to nourish the faith of his people.

A procession that proclaims the presence of Christ

The letter concludes with a reflection on the meaning of the Corpus Christi processions, which will be celebrated this Sunday and will pass through the streets of Valencia, and of numerous localities in the diocese.

Finally, Benavent recalls that when the Blessed Sacrament leaves the churches and is accompanied by the faithful, the Church publicly proclaims its faith in Christ and manifests the certainty of walking accompanied by Him.

“In the Eucharistic procession that passes through the streets of our towns and cities, the Church proclaims that nothing makes it lose its peace, because it has the certainty of walking accompanied by Christ”

New Chaldean patriarch calls for preserving Eastern Christian identity in the face of a culture that "seeks to erase identities"

The new patriarch of the Chaldean Catholic Church, Paul III Nona, presided over his enthronement Mass in Baghdad with a call to move “from the logic of fear to the logic of faith” and with a reflection on the need to safeguard the spiritual, liturgical and cultural heritage of the Chaldean tradition amid the challenges facing Christians in the East and in the diaspora.

During the celebration held on May 29 at St. Joseph’s Cathedral in Baghdad, the new patriarch outlined some of the pastoral priorities he considers essential for this new stage of the Chaldean Church, one of the world’s oldest Christian communities.

“Do not be afraid; only believe”

Taking as his starting point Christ’s words recorded in the Gospel of Saint Mark - “Do not be afraid; only believe” - the new patriarch invited the faithful to live with trust in God even amid difficulties.

“Faith means seeing what cannot be seen and trusting in what surpasses human logic,” he affirmed during the homily.

For Paul III, the Christian is called to remain steadfast even when human securities disappear, convinced that God continues to act even in moments of trial and apparent silence.

The patriarch explained that he wishes to undertake his new mission supported by two fundamental pillars: faith and trust. 

“With trust despite fear; with faith despite challenges; and with openness to all despite the temptation to withdraw into ourselves,” he noted.

Six priorities for the new stage of the Chaldean Church

During his homily, Paul III highlighted several areas he considers essential for the future of the Chaldean Church: ecclesial unity, spiritual life, formation of the clergy, co-responsibility of the laity, preservation of Chaldean culture, and fraternity with other Catholic Churches.

Referring to the communities scattered throughout the world, he rejected viewing the diaspora solely as a loss for Iraq. 

On the contrary, he stated that the presence of Chaldean faithful in other countries constitutes a providential opportunity for evangelization and Christian witness.

At the same time, he stressed the importance of strengthening the Christian presence in Iraq and in the countries of the East, where the Chaldean tradition was born and developed over the centuries.

The defense of Eastern tradition

His remarks on Christian identity addressed the influence of the Western world on the rites and traditions proper to the Eastern world.

“We live in an age and within a global culture that seeks to erase identities, merge cultures, and dilute traditions and received heritages,” the patriarch affirmed.

In light of this situation, he underscored the need for the Chaldean tradition to remain the foundation of ecclesial life and of the transmission of the faith to new generations.

Paul III insisted that preserving one’s own tradition does not mean rejecting the modern world or retreating into the past. 

On the contrary, he maintained that spiritual, cultural, and liturgical roots enable Christians to engage with other cultures without losing what gives them identity.

His words take on special relevance at a time when numerous Eastern Churches express concern over the progressive loss of languages, customs, and traditions among communities that have emigrated to the West.

A Church of many rites and one faith

The new patriarch also wished to recall that the richness of the Catholic Church is expressed precisely in the diversity of its traditions.

He compared Catholic communion to a garden filled with flowers of different colors and fragrances, united by the same faith in Christ. 

In this context, he highlighted the importance of strengthening bonds of fraternity among the various Eastern and Western Catholic Churches.

Finally, he recalled that all pastoral projects will be fruitless if they are not sustained by prayer, unity, and fidelity to the Gospel.

A tribute to his predecessor

To conclude, Paul III offered words of gratitude to Cardinal Louis Raphael Sako, who led the Chaldean Church for thirteen years.

The new patriarch thanked him for his service and asked for him a time of rest, stability, and prayer after a long life dedicated to episcopal ministry.

Catacaos apology request comes under suspicion: cameras, Bertomeu and the shadow of a documentary

The request for forgiveness by the Peruvian hierarchy in Catacaos, presented as a historic act of reparation toward the victims linked to the Sodalicio case, has become embroiled in fresh controversy following the publication of a serious accusation by La Abeja: the ceremony is said to have also been used as a staged event to obtain footage for a documentary centered on Monsignor Jordi Bertomeu.

The event held at the parish of San Juan Bautista in Catacaos was officially described as a Mass of accompaniment and symbolic reparation for the peasant communities of the Tallán indigenous people. 

The Peruvian Episcopal Conference stated that the celebration responded to a request submitted by Catacaos residents to Bertomeu and that it was attended by cardinals, archbishops, representatives of civil society, authorities, and members of the diplomatic corps. 

Vatican News also portrayed the scene as a gesture of reparation, noting that Bertomeu, after two weeks dedicated to a listening channel at the Apostolic Nunciature of Peru, concelebrated the Mass with Cardinals Carlos Castillo and Pedro Barreto and other Peruvian bishops.

The official dimension of the act is clear. 

What is now being questioned is something else: whether that ceremony was also prepared or exploited as audiovisual material to build Bertomeu’s public image as the protagonist of the Sodalicio case. 

According to the article signed by Luciano Revoredo in La Abeja, various videos circulated on social media show the presence of a cameraman and an assistant in the front row, as well as several cameras recording the gestures of Bertomeu and the bishops present. 

The outlet identifies the man with the camera as Salvador del Solar, actor, filmmaker, and former Peruvian prime minister, and states that he was not a parishioner, journalist, or pastoral agent.

The accusation is not limited to Catacaos. La Abeja maintains that during several days of the Sodalicio victims’ listening channel at the Apostolic Nunciature of Peru in Lima, a man with audiovisual equipment was filming and recording who entered and left, as well as interviewing some people as they left the premises. 

The same article claims that Bertomeu once stepped out to speak with a group of alleged victims and even got into the cameraman’s vehicle.

That detail is especially sensitive because the listening channel was not a minor private activity. 

The official communiqué of the Apostolic Commissioner stated that between May 4 and 22, 2026, a “First Listening Channel” would be made available at the Apostolic Nunciature in Peru for people who considered themselves victims not properly compensated for physical, sexual, spiritual, conscience, authority, economic, or other abuses attributed to members of the so-called Sodalitium spiritual family.

If what La Abeja reports is confirmed, the problem would no longer be whether the request for forgiveness was timely or not. 

The problem would be far more serious: victims summoned by a pontifical body, a diplomatic seat of the Holy See, and a public liturgy would have served as a stage to produce images for an audiovisual narrative of clerical self-promotion.

The sequence raises questions that Rome cannot dismiss as a mere media controversy. 

Who authorized the presence of Salvador del Solar or any other audiovisual team alongside Bertomeu? 

Was the filming for internal archives, for the press, for a production company, or for a documentary? 

Were the people who came to the Nunciature informed? 

Was there express consent from those entering and leaving a victims’ listening channel?

Is there authorization from the Holy See to use images of that process in an audiovisual production? Did the apostolic nuncio in Peru know what was happening?

The point is not minor. 

One thing is to document an institutionally sensitive process. 

Quite another is to surround victims and bishops with cameras to feed the visual narrative of a commissioner turned central character. 

The Church can and must ask forgiveness when it has failed. What it cannot do is turn that forgiveness into a scene profitable for the camera.

The Catacaos ceremony had already been questioned for using the liturgy as support for a gesture with strong political and media overtones. 

InfoVaticana then reported that the problem was not in asking forgiveness, but in doing so “in front of cameras” and within the liturgical action, turning the altar into a stage for a message foreign to the rite. 

The new accusation aggravates that reading: if there was an audiovisual production behind it, the line between reparation and representation becomes completely blurred.

Bertomeu is not just any priest in this case. 

He is an official of the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith and the apostolic commissioner in charge of liquidating the institutions linked to the Sodalicio. 

Precisely for that reason, his public exposure requires more prudence, not less. 

The greater the authority received, the greater the obligation to separate service to the victims from the construction of a personal image.

The Holy See, the Apostolic Nunciature in Peru, and Bertomeu himself must immediately clarify whether a documentary project existed, who promoted it, who filmed, with what permissions, for what purpose, and where those images are. 

Because if a Mass of reparation and a listening channel were used to fabricate the heroic profile of the pontifical commissioner, then Catacaos was not merely a debatable ceremony. 

It was the conversion of others’ pain into filming material.

Three parishes in Getafe will receive the blessing of Leo XIV for their future churches

Pope Leo XIV’s visit to Madrid will also leave a visible mark on three municipalities in the Diocese of Getafe.

During the major gathering scheduled for June 8 at the Santiago Bernabéu Stadium, the Pontiff will bless the cornerstones of three new parish churches that will be built or expanded in Alcorcón, Móstoles and Valdemoro.

According to the Diocese of Getafe itself, the Pope will bless seventeen cornerstones for future churches in the dioceses of Madrid, Alcalá de Henares and Getafe, a gesture intended to highlight the evangelizing vitality of the region’s Catholic communities.

Three projects to meet the growth of the parishes

The parishes of the Diocese of Getafe will be St. John Paul II in Alcorcón, St. Paul VI in Móstoles and St. Vincent de Paul in Valdemoro.

In all three cases, the growth of pastoral activity and the number of faithful has made clear the need for larger, more suitable facilities to serve the communities.

The situation is especially significant in Valdemoro. 

Its pastor, Gabriel Díaz Azarola, explains that every Sunday he celebrates the Eucharist for nearly a thousand people in a space that can accommodate barely 160 faithful, a reality that underscores the urgency of a new parish church.

While in Alcorcón it is a newly established parish currently operating in the facilities of Colegio Juan Pablo II, in Móstoles and Valdemoro the works will complete and expand already existing structures.

“A unique and unrepeatable occasion”

The fact that the Successor of Peter himself will bless the cornerstones of the future churches represents a spiritual and pastoral boost for communities that have spent years working to bring these projects to fruition.

This rite expresses the consecration of the future church to God and reminds us that every Christian community is called to build itself upon Christ, the cornerstone. 

The blessing of the first stone thus marks the beginning of a material work, but also the start of a spiritual project destined to gather the faithful around the Eucharist, the preaching of the Word and sacramental life.

Church beatifies nine Polish Salesians

The Church will celebrate this Saturday in Krakow the beatification of nine Polish Salesian religious killed in Nazi concentration camps during the Second World War. 

The ceremony will take place at the Shrine of Saint John Paul II and will be presided over by the Prefect of the Dicastery for the Causes of Saints, Cardinal Marcello Semeraro.

The new blesseds were recognized as martyrs by Pope Leo XIV last October, after it was determined that they were persecuted and killed out of hatred for the faith during the German occupation of Poland.

Priests and educators persecuted for their faith

The nine religious belonged to the Salesian Congregation and were carrying out their pastoral and educational work in different regions of Poland when they were arrested by the Nazi authorities.

Father Jan Świerc and seven of his companions died in the Auschwitz extermination camp between June 1941 and September 1942. 

Father Franciszek Miśka died in May 1942 in the Dachau concentration camp, where thousands of priests from across Europe were interned.

The Church now officially recognizes their witness of fidelity to Christ amid persecution and proposes them as an example for the faithful.

The priest who offered himself to save a Salesian brother

Among the new blesseds, the figure of Father Włodzimierz Szembek stands out. Born in 1883 into an aristocratic family near Krakow, he studied agricultural engineering at Jagiellonian University and for years managed important family estates. 

However, he chose a life of simplicity and service, dedicating himself to the apostolate among the most humble and generously helping the poor, orphans, and religious communities.

He entered the Salesian Congregation in 1928 and was ordained a priest six years later by the then Archbishop of Krakow, Adam Stefan Sapieha.

His martyrdom began on July 9, 1942. 

When Gestapo agents stormed the Salesian house in Skawa to arrest the superior of the community, the elderly Father Walenty Kozak, aged 72, Szembek intervened to ask that he be arrested in his place. 

The Nazis ended up taking both religious, although the superior would be released a few weeks later.

After his arrest, he was imprisoned in Nowy Targ and Zakopane, where he suffered brutal torture. 

His executioners broke several of his ribs, kept him in inhumane conditions, and subjected him to continuous interrogations. 

Fellow prisoners later recalled that he returned from torture sessions without hatred toward his persecutors and insisted that they should pray for them.

He was finally deported to Auschwitz with severe physical injuries. Forced to perform hard labor and weakened by mistreatment, he died on September 18, 1942. He had prisoner number 60019.

A beatification linked to prayer for vocations

The Archbishop of Krakow, Monsignor Grzegorz Ryś, has sought to link the celebration to the current need for new priestly and religious vocations.

In a message released before the ceremony, the prelate explained that the Church will not only remember the sacrifice of these martyrs but will also pray that young Poles respond generously to the call to the priesthood and consecrated life.

Ryś recalled that the lack of priests during the Nazi occupation left a deep mark on the life of the Polish Church and noted that the witness of these religious continues to be a source of inspiration for new generations.

The connection with Saint John Paul II

The beatification will be celebrated at the shrine dedicated to Saint John Paul II for a particularly significant reason.

According to the Archbishop of Krakow, the young Karol Wojtyła witnessed the arrest of one of the Salesians persecuted by the Nazis. 

That experience was part of the spiritual context that accompanied the birth of his priestly vocation during the war years.

The future Pope also directly experienced the consequences of the persecution against the Polish clergy and witnessed firsthand the difficulties faced by Christian communities when priests were imprisoned or killed.

The Nazi persecution of the Church in Poland

The German occupation of Poland was marked by a systematic policy of repression against the Catholic Church.

According to data from the Polish Episcopal Conference, nearly 2,800 Polish priests and religious were killed by the Nazi regime during the Second World War, including six bishops.

Saint John Paul II wished to especially recognize that witness of fidelity and, during his trip to Warsaw in 1999, beatified 108 Polish martyrs who were victims of 20th-century persecutions.

The nine Salesians who will be raised to the altars this Saturday are part of a larger group of 122 Polish Catholics whose beatification process began in 2003. 

Leo XIV authorized the promulgation of the decree of martyrdom on October 24, 2025, culminating a long process that will allow the Church to officially honor these priests killed for remaining faithful to Christ in one of the most dramatic chapters of European history.

First whistleblower withdraws his support for Bertomeu

It makes sense to begin by understanding exactly what José Enrique Escardó has said and why it matters, because we are not dealing with just another critic of Jordi Bertomeu. 

Escardó is the first public whistleblower on Sodalicio violence - since the year 2000 - the most visible survivor of the case and the voice that has led the victims for a quarter of a century. 

He is also the man who in 2025 came out to defend Robert Prevost against accusations of cover-up in Chiclayo, calling them “absolutely false” and attributing them to a Sodalicio campaign to prevent him from becoming Pope. 

And finally, he is part of the same group of victims that not long ago asked Rome to support the commissioner. 

When someone with that track record publicly breaks with Bertomeu, we are not witnessing a criticism: we are witnessing the collapse of the endorsement that morally legitimized the entire process.

The break, moreover, is explicit and goes to the bone. 

Escardó maintains that Pope Francis assured him he would sign whatever he asked regarding Bertomeu, and that the commissioner, knowing this, “at no time accepted even the slightest suggestion from a victim”; that he does “whatever he wants”; and that what he wants is “to make himself known in order to be promoted in the Church while deceiving the victims.” 

The charge is not theological or doctrinal: it is operational. He accuses him of not listening precisely to the man who embodies the “listening channel.” 

It is worth setting aside the rhetorical underbrush - Escardó calling the Church “the most corrupt institution on Earth” is hyperbole from a harmed party that each person can weigh as they see fit - because the concrete reproach survives without it, intact: the manager of the reparation instrumentalizes those he claims to repair.

And there is still something more devastating. Reaffirming himself as the first whistleblower, Escardó states that the suppression of the Sodalicio “has been only nominal,” that the structure continues to operate “under other names and front men” and that the hearings and reparations are “buckets of cold water to calm some victims and deceive public opinion.” 

It is, word for word, the diagnosis that media outlets like this one have been documenting for months - the patrimonial network remains intact, Figari is alive and supported, no real lifting of the corporate veil - yet now formulated from the only place no campaign can delegitimize: that of the founding victim. 

When the historic whistleblower and the critical media coincide in the diagnosis, even if they arrive by opposite paths, the manager left in the middle no longer has a narrative left.

Because what Escardó adds does not fall into a vacuum. 

It falls on a file that Rome knows all too well and that has not stopped growing. 

The commissioner who managed to get an elderly and frail Francis to sign a threat of excommunication against the two laypeople who had denounced him - a decree the Pope himself revoked in his own hand once he understood the legal absurdity they had placed before him. 

The commissioner in whose circle a false complaint against a critical priest surfaces twenty-two days after that priest raised his voice, with an alleged victim who neither signed the document nor knew of its existence. 

The commissioner who, off-mic, dismisses the country under investigation as “a jungle” where everyone “manages as best they can.” 

The instructor who was, successively, author of the report, writer of the Nunciature’s press releases, de facto judge and liquidator of what he himself had investigated: prosecutor, judge, executioner and notary of his own work. 

And meanwhile, one of the affected associations is taking him to court in Spain, with a hearing set for June 22. It is not an accumulated suspicion: it is a documented pattern.

And here is what is truly surprising, because it is not Bertomeu. 

Officials with more appetite for protagonism than technical solidity have always existed; it is a known species and, at bottom, minor. 

What is extremely difficult to explain is León XIV’s determination to keep him. 

We are talking about the Pope who knows Peru better than any recent pontiff - twenty years of pastoral work, including the bishopric of Chiclayo - who has the complete file on his desk, who has seen even the support of the victims themselves crack, and who nevertheless, in November, appointed three deputy commissioners precisely to strengthen the questioned management. 

Prevost has received, from critics, from canon lawyers and now from the case’s first whistleblower, exactly the same converging advice: that this commissioner harms more than he repairs. 

And he has decided, against all of them, to keep him. 

That a pontificate that built a good part of its anti-abuse credibility on the Sodalicio case should insist on retaining the only figure eroding it is, quite simply, the unanswered question in all of this.

After the Catalan controversy, an abuse whistleblower now asks the Pope to cancel his visit to Montserrat

The visit of Leo XIV to Catalonia continues to generate controversy even before it begins. 

On the same day that the Vatican modified the program for the blessing of the Tower of Jesus Christ at the Sagrada Familia to include Catalan following pressure from separatist leaders, a sexual abuse whistleblower has now asked the Pontiff to suspend his visit to the Montserrat monastery.

According to 3Cat, Miguel Hurtado, known for having reported abuses suffered in the environment of the Benedictine abbey, appeared this Tuesday before the Apostolic Nunciature in Madrid to demand that Leo XIV cancel his stop at Montserrat and hold a meeting with abuse victims during his stay in Spain.

New pressure on the papal trip agenda

The request comes just days before the Pope’s arrival in Barcelona, where he is scheduled to preside over several events of great ecclesial significance. 

Among them stands out the blessing of the Tower of Jesus Christ at the Sagrada Familia, one of the central moments of the visit, as well as a subsequent pilgrimage to the Montserrat monastery.

The activist described Montserrat as the “ground zero of Church abuse in Spain” and argued that the papal visit should not take place while, according to his claims, disagreements over reparations for victims continue.

Criticism of the compensation policy

Hurtado maintains that the Benedictine community of Montserrat has refused to compensate him and accuses the abbey of having declared itself a “moral objector” to the compensation mechanisms established after the agreement reached between the Spanish Church and the Government on reparations for abuse victims.

In his view, the agreement contains loopholes that allow some religious institutions to avoid economic reparation commitments. 

For this reason, he is calling for more decisive intervention from both the Spanish Church and the Holy See.

Demands a meeting with victims

In addition to requesting the cancellation of the visit to Montserrat, Hurtado has called for Leo XIV to hold a specific meeting with abuse victims during his stay in Spain.

The whistleblower considers it contradictory that the Pope has scheduled meetings with civil and ecclesiastical authorities without including those who have suffered abuse within the Church.

According to him, he expects a response from the Vatican before Friday and does not rule out taking further action coinciding with the papal visit and the planned meeting between Leo XIV and the President of the Government, Pedro Sánchez.

Cobo recalls that the Pope cannot accommodate all meeting requests

Asked about the possibility of Leo XIV holding a specific meeting with abuse victims during his trip to Spain, Cardinal José Cobo recalled this Wednesday that the papal agenda is receiving numerous requests for meetings from various ecclesial and social sectors.

“There are a thousand groups pressuring for the Pope to meet with them,” stated the Archbishop of Madrid and Vice President of the Spanish Episcopal Conference. 

He explained that it will be up to the Pontiff himself and the Vatican delegation to determine which meetings can take place during the visit.

Cobo also emphasized that Leo XIV has already met with abuse victims on several occasions since the beginning of his pontificate and assured that he will continue to do so in the future. 

“That does not mean these issues do not interest the Pope; it simply means that time is time,” he noted.

An increasingly politicized trip

The new controversy adds to the recent debate generated by the language of the blessing of the Tower of Jesus Christ at the Sagrada Familia. 

After the initial publication of the celebration’s missal, separatist leaders, institutional representatives, and various voices from ecclesial Catalanism criticized the fact that the moment would take place in Spanish.

Political pressure ultimately led to a correction by the Holy See, which finally decided to include Catalan in the ceremony.

Just days before the trip, Leo XIV’s visit to Catalonia continues to accumulate debates unrelated to the main purpose of his journey.

Madrid closes the investigation into Carmen Hernández and sends the case to Rome regarding the co-founder of the Neocatechumenal Way

The Archdiocese of Madrid has closed the diocesan phase of the beatification and canonization cause of Carmen Hernández, co-founder of the Neocatechumenal Way together with Kiko Argüello. 

The investigation, which began in December 2022, will now continue in Rome, where the Dicastery for the Causes of Saints will examine the documentation gathered over these years.

The ceremony took place at the Redemptoris Mater Seminary in Madrid, beside the tomb of Carmen Hernández, who died on July 19, 2016. 

According to the Neocatechumenal Way, around 650 people took part in the event, presided over by Cardinal José Cobo, Archbishop of Madrid, accompanied by Cardinals Antonio María Rouco Varela and Paolo Romeo, as well as several bishops, Hernández’s relatives, and members of this ecclesial reality present throughout the world.

One step closer to the altars

During the ceremony, Cardinal José Cobo formally closed the diocesan investigation and encouraged those present to see holiness as a universal vocation for all the baptized.

The phase now concluded has gathered a vast amount of documentation on the life, virtues, and reputation for holiness of Carmen Hernández. 

In total, the records of the investigation fill 70 boxes of documentation, each containing around 1,200 pages, which will be sent to the Holy See for study.

The opening of a canonization cause does not imply an automatic recognition of holiness, but it does mean that the Church considers there to be sufficient grounds to thoroughly examine the life and Christian witness of the person under investigation.

From Ólvega to an international mission

Born in Ólvega (Soria) in 1930, Carmen Hernández devoted much of her life to evangelization and the transmission of the faith. 

Her encounter with Kiko Argüello in the 1960s gave rise to the Neocatechumenal Way, a path of Christian initiation that would later spread to numerous countries and today has a presence on five continents.

During the event, Carlos Metola, the postulator of the cause in this first phase, highlighted Hernández’s apostolic zeal and her love for Jesus Christ, emphasizing the spiritual legacy she continues to leave almost a decade after her death.

Kiko Argüello: “Without her, the Way would not exist”

The founder of the Way especially recalled Hernández’s contribution to the reception of the insights of the Second Vatican Council, her insistence on the centrality of the Easter Vigil, and her role in rediscovering the Jewish roots of Christianity.

“She was a theologian in constant search and deepening,” Argüello stated. “Her entire life was marked by her love for Christ and the mission of the Church.”

With the closure of the diocesan phase, the cause now enters a new stage. 

It will be the Holy See that studies the documentation sent from Madrid and determines the next steps in a process that could, in the future, lead to the beatification and canonization of the co-founder of the Neocatechumenal Way.

Thursday, June 04, 2026

Enoch Burke receives his final payslip after formal sacking

Enoch Burke has received his last payslip after being formally sacked, the High Court has heard.

However, he will remain in prison after again refusing to promise to stay away from his former school.

His case came under review by Judge Brian Cregan yesterday, with a typically argumentative Burke addressing the court via videolink from Castlerea Prison.

Kane Kavanagh-Baer, barrister for the Department of Education, said Enoch Burke had been removed from the department’s payroll on May 28 and had received his last payslip.

The court had been told last month that the history and German teacher was formally dismissed for gross misconduct after a Disciplinary Appeal Panel (DAP) rejected his appeal against his original dismissal in January 2023.

The DAP said the grounds for a review of that dismissal were ‘not made out’ in circumstances where a panel hearing did not go ahead because of his disruptive behaviour.

Burke was dismissed following his reaction to being asked to call a transgender student by a new name and the pronoun ‘they’, which he said was against his Christian beliefs.

The two previous three-member panels were disbanded following court actions by Burke, who had alleged bias on the part of representatives of the teaching union ASTI.

Separately, the Court of Appeal last month dismissed Burke’s bid to bring a late challenge to a High Court judgment that found he was validly suspended from his job.

That May 2023 judgment from Judge Alexander Owens also saw Burke banned from trespassing at the school.

His refusal to obey that court order has resulted in him, as of today, spending 700 days in jail, as well as racking up tens of thousands of euros in fines – some of which have been paid directly from his salary.

Judge Cregan has now asked the school, the Department of Education, and a receiver to ascertain how many times Burke had trespassed, whether a €15,000 trespass damages award had been paid, and how much in trespass fines he still owes.

‘I want to be aware now what the total level of fines are so that the court can monitor its orders,’ he explained.

When Burke complained there was no fine for refusing to use transgender pronouns in Ireland, the judge replied: ‘You keep arguing this point, but you never actually make it in a court of law at the appropriate time.’

Burke said yesterday he wrote to the school’s board of management last week, saying he did not accept his dismissal was lawful and it was not possible for him to accept the opinion of the DAP.

He told the court the DAP process was ‘unlawful’ and ‘flies in the face of natural justice and fair procedures’.

He complained of an alleged conflict of interest on the part of the DAP chairperson, solicitor Claire Callinan, because she also chaired the disciplinary panel of the Church of Ireland, and Wilson’s Hospital School was a Church of Ireland School.

‘There has been no change in my status as a full-time permanent teacher of German and history at Wilson’s Hospital School,’ he insisted. 

However, he did not confirm if he planned to bring a legal challenge against the DAP decision.

He said he did not agree with the Court of Appeal judgment, adding he will ‘never accept’ his Christian beliefs ‘can be set forward as gross misconduct’.

Judge Cregan asked Burke if he was prepared to give a court undertaking not to trespass at Wilson’s Hospital School.

Burke did not answer the question, but claimed the judge engaged in a ‘display of partiality’ last month by asking the school’s lawyers to read on to the court record the DAP’s report effectively dismissing his challenge.

‘You could have risen to read it. You wanted it read into the public record. You wanted the assembled journalists to put out a bad report about me. That is what you wanted. It was a flagrant abuse of court time,’ said Burke.

Judge Cregan responded that his comments were ‘ridiculous’ and justice must be administered in public. 

He also said he had needed an understanding of the grounds on which his challenge was dismissed or not proceeded with.

Asked if he was going to challenge the Court of Appeal’s decision, Burke said that was a matter for him to consider.

Noting his continued refusal to purge his contempt, the judge said that his imprisonment should continue.

He said the former teacher could be released from prison today if he gave the undertaking, but that otherwise he would have to remain in prison ‘for the time being’. 

He said he would review the matter in three weeks’ time.

Synodality and Magnifica humanitas: Liturgy once again left off the agenda of Leo XIV’s next consistory

The next consistory convened by Pope Leo XIV for June 26, 27, and 29 will focus on reflection on the international situation, study of the encyclical Magnifica humanitas, and an update on the synodal process. 

This is evident from a letter sent on June 3 by Cardinal Giovanni Battista Re, Dean of the College of Cardinals, to all participating cardinals.

In the letter published by Messa In Latino, the cardinal states that the Holy Father wishes the meeting to be a space for mutual listening, discernment, and shared reflection on the challenges currently facing the Church. 

The goal is to gather the experience of cardinals from around the world and foster a frank exchange of views on issues relevant to ecclesial life.

Four major themes for the consistory

The first session will be devoted to a shared reflection on the international situation and the reality of local Churches. 

The cardinals will be invited to present the main sufferings, tensions, and challenges currently affecting the peoples and ecclesial communities under their responsibility, as well as the signs of hope and reconciliation they consider most significant.

The second and third sessions will focus on the encyclical Magnifica humanitas, recently published by Leo XIV. 

The Vatican has made specific working materials available to participants to prepare for the discussions.

During the second session, particular attention will be given to the fifth chapter of the document, titled “The Culture of Power and the Civilization of Love.” 

The letter highlights that the encyclical analyzes the growing polarization and conflict in the contemporary world and recalls that peace is not merely a moral ideal but an essential condition for the development of peoples.

The text also notes that the cardinals will be invited to reflect on how to reaffirm today the principle of the “superamento della teoria della guerra giusta,” that is, the overcoming of the just war theory, an expression the encyclical itself considers frequently invoked to justify armed conflicts.

The encyclical as a central axis of the pontificate

The third session will delve into the central proposal of Magnifica humanitas: interpreting the cultural and social transformations of our time in light of the Gospel in order to guide integral human development.

The prominence given to the encyclical during the consistory confirms that the document has become one of the main programmatic axes of Leo XIV’s pontificate. 

It is not merely a doctrinal reflection but a text the Pope wishes to make a reference point for the Church’s pastoral action and discernment in the coming years.

The synodal process returns to the table

The final session will include an update on the process of implementing the Synod and the preparation of the assemblies scheduled for 2027 and 2028. 

The cardinals will receive information on the various stages, criteria, and tools being developed to continue the synodal path.

This will be followed by an open dialogue between the members of the College of Cardinals and the Pope, with brief interventions of three minutes per participant.

The sessions contrast with the absence of other topics that had raised interest after the first consistory of the pontificate. 

At that time, the cardinals chose to focus their work on synodality and the evangelizing mission, leaving aside issues such as liturgy and the reform of the Curia.

Consistory and creation of new metropolitans

The letter also recalls that the consistory will be held on June 26 and 27 in the Paul VI Hall and the Synod Hall. 

The proceedings will conclude on June 29 in St. Peter’s Basilica, during the solemnity of Saints Peter and Paul.

On that day, at 9:30 a.m., Leo XIV will preside over the solemn Eucharistic celebration in the Vatican Basilica, during which he will bless the pallia and personally confer this liturgical insignia on the new metropolitan archbishops appointed over the past year.

The imposition of the pallium is one of the most significant moments of the solemnity of Saints Peter and Paul. 

This band of white wool, adorned with black crosses, symbolizes the communion of metropolitan archbishops with the Successor of Peter and the pastoral responsibility they exercise over the particular Churches entrusted to their care.

The letter sent by Cardinal Re further specifies that a concelebrated Eucharist for all the cardinals is not planned for Sunday, June 28, as had already been communicated previously.

The convocation reflects the Pope’s desire to turn consistories into genuine spaces for collegial consultation and discernment, in which the cardinals can contribute the experience of the particular Churches and collaborate more closely in guiding the universal governance of the Church.

"Many UFOs are demons": McElroy dismisses Washington exorcist after statements on extraterrestrials

Cardinal Robert McElroy has dismissed Monsignor Stephen Rossetti as exorcist of the Archdiocese of Washington after the latter publicly stated that many UFO sightings could be linked to demonic activity. 

The decision, announced on June 3 by the archdiocese itself, ends nearly two decades of Rossetti’s ministry in the U.S. capital.

According to an official statement issued by the Archdiocese of Washington, McElroy has also severed all institutional ties with the St. Michael Center for Spiritual Renewal, the organization led by Rossetti and dedicated to spiritual formation and accompaniment in matters related to deliverance and exorcism.

UFO statements trigger dismissal

The controversy arose from a video - now removed - posted by Rossetti on YouTube on May 29. In it, the priest expressed his personal view that “many, if not most,” UFO sightings are in fact demonic manifestations.

Rossetti argued that demons possess abilities beyond ordinary human capacities and suggested that some phenomena attributed to supposed extraterrestrial intelligences could be explained by preternatural activity.

The remarks prompted a swift response from the archdiocese. In its statement, McElroy said the comments “seriously undermine the Church’s very precise teaching on the devil, demons, and exorcism.”

An internationally known exorcist

The decision affects one of the most prominent figures in the ministry of exorcism in the United States. 

A priest of the Diocese of Syracuse (New York), Rossetti has for years engaged in extensive public outreach through conferences, publications, training courses, and social media.

His St. Michael Center had become a reference point for many faithful interested in spiritual warfare, deliverance, and the extraordinary activity of the devil.

That very public presence had helped spread his reflections on exorcism and demonology widely, though it had also drawn criticism for some of his interventions on supernatural phenomena and extraordinary experiences.

Rossetti apologizes and pledges obedience

After Cardinal McElroy’s decision became known, Rossetti issued a statement expressing sadness over the events and apologizing if his words had not been faithful to the Church’s magisterium.

“I apologize for any way in which I have not been faithful to the teachings of the Church’s magisterium, particularly in the video cited about aliens and the demonic,” he said.

The priest also affirmed that obedience to the Church is essential and stated his intention to continue submitting his work and that of the St. Michael Center to ecclesial teaching.

Rossetti likewise thanked the archdiocese of Washington for the nineteen years he served as its exorcist and announced that the St. Michael Center will continue its work from another location.