Wednesday, February 11, 2026

Florida university founded by Domino’s Pizza mogul eyes Waterford abbey for new 'outreach campus'

“IMAGINE COMING OVER the hill and encountering it – the hallmarks of Ave Maria University, the joy, the search for truth, the campus community, vividly expressed in our new campus across the Atlantic.”

That is how a private Catholic university based in the United States is describing plans for a new campus at the former Mount Melleray Abbey in Co Waterford.

Ave Maria University, which is located in Florida, says it intends to establish a campus at the historic Cistercian monastery near Cappoquin, according to a promotional video posted on the university’s website.

The video also references the “rich Catholic and cultural heritage of Europe, of Ireland.” 

The video, first reported on by WLR, describes the proposed Mount Melleray site as part of an international programme offering students “academic excellence, adventure, and a deeper connection to Catholic faith”, with applications due to open later this year.

Mount Melleray Abbey closed in January 2025 after almost 200 years, with the Cistercian Order citing falling numbers and an ageing monastic community.

At the time, the Order said it was exploring future uses for the site that would preserve its spiritual and educational character.

In a statement in August, the Order stated that they had “begun discussions with a like-minded community, united in faith and purpose, who may be able to continue the care of Mount Melleray”.

“If these talks progress well, they will tend this sacred place with devotion, ensuring that its tradition of prayer, welcome, peace, and study remains at the heart of its life,” the statement continued.

It is not yet known if this statement was referring to Ave Maria University.

Founded by Domino’s Pizza founder and billionaire Thomas Monaghan, Ave Maria University describes its mission as promoting Catholic higher education rooted in church teaching.

Undergraduate tuition fees at its main Florida campus exceed $31,000 (€26,000) per academic year, not including accommodation costs.

Church to be auctioned – starting bid 29,000 euros

In March, the former Catholic church of the 10,000-inhabitant town of Tangierhütte comes under the hammer. 

The starting bid for the listed building in Saxony-Anhalt is 29,000 euros, according to the auction catalogue. 

The property is offered by the Sächsische Grundstücksauktionen AG.

The church was built in 1930 and has been profaned since 2019. A building permit for conversion into living space with studio has been in place since 2021. 

According to a report by the "Altmark Zeitung", a studio or showroom can be set up on the ground floor and a living area with about 106 square meters on the upper floor. 

The property includes a 900 square meter plot.

According to auction documents, the building is in a state in need of renovation. 

There is no heating equipment. 

On the other hand, it is emphasized positively that the nave is exposed through four round windows – well preserved and undamaged.

Shroud of Turin: Medieval bas-relief hypothesis challenged on scientific grounds

Last summer news regarding studies of the Shroud of Turin reported on Brazilian researcher Cicero Moraes who proposed a digital reconstruction of the image of the Shroud that supported a hypothesis that it was created in the Middle Ages using a bas-relief. 

A response recently published in Archaeometry challenges the validity of Moraes’s claims point by point.

Three specialists on the Shroud of Turin, Tristan Casabianca, Emanuela Marinelli, and Alessandro Piana, criticized this study, which they say rests on ambiguous objectives, methodological flaws, and faulty reasoning. 

In doing so, they confirm the criticism already expressed last summer by the Archbishop of Turin and Custodian of the Shroud, Cardinal Roberto Repole, and by the International Center for Shroud Studies of Turin (CISS). 

What deserves special emphasis, and this is the news of recent days, is the importance of their critique being published in the very same academic journal in which Moraes’s original article had appeared.

The ongoing debate

The debate over the authenticity of the Shroud has always been lively, ever since the first photograph taken in 1898 by photographer Secondo Pia. Today the controversy continues primarily in international academic journals. 

In 2019, the famous carbon-14 dating (1260–1390 AD), published in Nature in 1989, was called into question by a new analysis of the raw data published precisely in Archaeometry, a journal associated with the Oxford laboratory that had taken part in the original dating.

Last summer, in the same journal, Brazilian researcher Cicero Moraes published an article supporting the medieval forgery thesis. According to him, a bas-relief produces a type of contact that seems to correspond better to the contours visible on the Shroud than does the volume of a human body. 

From this he drew an argument in favor of a medieval artistic origin. From the moment of publication, however, Moraes’s article raised numerous doubts among specialists. In his statement, Cardinal Repole criticized the “concern about the superficiality of certain conclusions, which often do not hold up to a closer examination of the work presented.”

Flaws in Moraes’s analysis

After the media attention subsided, the commentary just published in Archaeometry by Tristan Casabianca, Emanuela Marinelli, and Alessandro Piana fully confirms the legitimacy of that initial criticism. 

The authors highlight numerous flaws in Moraes’s analysis: anatomically deficient modeling, since it reproduces only the frontal image, reverses right and left in both the feet and the hands, and arbitrarily chooses a height (180 cm) outside the accepted consensus (173–177 cm); repeated use of vague terms to assert similarity without ever providing precise measurements; the choice of a single image, the 1931 photograph, despite the existence of much more recent ones. Moreover, the modeling was simulated not on linen but on cotton.

Even more troubling, Moraes’s 3D modeling overlooks the principal specific features of the Shroud: the extreme superficiality of the image (a depth of one-fifth of a thousandth of a millimeter) and the multiple independent confirmations of the presence of blood, which are incompatible with any medieval artistic practice. 

The authors therefore question the real value of a model that does not faithfully reproduce the anatomical characteristics of the Man of the Shroud and that ignores its most significant physicochemical properties. 

Moraes’s study also neglects the fact that several variants of the bas-relief hypothesis had already been examined and rejected in the early 1980s in academic journals. It likewise overlooks that the issue of anatomical deformation of a body onto a cloth had already been thoroughly examined as early as 1902 by the French scientist Paul Vignon.

Weak historical foundations

According to the commentators, the historical foundations of the initial study also appear weak. Moraes has to draw on periods and places with no connection to one another to explain how an artist or forger could have intellectually conceived and in practice produced that unique image of a naked Christ, shown front and back, in a post-crucifixion scene. 

But, as Casabianca, Marinelli, and Piana point out, this amounts to a fallacy of composition, an explanatory method that, if generalized, would undermine the very foundations of art history. 

The image is so far outside the traditional artistic framework that the main historian on whom Moraes relies, William S. A. Dale, was convinced that it could not have been created in 14th-century France, but rather in the Byzantine period, at least 200 years earlier and 2,000 kilometers away from Champagne.

In his reply to these criticisms, also published by the journal, Moraes maintains his conclusions but specifies that his article offers a “strictly methodological” perspective, focused on evaluating morphological deformation within the framework of projecting a body onto a cloth. 

Moraes nevertheless steps outside this methodological framework to evoke four artistic works from the 11th to the 14th century that might have inspired the creator of the Shroud. 

However, none of them depicts a naked Christ in a post-crucifixion scene, and therefore none can explain the appearance of the image in a small French village in the mid-14th century.

Since the beginning of the 20th century, the Man of the Shroud has given rise to countless questions and scientific investigations. 

This latest academic controversy shows that while modern tools, including digital ones, can enrich our knowledge, extrapolations about the origin of an object as singular as the Shroud require particular rigor, both methodologically and historically.

'I will never forget you:' Theme for Sixth World Day for Grandparents and the Elderly

Pope Leo XIV has chosen “I will never forget you” (Is 49:15) as the theme for the Sixth World Day for Grandparents and the Elderly, said the Vatican's Dicastery for Laity, Family and Life in a statement.

The World Day, instituted by the late Pope Francis in 2021, is celebrated every fourth Sunday of July and is presented as an opportunity to bring the closeness of the Church to the elderly and to enhance their contribution within families and communities. 

This year, the date coincides with the feast of Saints Joachim and Anne, Sunday, July 26, and the Holy Father invites everyone to celebrate the Day with a Eucharistic liturgy in the cathedral church of each individual diocese.

Taken from the Book of the Prophet Isaiah, the chosen verse is meant to be a message of consolation and hope for all grandparents and elderly people, especially those who live in loneliness or feel forgotten. 

At the same time, it is a reminder to families and ecclesial communities not to forget them, recognizing in them a precious presence and a blessing.

The Pope's choice highlights how God’s love for every person never fails, not even in the fragility of old age.

The Dicastery for Laity, Family and Life encourages particular Churches, associations, and ecclesial communities throughout the world to find ways to promote and celebrate the Day within their local contexts, and for this purpose it will later make available specific pastoral resources.

Obituaries of two Belgian priests suggest they had illegitimate ‘partners’

The death of two Catholic priests in Belgium has drawn attention after their families’ obituaries publicly referred to the clergymen as having had a “partner,” while diocesan notices of their deaths omitted any such references.

On January 22, the Diocese of Namur in Belgium published an official obituary for Abbé Maurice Léonard, a Catholic priest and dean of Andenne who had died on January 16. 

While the diocesan notice described his pastoral ministry and priestly profile, a separate family obituary published on January 21 explicitly mentioned his compagne de vie (“life partner”) and his enfants de cœur (“children of the heart”), according to documentation reported by the French Catholic website Riposte Catholique.

The diocesan obituary described Léonard in the following terms: “A priest of convictions and an engaged man, appreciated for his ability to listen, his measured words, and his attention to people of all generations.”

The diocese presented him as a priest committed to social justice, without any reference to a relationship. By contrast, the obituary notice published by Léonard’s family explicitly named his “partner” and referred to his “children of the heart.” This wording was included without editorial comment and was publicly accessible.

The presence of such references apparently did not prompt any official clarification from diocesan authorities at the time of publication.

This was not an isolated occurrence within the region. Readers of Riposte Catholique provided documentation of a similar case involving another priest from the Andenne area, Abbé Marc Otjacques.

Otjacques died on September 4, 2024, as a result of a bicycle accident while returning from Mass. His death was announced on the diocesan website with a notice that described him as strongly committed “to the poor.” As in the case of Léonard, the diocesan obituary contained no reference to any personal relationship or family.

However, the obituary notice published by Otjacques’ family was signed by “his partner” and his enfants de cœur, using the same language to that found in Léonard’s family notice. These details, again, appeared only in the family announcement and not in the diocesan communication. Both cases occurred within the same geographical area of the Diocese of Namur.

In the Catholic Church, celibacy is regulated primarily by Canon 277 §1, which states:

Clerics are obliged to observe perfect and perpetual continence for the sake of the kingdom of heaven and therefore are bound to celibacy which is a special gift of God by which sacred ministers can adhere more easily to Christ with an undivided heart and are able to dedicate themselves more freely to the service of God and humanity.

Furthermore, Canon 1037 establishes that a candidate for priestly ordination may not be admitted “to the order of diaconate unless they have assumed the obligation of celibacy in the prescribed rite publicly before God and the Church.”

Canon 1395 §1 addresses violations of this obligation. It provides that a cleric who lives in concubinage or persists in another external sin against the Sixth Commandment that causes scandal may be punished with just penalties, including suspension and, “if after a warning he persists in the offence … he can be dismissed from the clerical state.”

Pope Leo names bishop outspoken against abortion laws as sixth archbishop of Denver

Pope Leo XIV named Bishop James R. Golka to become the sixth archbishop of Denver as announced by the Holy See on Saturday, February 7.

Archbishop-designate Golka, 59, is currently the bishop of Colorado Springs and will succeed Archbishop Samuel Aquila, whose canonically mandatory resignation was submitted upon his 75th birthday last September and has now been accepted by the American pontiff.

Archbishop-designate Golka was born September 22, 1966, in Grand Island, Nebraska and is the fourth of 10 children. After graduating from Grand Island Central Catholic High School, he attended Creighton University in Omaha, where he studied philosophy and theology.

He received a Master of Divinity and a Master of Arts in Sacramental Theology from St. Paul Seminary in Minnesota and was ordained to the priesthood of Jesus Christ for the Diocese of Grand Island on June 3, 1994.

He served in various parish assignments and other capacities, including vicar general and pastor of the Cathedral of the Nativity of the Blessed Virgin Mary just before being named Bishop of Colorado Springs by Pope Francis in 2021.

A fluent Spanish speaker, Bishop Golka created a shrine in Colorado Springs dedicated to Our Lady of Guadalupe, Mother of the Divine Redeemer and patroness of the diocese.

With the episcopal motto “Stewards of God’s Mysteries,” Bishop Golka also serves as Episcopal Moderator of the Diocesan Fiscal Management Conference. Having worked closely with stewardship organizations, he has been a popular speaker on the topic of stewardship among various audiences.

In 2024, Bishop Golka also released a pastoral letter for the Jubilee year titled “Christ Our Hope” in which he encouraged pastors “to make the Sacrament of Reconciliation available to the faithful as much as possible” and emphasized the need for ongoing personal conversion as a means of effective lay evangelization.

He also spoke to the importance of strengthening Catholic identity in Catholic schools, recalling the mission of these institutions as having their “origin in the person of Christ and its roots in the teachings of the Gospel.”

With Aquila and the other bishops of Colorado, Golka also informed Catholic legislators who voted for the state’s Reproductive Health Equity Act (RHEA) in 2022 that they were not to receive Holy Communion until they had contrition and received absolution through the Sacrament of Reconciliation.

The bill, which became law, eliminated any restrictions on abortion and allowed for the direct killing of preborn girls and boys up until the moment of birth. Homosexual Colorado Gov. Jared Polis signed the legislation into law on Apri 4, 2022.

And in an open letter with his brother bishops in the state last year, Golka was also outspoken against so-called Coverage for Pregnancy-Related Services legislation, which sought to allocate a minimum of $1.5 million in taxpayer funds per year toward abortions. The bishops implored Polis to veto the bill, which he went on to sign on April 24, 2025.

Archbishop-designate Golka will be installed as Denver’s new archbishop during a solemn Mass on Wednesday, March 25. Upon his installation, Golka will assume pastoral responsibility for Colorado’s largest diocese and metropolitan see, which serves 600,000 Catholics in 148 parishes and 31 Catholic schools.

Archdiocese of Bamberg expects minus of five million euros

The Archdiocese of Bamberg has adopted its budget for the current year. 

The Upper Franconian archdiocese is planning with a minus of around five million euros, according to a statement published on Monday. 

The budget provides for income of 229.8 million euros and expenses of 234.8 million euros.

The majority of the revenues therefore still come from church tax funds: The archdiocese expects revenues of 176.3 million euros, a slight increase compared to the previous year (176.2 million euros). 

In addition, there would be a further 35.5 million euros in grants and allocations, including 10.6 million euros in state benefits. A further 18 million euros fell on other income, including rental and lease income.

Expenditure on pastoral care and staff

On the spending side, 40.6 percent in pastoral care and 45.5 percent in personnel costs, it continues. 

The construction budget comprises 16 million euros. 

Considering the financial profits of about 10 million euros and withdrawing loss takes of 2.4 million euros, you come to a balanced balance sheet.

"The current framework conditions and foreseeable developments require a very careful and forward-looking handling of the financial resources available," said Finance Director Mathias Vetter. 

Austerity measures and prioritization would create conditions to rebalance operating profit and to ensure the economic stability of the archdiocese in the long term. 

Vicar General Georg Kestel, deputy to Archbishop Herwig Gössl, said: "Even under changed financial conditions, we want to remain a church that lives out of faith, assumes responsibility and is close to the people."

Diocese of Rottenburg: Less church tax for church communities

The Diocese of Rottenburg-Stuttgart expects less church tax revenues in the coming years – and thus also less financial allocations to its parishes. 

In the previous plans, it was assumed that the church tax share for the church communities would be around 280 to 290 million euros in the long term. 

This assumption is no longer tenable, the diocese said on Monday. 

Instead, in terms of church communities, only church tax revenues of about 260 million euros for the year 2026 and only around 246 million euros in 2027 can be expected.

At the same time, the diocese referred to its own financial planning, according to which an "annual structural financing deficit of around 65 million euros by the year 2035" is to be expected. 

The reason for this is rising personnel and material costs, in particular as a result of wage and price increases.

It has been known for some time that the diocese and its parishes will have fewer church tax funds available in the future. The diocese and the parishes are entitled to the distributable church tax revenue in half each. 

In the recently published "Updated Budget Decree 2025/2026", the diocese has now informed about the decision of the Diocesan Council of November 2025 to reduce the church tax allocation to the church communities by 8.7 percent.

'Baby boomers' retire

One cause of the falling church tax revenues, according to the diocese, is "the persistently difficult economic situation." 

This is also noticeable in Württemberg, which is strongly influenced by the currently weakening sectors of mechanical engineering and the automotive industry. 

In addition, there are a declining number of baptisms and a persistently high number of church disputes. Moreover, the income-driven "baby boomer" generation is retiring.

The diocese of Rottenburg-Stuttgart, with its 1,020 parishes and around 1.6 million members, comprises the Württemberg district of Baden-Württemberg. 

It is the third largest diocese in Germany. 

In the future, the merger of the current 1,020 parishes into 50 to 80 new parishes is to be used to reduce the administrative burden to the administration. 

According to Bishop Klaus Krämer, the goal is that all planned 50 to 80 larger units have been formed in 2030.

The error of the FSSPX that Rome can demand they correct (Opinion)

If Rome wants the dialogue with the Priestly Fraternity of Saint Pius X to be something more than a staging, there is a concrete, delimited, and fully enforceable point that must be put publicly on the table. 

It is not so much the recognition of the ecclesial crisis, which today is de facto assumed even by Roman instances. 

Nor is it the endless discussion about the hermeneutics of the Second Vatican Council, whose pastoral character and problematic reception no longer constitute an institutional taboo. 

The point that Rome must indeed demand from the FSSPX with total legitimacy is the correction of a grave pastoral error that they have been committing: in fact preventing the faithful from fulfilling the Sunday precept by attending a valid Mass promulgated by the Church, and doing so moreover in the name of defending tradition.

In the ordinary praxis of the FSSPX, a clear idea is transmitted in its consequences, although sometimes formulated implicitly: when the faithful has access to the traditional Mass, attendance at the Novus Ordo does not fulfill the Sunday precept, and when he does not have access, he is exempt from going to Mass. 

This is not a matter here of a liturgical preference or an ascetic exhortation. It is a matter of a moral qualification that places the faithful in an objective situation of grave sin for obeying the authority of the Church.

That is the core of the problem. The Sunday precept obliges under mortal sin. To say, explicitly or implicitly, that a valid Mass, celebrated according to a rite promulgated by the Roman Pontiff, is not sufficient to fulfill that mandate, is equivalent to breaking the moral certainty of the faithful. 

From that moment on, obeying the Church ceases to be a sufficient guarantee to remain in grace. 

The faithful is obliged to subject the ecclesiastical law to a prior judgment external to the hierarchy, and the pastoral authority loses its objective capacity to bind.

But the damage does not stop there. This position ends up weakening the Catholic doctrine on the objective efficacy of sacramental grace. The tradition of the Church has always been clear: the Mass acts ex opere operato. Its efficacy does not depend on the environment, nor on the spiritual climate, nor on the subjective correctness of those who attend. Grace is not fragile. 

What is fragile is man, and that is why he needs the sacraments. To introduce the idea that the context can neutralize grace to that extent is equivalent to inverting the traditional logic: the sacrament ceases to be a remedy and becomes a danger.

This approach has a historically understandable origin. In the seventies and eighties, when the liturgical landscape was objectively devastating and the traditional Mass seemed cornered, an instinctive pastoral of withdrawal could develop, marked by a reasonable fear of absolute disappearance. 

But that context is no longer the current one. Today there is an ecclesial fact impossible to deny: real biritualism. Hundreds of thousands of faithful have discovered the traditional Mass from the Novus Ordo. Not against it, but from it. They have arrived at tradition not from rupture, and they live normally in both rites.

This data is decisive and the Fraternity cannot continue to ignore it. The traditional Mass has an intrinsic force, which today no longer needs to be protected through moral prohibitions or through the disqualification of the ordinary rite. 

Where both rites coexist, the good imposes itself by itself. Experience demonstrates that tradition does not weaken; on the contrary, it expands, consolidates, and is transmitted with greater naturalness. Contact does not corrupt it.

Therefore, the gravest error is not doctrinal in the abstract, but pastoral in the concrete: explicitly preventing the faithful from attending a valid Mass to fulfill a grave commandment of the Church. 

That is the point that Rome must demand be corrected. It is not an ideological concession, but a minimum demand of theological coherence. 

As long as the idea is maintained that obeying the Church may not be sufficient to avoid mortal sin, the problem will not be disciplinary or canonical. It will be directly theological.

In this framework, the meeting between Cardinal Víctor Manuel Fernández and Superior General Davide Pagliarini has a clear landing point. Rome can and must ask the Fraternity to suppress that specific pastoral position. Once that commitment is obtained, the rest enters a different terrain. 

The acceptance of bishops would not then be a doctrinal concession, but a prudential measure of sacramental continuity, especially in an objective context of emergency generated by Traditionis Custodes. That framework of exceptionalism exists and denying it would be naive.

But none of that can be justified while a pastoral approach is maintained that blocks the faithful’s access to grace in the name of its protection. 

Tradition does not need that fear. 

It probably never needed it. 

But today, less than ever.

Monsignor Bagaforo: ‘Lent and Ramadan coinciding is a blessing: created to live together’

This year, the Catholic Church's Lent and Islam's holy month of Ramadan will most likely begin simultaneously on February 18, with the Muslim and Christian calendars coinciding.

Bishop Jose Colin Bagaforo, president of the Commission for Interreligious Dialogue of the Catholic Bishops' Conference of the Philippines (CBCP), sees this coincidence as an opportunity for solidarity and reflection within a diverse national religious landscape.

“This shared beginning is a grace. It invites us to slow down, return to God, and walk together in faith,” he said. According to the prelate, the shared date is a unique opportunity for a period of grace for interreligious dialogue; it represents a symbolic backdrop for ongoing peacebuilding efforts in Mindanao, as in all of the Philippines, highlighting the shared values of dedication to life and devotion to the merciful God.

Calling for unity, Bagaforo, bishop of the Diocese of Kidapawan, said it will be a peaceful time when Christians and Muslims can walk together in faith for the common good, solidarity, and harmony. “Ramadan and Lent remind us that faith must transform the heart and shape our actions,” said the Filipino pastor. “Fasting opens our eyes to suffering and increases our compassion.”

Emphasizing the importance of collaborative action, Bagaforo also encouraged both communities to go beyond ritual and work together on “sacred tasks,” such as caring for the most vulnerable, protecting the environment, and educating for peace.

February 18, Ash Wednesday, is the first day of a 40-day period of prayer, fasting, and repentance for Catholics, leading up to Easter Sunday on April 5. There are approximately 85 million Catholics in the Philippines spread across 87 dioceses. Lent prepares Catholics for the commemoration of the passion, death, and resurrection of Jesus Christ, with a focus on self-discipline, charity, prayer, and fasting.

On the other hand, Ramadan is expected to begin on February 18 or 19, pending the official sighting of the crescent moon. The country has seven million Muslims. Most of them are located in Mindanao, in the southern Philippines.

The city has been a region of conflict for many decades due to historical, socio-political, cultural, and religious divisions. Ramadan marks the first revelation of the Quran and involves abstaining from food, drink, and intimacy from dawn (Suhoor) until sunset (Iftar). The Ramadan season culminates with the celebration of Eid al-Fitr.

"During these sacred times, Muslims and Christians enter a time of prayer, fasting, repentance, and generosity. We turn our hearts to the Merciful One. We learn anew to see each other as brothers and sisters.

Our sacred texts invite us to peace: ‘Blessed are the peacemakers’ (Mt 5:9). And God ‘invites everyone to the House of Peace’ (Quran 10:25). In a world marked by violence and division, this moment calls us not only to pray for peace, but to live it and work for it," said the bishop.

The prelate added that Ramadan and Lent remind us that faith must transform the heart and shape our actions. “Fasting opens our eyes to suffering and increases our compassion,” he said.

“God's love is demonstrated in love for our neighbor, especially the poor and marginalized.” Attention to our neighbor is proposed by Jesus, as well as by the prophet Muhammad, “who taught that the best among us are those who do good to others,” the bishop emphasized.

In addition, both religious traditions teach that the earth is a sacred gift. Quoting Pope Francis in his encyclical Laudato Si', the bishops said that the cry of the earth and the cry of the poor are one and the same.

The Quran teaches that humanity has been entrusted with the role of khalifa, steward of God's creation. “When forests are destroyed, waters poisoned, and the earth abused, peace is broken. Caring for our common home is therefore an essential work of peace,” he added.

Speaking of human fraternity and friendship, Bagaforo continued, “We were created to live together, not against each other. No one should be excluded. No one should be left behind. This vision of brotherhood resonates deeply in both Ramadan and Lent. Peace grows where mutual respect is practiced, where dialogue replaces suspicion, and where solidarity becomes a way of life.“

Alay Kapwa, a Lenten offering whose name means ”offering to one's neighbor," embodies this spirit of brotherhood in the Philippines. “It is not simply an act of charity, but a way of seeing the other as kapwa, someone who shares our humanity and our future. Through Alay Kapwa, prayer becomes service and sacrifice becomes hope for communities affected by poverty, conflict, disasters, and ecological damage,” the bishop explained.

Furthermore, the bishop stated—drawing inspiration from Pope Francis' message for World Peace Day, entitled “Towards an unarmed and disarming peace”—that true peace is not built with weapons or fear, but through trust, justice, dialogue, and shared responsibility. Peace, therefore, must be patient, inclusive, and lived. He then invited Christian and Muslim communities, interreligious dialogue bodies, and civil society partners to pray together and work together.

“Let us care for the poor. Let us protect creation. Let us educate for peace. Let us respond together to the wounds of our world. These are sacred tasks. These are works of peace,” he said. “May this shared observance of Ramadan and Lent become a living prayer. A prayer expressed through fasting and generosity. A prayer lived through fraternity, compassion, and care for our common home.”

Pope Leo XIV’s relaxing Tuesdays at Castel Gandolfo

“He's going to try to go there more often because it's far from the crowds — far from the daily grind.” 

A few weeks after Leo XIV's election, his brother John Prevost told the press that the Pope intended to make Castel Gandolfo again into the papal second home, and even more than his predecessors. 

The green oasis located about 18 miles from Rome would become “a permanent fixture” of this pontificate, promised John, a brother and close confidant within the family of the Head of the Catholic Church.

A papal tradition

And indeed, within a few months, “Leo's Tuesdays” became an institution. Every Monday at the end of the day, the Pontiff leaves the Vatican in his black van. Accompanied by gendarmes and Swiss guards, the Pope heads to Castel Gandolfo, adjacent to the Castelli Romani regional park — a large nature reserve encompassing more than 60 square miles — for his day of rest.

On Tuesdays, there are no audiences on the popes' agendas: his predecessors before him had made this a day of respite, since, as is the case for every priest, Sundays tend to be busy. 

Francis didn’t leave the Vatican, John Paul II treated himself to excursions in the mountains ... Leo XIV, for his part, plays tennis with his Peruvian secretary and goes swimming.

The high walls of Castel Gandolfo conceal dozens of acres of countryside, including a covered tennis court and a swimming pool built during the Polish pope's time, which has recently been renovated for the residence's new occupant, Aleteia has learned.

Changes have taken place since the last popes who came here on vacation. Pope Francis decided to convert the apostolic palace of Castel Gandolfo into a museum, and the new pontiff took up residence in a nearby building, Villa Barberini.

Resting but not inactive

Last fall, responding to questions from journalists waiting for him as he left Castel Gandolfo, the Pope said that his Tuesday “day off” was not synonymous with idleness or complete disconnection. The reality is that he continues to deal with urgent correspondence and take phone calls. 

However, “it's really an opportunity to relax, and he doesn't have to wear his papal robes all the time,” said his brother John.

At 2 p.m., the Pope reserves his garden for private use. The gates are closed to tourists and the 267th pontiff devotes himself to his favorite hobbies.

In addition to tennis, reliable sources whisper that he has taken up horse riding again, which he already practiced when he was a missionary in Peru. Spanish radio station COPE, which visited the site with a group of young students, reports that he rides Saleros, a 10-year-old horse from Valencia, “with whom he has formed a special bond.”

We know the papal stables are also home to the young Proton, a white thoroughbred gifted by a Polish breeder.

The Tuesday evening ritual

“Every human being, in order to take good care of themselves, should engage in activities for both the body and the soul,” the Pontiff has said, explaining that this midweek break is a habit that “helps him a lot.”

In fact, his new and heavy responsibilities, as head of a micro-state and spiritual guide to 1.4 billion souls, have filled the septuagenarian's schedule, which in fact has not been light for decades.

“He is more tired than before — you can see it on his face. He just tries to stay calm and go to bed at a reasonable hour,” acknowledged his brother John.

In Castel Gandolfo, Leo XIV also discreetly receives his close friends, some of whom have come from the United States or even Peru for moments of fellowship.

But as soon as he emerges from this interlude, the Bishop of Rome is once again caught up in his duties: a flock of journalists wait for him every Tuesday evening in front of the gates of his residence, cameras at the ready and microphones outstretched, hoping to get a quick statement.

Australian bishops on economic crisis: Beyond statistics, stories of resilience

The first of two statements made by the Australian Catholic Bishops Conference (ACBC) on social justice in the country has been released. 

The President of the ACBC, Archbishop Timothy Costelloe, described the statement as an invitation “to reflect deeply on the challenges facing our nation and to respond with faith, hope and love.”

Throughout the nation, Archbishop Costelloe lamented, many people are struggling with the rising cost of living. “For some, this means skipping meals, delaying medical care or living without secure housing”, he noted.

But he warned against letting these people become simply numbers or statistics. Rather, we should see them as they are: “human stories of struggle and resilience.”

Build communities where no one is forgotten

The Archbishop stressed that the Gospel calls each and every one of us to accompany those who suffer, and this statement is an invitation to that mission.

The Australian bishops draw on Catholic social teaching and four of its seven principles: the dignity of every person, the common good, solidarity, subsidiarity and the preferential option for the poor. These, Archbishop Costelloe highlighted, “challenge us to share generously, to advocate for justice, and to build communities where no one is forgotten.”

The situation at hand

Over the last few years, Australia has been facing an economic crisis as people have been struggling to pay for basic goods and services in what has become known as the “cost of living crisis”. Reports name the COVID19 pandemic, wars, high interest rates, rising housing costs, wage stagnation, and excessive corporate profits as causes.

The bishops’ statement highlighted the real human cost of this crisis by looking at people’s lived experiences. One young woman from New South Wales recounted how over the last year her life has drastically changed due to the lack of funds. “There have been times when I’ve had to skip meals just to ensure that my daughter and pets could eat”, she shared, noting that she hasn’t been able to pay her electricity bills for over two years.

But this is not a singular case. A 2024 study revealed that more than 70% of employed people and those on government support said the cost of goods and services has gone up faster than people’s paychecks. As a result, people have had to dip into their savings, borrow money, go without heating and air conditioning, or avoid going to the doctor or buying medicine.

In 2025, over one in three Australian households reported “experiencing food insecurity, with many skipping meals or relying on emergency food relief.” Those living in more regional communities find it even more difficult, as one survey reported the price of basic food items in remote areas was double the price in capital cities.

All are of inestimable value

In response, the Australian bishops called attention to the Compendium of the Social Doctrine of the Church. They placed the priority on two of the principles of the Catholic Church's teaching: the universal destination of goods and the preferential option for the poor.

Yet, the bishops noted that respect for the dignity of every human person lies at the heart of all Catholic social teaching. As everyone is created in God’s image and likeness, they are of inestimable worth. The reality, however, is conflicting.

The evidence the bishops have reported in the statement reveals that the impact of rising costs of living, and it “shows that many Australians are being deprived of their human dignity.” This, they stressed, “is not acceptable.”

The principle of universal destination of goods demands that each person should have access to the necessary things in life to live with dignity. Going further, the Catholic Church’s commitment to the common good means each person should have all they need to flourish.

We all have a part to play

The bottom line is that the increasing cost of living in Australia has left many without food, medicine, or even a home. “The Church cannot ignore what is fundamentally at odds with what God intended”, the bishops argued, and they stressed they must work to make sure every individual person is not left out or left behind.

With this in mind, the Australian bishops highlighted how the first thought must go towards those who are poor or marginalized. This, they explained, “requires us to not only share what we have with people who are poor, but to also challenge what causes and entrenches poverty in society.”

In response, the bishops called on all parts of society to be involved—governments, corporations and businesses, churches and faith communities, civil society, and community organizations.

Numerous Catholic social service organizations in different dioceses across the country offer financial counselling, affordable housing, and emergency relief to some 700,000 people each year. The St. Vincent de Paul Society provide various forms of support, including $50 million in emergency relief annually.

Yet, the weight is not solely on their shoulders. The Australian bishops’ statement urged everyone from all walks of life to “play some part in working for the common good amid the cost of living crisis.”

They suggested volunteering at local Church and community organizations, donating money and goods to organizations, petitioning local politicians to help those most in need, or joining organisations promoting more affordable housing locally or nationally.

We must be prophets of hope, they argue, in a world where people struggle to make ends meet. Across the country, each person can help take steps to “lift the cloud of gloom which overwhelms so many of us today and replace it with hope for a stronger, compassionate, more resilient and fairer country.”

Pope Leo XIV expected to visit Assisi during Year of St. Francis, archbishop says

The Italian hilltown of Assisi is anticipating a visit from Pope Leo XIV during the special Jubilee Year of St. Francis as the city celebrates the 800th anniversary of the death of its most famous saint.

"We are already looking forward to Pope Leo's visit in the coming year," Archbishop Domenico Sorrentino, the apostolic administrator of the Diocese of Assisi-Nocera Umbra-Gualdo Tadino and Foligno, said at a Feb. 3 press conference in Rome.

"We have made the request, but we have not yet received a response regarding the date," he said. "However, we are extremely confident that he will not fail to come."

More than 350,000 pilgrims have already registered to venerate the relics of St. Francis, which will be displayed from Feb. 22 to March 22 in front of the altar of the Lower Church of the Basilica of St. Francis of Assisi.

Sorrentino suggested several possible dates for the papal visit. One option is mid-May, when Assisi's Sanctuary of the Renunciation will celebrate the anniversary of its inauguration. The sanctuary, part of Assisi's Church of St. Mary Major, marks the site where St. Francis renounced his worldly possessions. It is also the location of the tomb of the recently canonized St. Carlo Acutis, whose death 20 years ago is also being commemorated this year.

A more likely timeframe is October, when Assisi will celebrate the feasts of both St. Francis and St. Carlo Acutis. Oct. 27 will also mark the 40th anniversary of the Spirit of Assisi, the landmark interreligious gathering organized by St. John Paul II, the archbishop noted.

"So Pope Leo will have plenty of choices if he wants to choose significant dates or if he wants to choose a date of his own," Sorrentino said. "And any day of the year he will certainly not only be welcome, but it will be a great joy for us and for the world."

The visit is not expected until after March 25, when Archbishop Felice Accrocca will be installed as the new bishop of Assisi. Leo accepted 77-year-old Archbishop Sorrentino's resignation in January after he served 20 years as the bishop of Assisi. Accrocca, currently archbishop of Benevento, is known for his expertise on St. Francis.

"It was a great grace to be for 20 years, bishop of Assisi," Sorrentino told OSV News.

"I won't rest in my retirement," he added. "When we are in the footsteps of these saints, like St. Francis, like also this young St. Carlo Acutis, we cannot rest. We must work for the world."

Leo has proclaimed a special Jubilee Year of St. Francis running until Jan. 10, 2027, offering a plenary indulgence to pilgrims who visit Franciscan churches or places of worship connected to the saint.

Leo previously made a brief visit to Assisi on Nov. 20 to address the Italian bishops' conference, during which he prayed privately at St. Francis' tomb.

"It is a blessing to be able to come here today to this sacred place," the pope said during that visit. "As we approach the 800th anniversary of St. Francis's death, we have the opportunity to prepare to celebrate this great, humble, and poor saint at a time when the world is searching for signs of hope."

Sorrentino emphasized the spiritual significance of the jubilee year at a press conference for the "Francis of Assisi and Carlo Acutis for an Economy of Fraternity" award.

"St. Francis guides us to Jesus, Carlo guides us to Jesus," the archbishop said. "They point to Jesus, almost as if two saints are stepping aside so that Jesus and the Gospel can come back into view at a time when Jesus and the Gospel have been forgotten."

The award provides financial support for integral development projects that benefit the poor, with the Diocese of Assisi awarding 50,000 euros ($59,510) to the winner. The 2025 award went to "Project HOPE" from India, which provides economic empowerment to deafblind and vulnerable youth and disadvantaged women under the guidance of Caritas Goa. The deadline to apply for the prize is Feb. 28.

South Korean Cardinal Lazarus You Heung-sik, prefect of the Vatican Dicastery for the Clergy, also spoke at the press conference.

"Together with young entrepreneurs from around the world, we envisioned a different economy, one that gives life rather than kills, includes rather than excludes, humanizes rather than dehumanizes, cares for creation rather than plunders it," You said.

"Today, 800 years after the death of Francis and 20 years after the death of Carlo, we see the great tree growing from the testimony of the self-denial of these two saints."

A Cornered Taiwan Finds New Hope for Vatican Support Under Pope Leo XIV (Opinion)

For decades, Taiwan has watched one ally after another cut diplomatic ties under pressure from China. Since 2016 alone, 10 countries have switched recognition from Taipei to Beijing, leaving only a dozen states that maintain full formal relations with Taiwan today, among them, the Holy See.

The island democracy’s only embassy on European soil looks onto St. Peter’s Basilica from the Via della Conciliazione, making the Vatican one of the most visible places in the world where the flag of the Republic of China (Taiwan) is flown publicly in defiance of the Chinese Communist Party’s view that Taiwan does not exist as a country.

“The Vatican is the only country in Europe that still recognizes Taiwan,” said Taiwanese Deputy Foreign Minister François Chihchung Wu in an interview with the Register. “And we need to maintain this kind of diplomatic relation because it is the source of the legitimacy of our government. So we are continuing to work very hard to work with the Vatican and trying to maintain this diplomatic relation, which is crucial for us.”

That political tension surfaced again in the last days of 2025, as China launched its biggest ever military drill around Taiwan after the U.S. announced an $11-billion arms sale to Taiwan. China’s leader, Xi Jinping, told U.S. President Donald Trump in a phone call on Nov. 24 that “Taiwan’s return to China is an important part of the postwar international order,” according to Chinese state media.

For Beijing, persuading the Holy See to abandon Taiwan would be a geopolitical prize. The specter that the Vatican might sacrifice its long-standing ties with Taipei for full relations with Beijing has surfaced under every 21st-century pontificate, reaching its peak under Pope Francis, who dreamed of becoming the first pope to visit China. 

But the election of Pope Leo XIV in May has rekindled fresh hope in Taiwan.

On a recent trip to Taipei, I met President Lai Ching-te and senior officials who described the Vatican’s unique place in Taiwan’s diplomatic outlook. I also saw firsthand how a Catholic missionary presence continues to thrive on the island, with 90 religious congregations active across Taiwan, proclaiming the Gospel in Chinese — a stark contrast to conditions in mainland China, where religious freedom has sharply deteriorated under Xi and minors are barred from entering Catholic churches and other religious sites.

My weeklong reporting trip to Taiwan was made possible by funding from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of China (ROC). The Holy See Press Office and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the People’s Republic of China (PRC) did not respond to request for comment for this article.

For Taiwanese leaders, the Vatican’s recognition is deeply valued. They frequently point to Taiwan’s democratic system and its high global rankings for press and religious freedom, metrics in which Taiwan outpaces the United States.

Taiwan’s foreign minister, Lin Chia-lung, told the Register that he understands why the Holy See might seek connections with Beijing, but insisted “this should not contradict diplomatic ties with Taiwan.” He added, “We really cherish the freedom of religion that we have right now. And I believe that, in this regard, Taiwan can have more cooperation with the Holy See going forward.”

Wu, who traveled to Rome for Pope Leo’s inauguration, spoke candidly about what Taipei hopes the new Pope will recognize. “The formal support of the Vatican to a free Chinese-speaking society is very, very important,” he said.

For Wu, Taiwan represents a model: a Chinese-speaking democracy where Catholicism can flourish unimpeded.

“Taiwan is not part of China,” he said. “We can be a very important model for China. … The existence of Taiwan is very, very important for the future of every Chinese-speaking society, but especially for China.”

Yet the Vatican’s relationship with Taiwan has always been complex. The Holy See first established ties with the Republic of China in 1942, when Chiang Kai-shek’s government was leading resistance against Japan in mainland China in the Second Sino-Japanese War. After the Chinese Civil War, when Chiang’s government retreated to Taiwan in 1949, the Vatican’s apostolic nuncio remained on the mainland until the communist regime expelled him in 1951 for objecting to Beijing’s plan to form a state-controlled Catholic Church in China. Two years later, the Apostolic Nunciature to China was moved to Taiwan.

The shift in global politics in 1971 — when the United Nations transferred China’s seat to Beijing and Taipei was expelled — triggered a Vatican response. Pope Paul VI downgraded the Holy See’s diplomatic representative in Taipei to a chargé d’affaires, a status that endures today. Msgr. Stefano Mazzotti has served in that role since 2022.

Peter Moody, an expert in international relations in East Asia and professor emeritus at the University of Notre Dame, told the Register that Taiwan values its relationship with the Vatican more than the Holy See values its relationship with Taiwan.

For the Holy See, “it’s a leftover of its relationship with China (Republic of China). Beijing broke off relations with the Vatican in the early 1950s, and the only way to maintain a relationship with ‘China’ was to move the nunciature to Taipei,” he said.

This arrangement for the Vatican’s presence in Taiwan feels fragile to many in Taipei, particularly when the Holy See has pursued rapprochement with Beijing. Under Pope Francis, the Vatican entered a controversial 2018 provisional agreement with China on the appointment of bishops, raising fears in Taipei that the Vatican’s deeper ties with Beijing could come at the cost of Taiwan’s last European ally.

“We are very worried that the Vatican could abandon Taiwan,” Wu said.

“Now with the new Pope, we have a new hope.”

Is ‘Double Recognition’ Possible?

Some scholars in Taiwan offer cautious optimism. Thomas Tu, a doctoral researcher in Taipei studying Vatican-Taiwan relations, says the idea of “double recognition,” or the Holy See maintaining ties with both Taiwan and Beijing, is unlikely but not impossible. He puts the chance at “a 10% or even less than 10%” that Rome could one day have a diplomatic presence in both capitals.

“That would be a great example for every country,” he said.

Such an arrangement would defy current diplomatic norms. Because of Beijing’s “One China” policy, no state today holds full ties with both the PRC and the ROC. But Tu argues that the Church’s diplomatic toolbox is unique, suggesting Rome could appoint a “papal delegate” in Beijing while keeping its nunciature in Taipei.

Tu, himself a Taiwanese Catholic, believes the Vatican is unlikely to sever ties with Taiwan.

Since the Lateran Treaty of 1929, he said, the Holy See has relied on international recognition to safeguard its sovereignty. It maintains relations with 180 states, including 80 with embassies accredited to the Vatican, and is reluctant to cut any. Taiwan’s religious freedom, he added, has made the island a strategic hub for translating Vatican materials into Mandarin.

Still, nearly every diplomat I interviewed acknowledged the same obstacle: Beijing would never accept dual recognition.

“I don’t think the Chinese authorities will be willing to make fundamental concessions which … the Holy See is willing to swallow … unless you forget about Catholicism and whatever it represents in total,” said Tien Hung-mao, Taiwan’s former foreign minister.

Moody said that “a more realistic possibility is for the Holy See to move the nunciature to Beijing and appoint some kind of papal delegate to Taipei.”

“Both the Chinese sides would have to accept this,” he added. “And, so far, Beijing doesn’t see any reason to.”

Ambassador Rong-chuan Wu, a senior adviser at the Institute for National Policy Research, was blunt: “From the professional point of view, there’s no possibility for the time being.”

Recognizing Beijing, he warned, would be “a disaster” that could inflict “tremendous damage to the Holy See,” making it appear as though the Vatican had abandoned its principles.

For some diplomats, that scenario has felt alarmingly plausible. Tien recalled that within his first weeks as foreign minister in 2000, he received a report that Vatican officials under Pope John Paul II were considering switching recognition.

“For me at the time, I was scared, right? I don’t want to be the foreign minister who only in 10 days lost the Holy See,” he said. “So do you know what I did? I flew to Rome … I met with the secretary of state of the Holy See. We talked for two hours.”

Looking ahead, Tien sees only one circumstance that might compel the Vatican to switch recognition, a collapse of the Chinese Communist Party. “The real question is: Is the Catholic Church, and the values and humanity it represents, compatible with communism? My answer to that is No,” he said.

Deputy Minister Wu echoed those doubts. While he hopes geopolitical changes might someday make dual recognition possible, he remains realistic. “According to my perspective and all my experience, it would not be possible. It’s not because we don’t want something … it’s because China wants to conquer Taiwan, so they would never accept it, except if they changed their president,” he said.

After a pause, he added, “Today, if you’re looking at all the conditions, looking at all the positions of China, it’s still impossible. But who knows? Maybe with the will of God … just like how the Vatican changed the Cold War with the arrival of a pope in Poland in 1980.”

‘Peace Be With You All’

From his first words on the loggia of St. Peter’s Basilica, Pope Leo XIV signaled that peace would be his diplomatic priority.

One does not have to look far to see headlines about the threat of a potential Chinese military invasion of Taiwan.

Taiwan’s former president Tsai Ing-wen regularly responded to Pope Francis’ annual World Day of Peace message, underscoring Taiwan’s commitment to peace amid Chinese aggression.

At this year’s National Day reception in Rome, held days after The New York Times detailed “The Missiles Threatening Taiwan,” Taiwan’s new ambassador to the Holy See, Anthony Chung-Yi Ho, invoked the words of Pope John Paul II: “Do not be afraid.”

“Taiwan faces constant challenges and threats from across the strait,” Ho said. “We do not yield to fear. Instead, Taiwan rises with courage — standing tall as a beacon of freedom and democracy.”

He added, “We believe that true greatness lies not in power, but in love. Guided by this conviction, Taiwan will continue to walk in unity with the Holy See, building bridges of peace and charity.”

Pope Leo is the first pope to have visited mainland China before his election, but the China he saw in the early 2000s was far less restrictive than China today under Xi Jinping. Still, many in Taiwan hope Leo’s experience will give him clearer instincts on the reality of human rights in China. They also point to the Pope’s first interview, in which he said he intends to listen to “a significant group of Chinese Catholics who for many years have lived some kind of oppression or difficulty in living their faith freely” and is open to dialogue with “a number of people, Chinese, on both sides.”

For now, the Vatican may have the luxury of waiting to see who eventually succeeds the 72-year-old Xi. Taiwan, however, fears it may not have that time.

Leo, who was elected pope amid the wars in Ukraine and the Holy Land, could in the coming years face a new international crisis in the Taiwan Strait.

And if he were to decide to break with precedent and send a dramatic signal of support for Taiwan from Rome, he could choose to travel there, a possibility Taipei has openly encouraged.

Former president Tsai invited Pope Francis to Taiwan multiple times, including ahead of his 2024 trip to the Asia-Pacific.

“If we can have the visit of the Pope to Taiwan … it would send a very strong message … that Catholicism can be practiced without problem in a Chinese-speaking society,” Wu said, “that the Chinese people also have the right, also have the possibility to live in a democratic country, in a free society. They are not condemned only to live under the Chinese communist rule.”