Tuesday, April 14, 2026

Case against ex-priest accused of sexual assault will move forward

A Superior Court judge on April 14 refused to dismiss a sexual assault charge against a Catholic priest who was removed from the ministry by the Providence Diocese.

Judge Luis Matos rejected a request by Kevin Fisette, 70, of Dayville, Connecticut., to drop the first-degree sexual assault charge against him for allegedly abusing a 13-year-old boy between 1981 and 1982 in Burrillville. 

Fisette had alleged that the state violated his due process rights.

Matos said in his bench ruling he found no evidence that the state attorney general’s office had acted in “bad faith” in its handling of the case. 

He dismissed as speculative arguments that mental-health records related to his accuser that have since been destroyed would have bolstered his case.

Fisette’s lawyer, J. Richard Ratcliffe, declined comment following the judge’s ruling. Fisette, who said nothing in court, is also being represented by Craig V. Montecalvo.

Sexual assault charge resurfaces in 2022

Central to Fisette’s arguments was a 2009 decision by then prosecutor George Page not to bring the allegations before a grand jury, putting the charge to bed at the time.

The case received renewed attention when Attorney General Peter F. Neronha took office, promising a review of the Catholic clergy abuse scandal.

In May 2022, a grand jury indicted Fisette on one count of first-degree sexual assault. 

The indictment alleged that Fisette sexually abused the teen while Fisette was assigned as a deacon to Our Lady of Victory Church in the Ashaway area of Hopkinton. He was released on $50,000 personal recognizance.

Fisette faces 'credible allegations'

Fisette was pastor at the St. Leo the Great Church in Pawtucket when a "credible allegation" was reported to state police in 2009, according to Providence Journal archives. 

He was removed from the ministry and in 2019 was placed on the list of credibly accused priests.

The attorney general's office declined to prosecute the case in 2009, citing no evidence of force or coercion and that there was "insufficient credible evidence of concealment or surprise," as well as inconsistencies in the alleged victim's statements and questions about his ability to recall events from decades earlier.

State police Capt. David Neill told The Journal at the time that investigators thought the case was viable.

What changed in the case?

Prosecutors reported at Fisette’s arraignment years later that he had abused a 13-year-old. They said the case had been strengthened by testimony from then Bishop Thomas Tobin and Monsignor John Darcy about "damning" admissions Fisette made to them.

Other new evidence included emails between Fisette and the teen that constitute an admission of guilt, as well as statements he made to the state police that implicated him, according to prosecutors.

The case is being prosecuted by Timothy G. Healy and Jonathan Burke.

Scathing report on clergy scandal

Neronha recently released a scathing report on the alleged sexual abuse of at least 315 children by 75 Catholic clergy members. 

The findings detail the lengths Rhode Island's Catholic leaders went to mask the magnitude of the scandal.

You can read the full report here.

Not guilty plea entered for former Northeast Wisconsin priest facing child porn charges

A judge entered a not guilty plea Tuesday for a priest accused of child pornography possession.

Fr. Andrew Showers, 38, faces two counts of possession of child pornography. He returns to court May 18 for a status conference.

Showers waived his preliminary hearing Tuesday. Showers then stood mute and did not enter a plea, so Judge Diane Meulemans entered the not guilty plea for him. 

Showers appeared in court in civilian clothes and was not wearing a priest’s collar.

Showers also faces charges for trying to meet who he believed was a 14-year-old girl, but "Abby" was actually an undercover police officer. 

He was charged in August with attempted sexual assault of a child, attempted child enticement and attempted use of a computer for a sex crime. 

A status conference is set for May 13 in that case.

These new charges are a result of digital evidence found on electronic devices seized from Showers following his arrest, officials said.

In a statement, Madison Catholic Bishop Donald Hying called the new charges "deeply troubling."

"Any situation involving the abuse, exploitation or victimization of children is profoundly grievous and stands in direct contradiction to everything we believe and uphold as Catholics," Hying said. "The safety, dignity and well-being of children and young people must always be protected. The abuse or exploitation of minors must never be tolerated, especially within the Church."

Since becoming a priest in 2017, Showers served at two churches in Northeast Wisconsin. 

He was at All Saints in Berlin and Our Lady of the Lake in Green Lake in 2022 and 2023. Showers also served at parishes in Madison, Waunakee, Clinton and Wisconsin Dells.

Limerick Diocese plans sale of five-acre site as it battles funding shortfall

THE Limerick Diocese is to bring a five-acre site to market as it battles a funding shortfall brought about by a fall in attendance at Mass.

The land, in Corbally, adjacent to the Diocesan Centre and St Munchin’s School, is set to go on the market in the coming weeks, and is zoned for residential, meaning housing could be build on site.

And Bishop Brendan Leahy has warned that further sales may be necessary in the future, saying: “difficult decisions" may need to be made "to ensure the long-term viability of the Diocese”.

He added the deficit facing the Diocese of Limerick is not sustainable in the long-term.

“The reality is that we are facing into a sustained position of a yearly deficit in our budget. While we are fortunate to have some reserves, this is not a situation that can continue indefinitely,” Bishop Leahy said.

The Diocese employs the equivalent of 13 full-time staff delivering a wide range of services to parishes and priests across Limerick.

These include child and adult safeguarding, pastoral and youth ministry, lay-pastoral supports, liturgical resources and support for the promotion of vocations and the ongoing formation of clergy.

They are paid through a monthly levy from churches in the form of the Diocesan need collection.

However, Bishop Leahy said with Mass attendance declining over recent decades, that fund is proving difficult to maintain.

Bishop Leahy said: “We are in a situation where our costs are rising, and we need to employ competent lay people who provide wonderful service. But our income base is reducing due to declining Mass attendance. This creates a gap that we simply cannot ignore.”

The senior cleric said any decisions made will be guided by a desire to retain services.

“Our priority is to continue supporting parishes, schools and communities across the Diocese in the best way possible. The commitment of our, priests, staff and volunteers is extraordinary and any decisions we take will be guided by a desire to protect these vital services into the future,” he said.

The sale of the site in Corbally, he added is one of a number of steps which must be considered to stablise the financial position of the Diocese.

“It is important that we act now, in a measured and responsible way, to safeguard the future of the Diocese,” he added.

In ancient Hippo, Pope Leo launches a vision for the church rooted in St. Augustine

Preaching from the Basilica of St. Augustine, dedicated to the figure to whom he has modeled his spiritual life, Pope Leo XIV laid out his vision for the Catholic Church animated by the North African saint's example of conversion. 

"In the face of poverty and oppression, the guiding principle above all for Christians is charity," he said on a hilltop overlooking the site of ancient Hippo, the Roman city where St. Augustine lived, prayed and ministered to his flock as a bishop for 34 years. "Let us do to those around us, as we would have them do to us."

The pope began his second day in Algeria on April 14 with a visit to Hippo's ruins under a steady stream of rain rare in the predominantly desert nation. 

The visit was the centerpiece of his two days in Algeria where Leo, the first Augustinian pope, wanted to pay homage to his spiritual father and, in the process, become the first pope to visit the North African nation.

Upon arriving at the site, where scattered columns rise from the grass in the shadow of the towering basilica above, Leo laid a wreath of flowers, then crossed his hands and stood in silence for several moments bearing a solemn expression. 

He then planted at the site an olive tree, a sign of peace, using a shovel.

The pope has been associated with the Augustinians since he attended a minor seminary run by the order in Holland, Michigan. 

"So much of who I am I owe to the spirit and the teachings of St. Augustine," he said in a message to members of the order in August.

Traveling with the pope in Algeria was the head of the Augustinian order and Leo's longtime friend Fr. Joseph Farrell.

After visiting with the local Augustinian religious community — the order has three friars in Muslim-majority Algeria — the pope celebrated Mass with some 1,500 people in the basilica where a statue of St. Augustine stands by the altar. 

Many in attendance were African Catholics who had migrated to Algeria or had traveled there from neighboring nations for the pope's visit. 

In his homily in Annaba, Leo held out the saint as a model for renewal in the church and the world and said the doctor of the church is revered "for his conversion even more than for his wisdom."

Augustine famously recounted in his Confessions the personal story of his transition from a hedonistic lifestyle that included fathering a child with his concubine, to his striking conversion in Milan, which eventually led to becoming a bishop and one of the greatest intellectual influences in Western thought. 

Discussing Augustine's reflections on the heart central to the saint's spirituality, the pope said that reform in the church "must begin in the heart" and "encompass everyone if it is to be effective." 

Leo said Christians must strive for unity and pointed to the first Christians as a model of church that "was not based on a social contract, but rather on the harmony of faith, affections, ideas and life decisions centered on the love of God who became man to save all the peoples of the earth."

The pope reflected at length on the Mass' first reading from the Acts of the Apostles, which said the "community of believers was of one heart and mind."

"Faith," Leo said, "unites people according to perfect justice, which calls everyone to charity." 

"The primary task of pastors as ministers of the Gospel is therefore to bear witness to God before the world with one heart and one soul, not permitting our concerns to lead us astray through fear, nor trends to undermine us through compromise," he said.

Pope Francis likewise highlighted the church modeled in the Acts of the Apostles "as the paradigm for every Christian community, as the icon of a fraternity."

Leo has made unity a central tenet of his 11-month pontificate, preaching repeatedly on the theme and often drawing from Augustine in doing so. 

His papal motto, "In illo uno unum" ("In him all are one"), was taken from Augustine's writings. 

Advancing Francis' legacy

As Leo laid out how Augustine informs his view of the future of the church, the Vatican published a letter the pope had sent to all of the world's cardinals on advancing the church's mission. 

After convening the world's cardinals to Rome in January to discuss the church's priority, the pope said that Evangelii Gaudium, the roadmap of Francis' pontificate which articulated his vision for the church, "continues to be a significant point of reference."

The pope, who spent more than two decades as a missionary in Peru, wrote in the April 12 letter that the cardinals' reflections on the document in January indicate "a shift from a pastoral approach of maintenance to one of mission."

"At the diocesan level, the responsibility of pastors to resolutely support missionary boldness emerges clearly, ensuring that such boldness is not weighed down or stifled by organizational excesses, but is guided by a discernment that helps us to recognize what is essential," he wrote. 

The world's cardinals are set to meet again in June, where the pope wrote that, among other topics, they would discuss reassessing how the church communicates "from a more explicitly missionary perspective."

And as Leo continues through his 11-day trip into sub-Saharan Africa, the pope will tap into his missionary roots, preaching to burgeoning Catholic communities in the Global South that will increasingly comprise a greater proportion of the church. 

US bishops express 'grave concern' over ICE treatment of pregnant women

Two U.S. bishops, who lead the U.S. Catholic bishops' efforts on pro-life and migration concerns, have advised the new head of the Department of Homeland Security of their "grave concern" over the treatment of pregnant and postpartum women in immigration detention.

"There are increasing numbers of alarming reports of pregnant mothers not getting the medical care they need while in immigration detention, tragically resulting in miscarriage in some cases, as well as reports of nursing mothers being separated from their babies when detained by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement," wrote Bishop Daniel Thomas of Toledo, Ohio, and Bishop Brendan Cahill of Victoria, Texas, in an April 13 letter addressed to DHS Secretary Markwayne Mullin.

The two prelates respectively chair the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops' Committee on Pro-Life Activities and Committee on Migration.

Their letter follows a Feb. 13 letter in which more than 30 pro-life leaders urged President Donald Trump, Mullin's predecessor Kristi Noem and ICE Acting Director Todd Lyons to reinstate federal guidance that would largely prevent immigration detention for pregnant and new mothers.

"Medical advocacy groups and investigative reporting have documented prolonged detention of women with high-risk pregnancies, delayed emergency treatment, miscarriages, and stillbirths," stated the letter, whose signatories spanned the ideological and religious spectrum. "Simply stated, unborn children are dying because of this policy."

A new joint report from the Women's Refugee Commission and Physicians for Human Rights found that "ICE is violating its own policy to keep parents and children together," while "detaining pregnant and postpartum women and not providing adequate medical care for pregnant women with life-threatening conditions."

Among the violations cited in the report were "mistreatment, inadequate healthcare, insufficient food, and shackling of pregnant and postpartum women in detention."

One 25-year-old pregnant woman interviewed after her deportation to Honduras told report authors that she had bled for several days while in detention, but had received no medical attention despite multiple requests for aid.

According to the same report, another woman was deported following an untreated miscarriage.

Additionally, a February 2026 BabyCenter poll of over 500 pregnant women found that 1 in 5 said ICE activity has prevented them from seeking prenatal medical care.

In their letter, Thomas and Cahill noted their USCCB committees had last year "expressed deep concern with U.S. Customs and Border Protection's rescission of guidance on caring for pregnant and postpartum mothers and their infants in its custody."

However, they noted ICE policy "still recognizes the vulnerability of these women and their children by generally discouraging their arrest and detention."

"Unfortunately, that policy seems to no longer be followed in practice," they added.

The bishops urged ICE "to abide consistently by Directive 11032.4, Identification and Monitoring of Pregnant, Postpartum, or Nursing Individuals, which is already in place, and thereby to avoid the arrest and detention of pregnant and postpartum mothers," except in "exceptional circumstances" provided in the directive, such as "national security concerns or imminent risk of physical danger to themselves or others."

"Doing so would be consistent with this Administration's recent pro-life actions, including those explicitly welcomed by the USCCB's Committee on Pro-Life Activities in January," said the bishops, referencing a Jan. 27 statement in which Thomas expressed his gratitude for "multiple steps" taken by the Trump administration to protect unborn children.

"No matter one's immigration status, there is no overarching justification for separating nursing infants from their mothers or endangering the health and safety of pregnant women or their preborn babies," the bishops said. "In this regard, we urge you in the strongest possible terms to extend the Administration's commitments on life to all vulnerable mothers, infants, and children in the womb."

Pope Leo XIV Accepts Retirement of Bishop of South Africa’s Bethlehem Diocese, Appoints Successor

Pope Leo XIV has accepted the retirement of Bishop Jan de Groef from the Pastoral care of the Catholic Diocese of Bethlehem in South Africa and has appointed his successor.

In the latest administrative changes published Tuesday, April  14 by the Holy See Press Office, the Holy Father appointed Mons. Motlatsi Meshack Phomane from the Diocese of Umtata as the successor of the 78-year-old Belgium-born member of Missionaries of Africa (White Fathers).

The appointment of Mons. Meshack, who until now serves as Parish Priest of Mt. Nicholas in Libode was confirmed by the Apostolic Nunciature to South Africa on the same day of the announcement.

“The Apostolic Nunciature joins the Church in Southern Africa in praying for His Lordship, The Most Reverend Motlatsi Meshack PHOMANE, the new Bishop of the Diocese of Bethlehem, and those under his pastoral care,” the statement confirming the announcement indicates.

Mons. Meshack was born on 14 November 1975, in Tshenola (Matatiele), in the Diocese of Umtata. Before entering the seminary, he undertook various work experiences before beginning his priestly formation at St. Philip Neri Pre-Oriental Seminary in Port Elizabeth.

He later continued his formation at St. Kizito Preparatory Seminary in Verulam, in the province of KwaZulu-Natal, before studying philosophy at St. Peter’s Seminary in Garsfontein and theology at St. John Vianney Major Seminary in Pretoria.

He was ordained a Priest on 30 June 2012, incardinated in the Diocese of Umtata. He has since held various pastoral, administrative, and academic responsibilities, including Diploma studies in Business Management at the University of South Africa from 2012 to 2013.

The alumnus of the Kenya- based Catholic University of Eastern Africa (CUEA) where he obtained a Licentiate studies in Canon Law has also served as the Chancellor of the Diocese of Umtata, Parish Priest of St. John the Baptist, Port St. John, and Diocesan Financial Administrator from 2013 to 2015.

The Bishop-elect also served as Parish Priest of St. Martin, Mt Fletcher from 2019 to 2025; Diocesan Representative for the Pastoral Conference, Sotho Region since 2013; and Diocesan Translator for the Sesotho language (since 2016).

He has served as member of the Metropolitan Ecclesiastical Tribunal of Durban since 2019; Member of the College of Consultors of the Diocese of Umtata since 2021; and Chaplain for the Diocesan Synod Committee, and Member of the Diocesan Finance Committee since 2025.

Once Consecrated Bishop, he will become the 5th Local Ordinary of the South African Diocese succeeding Bishop Groef who has been at the helm of the Episcopal See since his Episcopal Ordination on 28 March 2009.

The Diocese that has a population of 59,916 Catholics out of the total population of 858,779, representing 7.0 percent, according to 2023 statistics, measures  34,965 square-kilometer.

Erected on 12 February 1948 as Vicariate Apostolic of Bethlehem, before elevation to a diocese on 11 January 1951, the Episcopal See is part of the Ecclesiastical Province of Bloemfontein.

Pope Leo praises witness of Algeria’s Christian martyrs at meeting with local Catholics

Pope Leo XIV honored the memory of Algeria’s Christian martyrs Monday evening, telling the country’s tiny Catholic community that the blood of those who died for their faith remains “a living seed that never ceases to bear fruit.”

Speaking inside the Basilica of Our Lady of Africa, a 19th-century church perched on a promontory overlooking the Mediterranean Sea and the city of Algiers, the pope praised the 19 men and women religious beatified in 2018 who were killed during the Algerian Civil War of the 1990s.

“It is precisely love for their brothers and sisters that inspired the witness of the martyrs we have commemorated,” the pope said. “In the face of hatred and violence, they remained faithful to charity even to the point of sacrificing themselves alongside many other men and women, Christians and Muslims.”

‘Discrete and precious presence’

The visit marks a remarkable moment for the North African country in which Catholics number fewer than 9,000 in a predominantly Sunni Muslim nation of more than 45 million people. 

Pope Leo described the Church’s role in Algeria as a “discrete and precious presence.”

Outside the basilica in heavy rain was a 19-year-old Catholic convert who shared with OSV News how he was raised in a Muslim family, but was baptized in 2024 despite his family’s opposition. 

Speaking under the condition of anonymity, he said that he was inspired by the miracles of the Church, in particular the Marian apparition of Our Lady of Zeitoun in Egypt. As an active member of the local Catholic community, he volunteered to help with the pope’s visit.

Prior to his arrival at the basilica, the pope visited the Great Mosque of Algiers. “Through this place of prayer, through the search for truth, including through study and through the ability to recognize the dignity of every human being, we know — and today’s gathering is proof of this — that we can learn to respect one another, live in harmony and build a world of peace,” he remarked spontaneously in Italian. 

Inside the basilica, Pope Leo sat under the apse mosaic with a French inscription that translates, “Our Lady of Africa, pray for us and for the Muslims.” 

Cardinal Jean-Paul Vesco, archbishop of Algiers, told the pope that the vast majority of people who cross the basilica’s threshold are Muslim.

“‘Madame l’Afrique,’ as she is often called here, is inscribed in the heritage of Algeria and in the hearts of Algerians,” the cardinal said in French. “The inscription that welcomes them, ‘pray for us and for the Muslims,’ expresses Mary’s maternal vocation for all humanity, and the vocation of this basilica, which hosts so many cultural and religious events, and gathers so many confidences and moments of intimate prayer.”

In his speech inside the basilica, Pope Leo, also speaking in French, said, “This very basilica is a sign of our desire for peace and unity.” 

“It symbolizes a Church of living stones, where communion between Christians and Muslims takes shape under the mantle of Our Lady of Africa,” he said.

During the event, people waited outside in the pouring rain as the basilica was filled to capacity.

‘A great gift from God for a small church’

Among those present inside the basilica was Father Jean Fernandes Costa, rector of the Cathedral of the Sacred Heart in Algiers, who described the local Catholic Church as very small and “highly diverse in terms of nationalities and cultures.” He said the community serves “as a sign of the Church’s universality in a non-Christian society.”

He told OSV News he has been in Algeria for seven years and serves the Archdiocese of Algiers not only as the cathedral’s pastor, but also as chaplain to university students from sub-Saharan Africa.

“It is a very unique situation, as we are embedded in a predominantly Muslim society and must constantly adapt to this reality,” said the priest, a Brazilian member of the Shalom Catholic Community. “Dialogue with Algerian society has developed gradually through welcoming visitors to our small churches and through our service to the poorest.”

Father Fernandes said that for local Catholics, the papal trip to Algeria is “a great gift from God for this small Church, which never imagined a papal visit so early in his pontificate and at the start of his apostolic journey to Africa. It is also a sign of hope for the future of this small community.”

Among those who had gathered for the event was Sister Brigitte Zawadi, a member of the Missionary Sisters of Our Lady of Africa originally from the Democratic Republic of Congo, who has been serving as a missionary in Algeria for two years. 

“I’m working with students from many countries coming from Africa and some from Algeria,” she told OSV News. For me, it’s a special mission.”

Ancient saints and modern martyrs

In his remarks, Pope Leo pointed to the great witnesses to faith both ancient and modern in the North African country, where St. Augustine served as bishop in the fourth century. 

Pope Leo cited the writings of St. Charles de Foucauld, the French hermit and missionary canonized by Pope Francis in 2022, who lived in Algeria among the Tuareg people of the Sahara before his martyrdom. He also quoted Brother Luc, the elderly physician-monk of the Trappist community of Notre-Dame de l’Atlas at Tibhirine, Algeria, whose story was depicted in the acclaimed 2010 French film “Of Gods and Men.”

Before his martyrdom, when offered a chance to flee potential danger at the cost of abandoning his patients, Brother Luc replied simply: “I want to stay with them.”

Earlier in the day, the pope made a private visit to the Augustinian Missionary Sisters of Bab El Oued to honor two of their members, Sister Esther Paniagua Alonso and Sister Caridad Álvarez Martín, who were killed in 1994 while on their way to Mass. 

Both were among the 19 martyrs beatified in 2018. Their congregation continues to serve the local population through education and outreach for children, youth and women.

Following his address in the basilica, Pope Leo prayed in a side chapel dedicated to St. Monica, the mother of St. Augustine, which also contained the cross from the Tibhirine monastery and an icon of the martyrs of Algeria, where the pope lit a candle in prayer.

Finding God in the desert

In his message to the local Catholic community, Pope Leo reflected on Algeria’s geography as a spiritual metaphor, pointing to the vast Sahara Desert that dominates much of the country’s territory.

“In the desert, no one can survive alone,” he said. “The hostile environment dispels any presumptions of self-sufficiency, reminding us that we need one another, and that we need God.”

The evening gathering included an eclectic mix of hymns and multiple testimonies, including words from a missionary and a Muslim.

Rakel Anzere, 26, a Pentecostal Christian from Kenya studying in Algeria, shared with the pope her experience taking part in ecumenical Taizé prayers with other students in Algeria.

“It’s really an honor because I get to meet the pope in person and to also speak on behalf of …  how our experience here in Algeria as Christians has been,” Anzere told OSV News prior to her testimony.

She added that it is clear to her that Pope Leo “has the people of Africa in his heart.”

The meeting in the basilica was the pope’s last public event of the day before returning to the apostolic nunciature, where he will meet privately with Algeria’s bishops. 

On April 14, the pope is scheduled to travel to Annaba and the ruins of the ancient Roman city of Hippo, where he will celebrate Mass at the Basilica of St. Augustine.

The Algeria leg of his journey is the first stop on an ambitious 18-flight, 11,000-mile papal trip through four African nations, Algeria, Cameroon, Angola and Equatorial Guinea, that runs through April 23.

Trump rebuffs Bishop Barron plea, says he will not apologize for Pope Leo tirade

President Donald Trump told reporters at the White House April 13 that he will not apologize to Pope Leo XIV after the president lashed out at the pontiff on social media and in verbal remarks the previous day, calling him “weak on crime” and “terrible for foreign policy,” as tensions escalate in the Mideast. 

Pope Leo has been a staunch critic of warfare generally, including the combat operations initiated by the U.S. and Israel in a surprise attack against Iran on Feb. 28. He also condemned Trump’s threat to wipe out Iran’s “whole civilization” as “truly unacceptable.” 

The president temporarily backed down from the threat, citing negotiations with Pakistani mediators, but then later told FOX News Sunday host Maria Bartiromo, “I’m fine with it.”

Bishop Robert E. Barron of Winona-Rochester, Minnesota, a member of the Religious Liberty Commission established by Trump, called the president’s comments from April 12 “entirely inappropriate and disrespectful” in an April 13 statement posted to the X social media platform. 

It is the pope’s prerogative to speak on matters of Catholic doctrine, Bishop Barron said, adding that while he thinks there are “many ways that the Trump administration has reached out to Catholics and other people of faith,” he thinks “the President owes the Pope an apology.”

Trump dismisses bishop’s call

Asked about Bishop Barron’s statement, Trump said he would not apologize. 

“Pope Leo said things that are wrong, he was very much against what I’m doing with regard to Iran, and you could not have a nuclear Iran, Pope Leo would not be happy with the end result,” Trump said. 

In his post, Trump wrote, “I don’t want a Pope who thinks it’s OK for Iran to have a Nuclear Weapon.”

Pope Leo, the first U.S.-born pope, has called for the rejection of nuclear weapons — a position consistent with his papal predecessors — and there is no evidence he supports Iran having such weapons. 

“I mean he — but he went public. I’m just responding to Pope Leo,” Trump told reporters April 13, adding, “So there’s nothing to apologize for. He’s wrong.”

Pope Leo: ‘No fear’ in speaking out

Speaking aboard the papal plane to Algiers, Algeria, earlier on April 13, Pope Leo told journalists that he is not a politician, but he will “continue to speak out loudly against war, looking to promote peace, promoting dialogue and multilateral relationships among the States to look for just solutions to problems.” 

“Too many people are suffering in the world today. Too many innocent people are being killed. And I think someone has to stand up and say there’s a better way,” he added.

“I have no fear neither of the Trump administration nor speaking out loudly of the message of the Gospel,” he said, “which is what I believe I am here to do, what the Church is here to do.”

Bishop in Tanzania Dies Days after Appointment to Vatican’s Dicastery for Communication

Bishop Bernardin Francis Mfumbusa of the Catholic Diocese of Kondoa in Tanzania has died at the age of  64, less than a week after Pope Leo XIV appointed him to the Vatican’s Dicastery for Communication.

In a statement announcing the death of Bishop Mfumbusa and signed by the Secretary General of the Tanzania Episcopal Conference (TEC), the Conference President says that the Bishop died on Tuesday, April 14 at 05:45 a.m. while receiving treatment at Benjamin Mkapa Hospital in Dodoma.

Bishop Mfumbusa was born on 1 April 1962 in Arusha, Tanzania. He was ordained a Priest on 14 June 1992 for the Diocese of Dodoma after completing his philosophical and theological formation.

Following his ordination, he served in pastoral and academic roles within the Church in Tanzania, including teaching and diocesan administration.

On 12 March 2011, Pope Benedict XVI appointed him the first Bishop of the newly erected Diocese of Kondoa. He was Consecrated Bishop on 15 May 2011 at the Cathedral of the Holy Spirit in Kondoa.

Since then, he has been serving as the Shepherd of the Diocese, which was created from the territory of the Diocese of Dodoma.

He is also widely recognised for his contributions to Church communication structures in Africa, including at the Pan-African Episcopal Committee for Social Communications (CEPACS), where he currently serves as the president.

In a video published Tuesday, April 14, the TEC Secretary General, Fr. Charles Kitima, said that the Bishop’s death comes as a sudden event because, although he had been undergoing treatment, he suffered a cardiac arrest that led to a deterioration in his condition.

“Initial treatment showed signs of hope, but by last night his condition worsened, and eventually the time came when he left us,” Fr. Kitima said, adding, “It is with deep sorrow that we lose this relatively young Bishop, who was 64 years old.”

The TEC SG further said that the late Bishop’s leadership had only just begun to flourish since his appointment as Bishop in 2011, when he became the founding Bishop of the Catholic Diocese of Kondoa.

He said that the “diocese is still young, and he leaves it while serving it wholeheartedly and with all his strength.”

“We therefore wish to share this news with the entire community, and also to affirm that, as Christians, we believe in God who created us in His image and likeness, and who allows us to share in His divine life here on earth through our good deeds,” he said.

“We receive this loss with great sorrow, but it is a sorrow that we are called to embrace with the eyes of faith in the Risen Christ, especially as we celebrate the Easter season and reflect on its meaning,” he said.

According to TEC, the Requiem Mass and burial will take place on Thursday, April 22 at the Cathedral of the Holy Spirit in the Diocese of Kondoa, beginning at 10:00 a.m.

The body of Bishop Mfumbusa will be received at St. Paul of the Cross Cathedral, Archdiocese of Dodoma, on Wednesday, April 21 at 8:00 a.m., followed by a Requiem Mass and viewing by the faithful of Dodoma.

Thereafter, the body will be transported to the Cathedral of the Holy Spirit in the Diocese of Kondoa the same Wednesday at 12:00 noon. This will be followed by a Requiem Mass at 4:00 p.m., after which the faithful will continue to pay their respects.

On Thursday, April 22 at 10.00 a.m., the Requiem Mass for burial will be held at the Cathedral of the Holy Spirit in Kondoa, followed by the burial rites.

Bishops applaud Pedro Sánchez for his regularization of immigrants

The Spanish Episcopal Conference, together with Cáritas, CONFER, and the REDES network, has backed the extraordinary regularization of immigrants promoted by the Government of Pedro Sánchez. 

This is not just a prudent support for a specific measure: the statement presents it as “an inherent demand” of the Church’s mission and as “a coherent expression of the Gospel in public life”.

The Church has always taught that the migrant must be welcomed, protected, and accompanied. 

That is not in question. 

But turning a specific policy - in this case, a mass regularization - into an evangelical demand raises a fundamental problem. 

Not because the intention is questionable, but because the leap from moral principle to political decision is not automatic. Between the two there is a proper realm: that of prudence.

The statement presents the extraordinary regularization as a response to a real situation of vulnerability. 

The data provided by the entities themselves show it: social exclusion, difficulty in accessing basic rights, structural dependence.

However, the issue does not end with that diagnosis. The question is not only what problem exists, but what solution resolves it without generating others. 

Migration policy is not limited to immediate welcome. It affects social cohesion, integration capacity, and the credibility of the norms themselves.

Recent experience requires introducing a nuance that the statement does not include. Political decisions and public messages have consequences. 

When the idea is conveyed that regularization is the natural way out of irregularity, there is a risk of reinforcing a pull effect that pushes thousands of people into increasingly dangerous routes. 

This is not a theoretical hypothesis, but a fact observed in various European contexts. Ignoring it does not protect the migrant; it exposes them.

To this is added another element that should be pointed out clearly. The approach taken tends to present irregular immigration in exclusively humanitarian terms. 

Reality is more complex. 

Behind each journey there are trafficking networks, exploitation, and, in not a few cases, death. 

Reducing the phenomenon to a welcome scheme without considering these dimensions leads to an incomplete vision that ends up being unfair to those who suffer its consequences.

That is why it is problematic to identify a specific measure with the Gospel. The Church’s social doctrine does not impose unique technical solutions. 

It recognizes the duty to welcome, but also the right of States to regulate migratory flows according to the common good. 

Between these two principles there is a legitimate space for debate. 

Presenting it as closed does not strengthen the Church’s teaching; it weakens it.

The question is not whether the migrant should be helped. 

The question is how to do it without sacrificing the truth about reality or turning into a moral imperative what belongs to prudential judgment. 

When charity is separated from prudence, it ceases to be fully Christian. 

And when the Church identifies its voice without nuances with a specific policy, it runs the risk of losing the necessary distance to illuminate, rather than accompany, the decisions of power.

Msgr. Rey denounces restrictions on Christians in Algeria during Pope Leo XIV's visit

Monsignor Dominique Rey, has denounced a «quasi-persecution situation» against Christians in Algeria, coinciding with the visit of Pope Leo XIV to the North African country. 

His statements introduce an element of contrast to the institutional tone that has marked the pontifical trip.

In statements collected by Tribune Chrétienne, Rey explains that he decided to speak out after directly hearing from local Christians, both Arabs and Kabyles, belonging to different confessions. 

As he points out, it is not isolated cases, but a situation that affects the entire body of the faithful.

“A quasi-persecution situation”

The prelate describes a worrying scenario: «Christians are falling into a quasi-persecution situation», marked by «increasingly significant restrictions on the exercise of worship and religious practice». 

In his view, this is a violation of the basic principle of religious freedom, which should guarantee every person’s right to believe and practice their faith without obstacles.

Criticism of the papal trip’s approach

The Pope’s visit has been presented as a gesture of outreach to the Algerian people. However, Rey believes that this approach cannot overlook the existing problems. 

In reference to the statements of Cardinal Jean-Paul Vesco, who has highlighted the encounter nature of the trip, the French bishop warns of the need to address the real tensions as well.

«It is very good to talk about encounter», he acknowledges, «but we must know how to put the issues of tension on the table», particularly the «marginalization of Christian communities» resulting from recent legal provisions.

The absence of Tibhirine and the risk of “consensus”

Another point that Rey regrets is the decision not to include a visit to Tibhirine in the trip, an emblematic place for Christians in Algeria due to the martyrdom of the Trappist monks in 1996.

For the bishop, this absence represents a missed opportunity to publicly recognize the witness of those who gave their lives for the faith. 

«The martyrdom of these witnesses marks the religious history of Christians in Algeria», he emphasizes.

Furthermore, he warns of the risk of an excessively conciliatory approach: «Wanting to be too consensual is to stop being in the truth», he states, insisting that the promotion of fraternity cannot be done apart from the reality experienced by Christian communities.

Accusations of state pressure and lack of religious freedom

Rey goes further in his diagnosis and points directly to the actions of the Algerian authorities. As he argues, the pressure exerted on Christians «is not admissible» and contradicts even a basic understanding of secularism.

In his opinion, the problem lies in the fact that the State does not guarantee true freedom of conscience, but tends to impose a certain religion: «It is a State that wants to impose the Muslim faith», he states clearly.

The role of the Vatican: between dialogue and denunciation

Regarding the Holy See, the bishop believes there is awareness of the situation, although he points out the need for greater balance between diplomacy and clarity.

As he explains, the Vatican «has received testimonies from deeply wounded Christian communities», but at the same time seeks to maintain a channel of dialogue with the authorities. 

Even so, he insists that this dialogue should not evade «the expression of the difficulties, trials, and sufferings» that the faithful are going through.

A context that challenges beyond the visit

Monsignor Rey’s statements introduce an element of contrast in the official narrative of the papal trip, by emphasizing a less visible reality. 

Without questioning the importance of dialogue between religions and cultures, his intervention underscores that this effort cannot be detached from the effective defense of religious freedom.

Leo XIV and his problematic conception of the «communion between Christians and Muslims»

There are words in politics that serve to embellish a speech, but in the mouth of a pope or a pontifical account, they cannot be used as if they were putty. 

“Communion” is one of them. 

The Spanish tweet from @Pontifex_es about Algeria does not limit itself to praising coexistence, social peace, or cooperation between people of different religions. It goes quite a bit further. It states that “under the mantle of Our Lady of Africa, communion is built between Christians and Muslims.” 

And that is exactly where the problem lies. Not in courtesy toward Muslims. Not in the desire for peace. Not in the possibility of civil collaboration. The problem is in calling “communion” something that, in the Catholic sense, it is not.

In the language of the Church, communion is not a kindly emotion nor a feel-good metaphor to designate that people get along reasonably well. Communion has an objective doctrinal content. 

The Catechism explains that the unity of the Church is ensured by “visible bonds of communion”: the profession of the same faith received from the Apostles, the common celebration of divine worship and the sacraments, and apostolic succession through the sacrament of holy orders. 

That does not describe mutual sympathy. It describes effective belonging to the same supernatural reality founded by Christ. If there is no same faith, if there are no same sacraments, if there is no ecclesial communion, speaking of “communion” ceases to be Catholic precision and becomes terminological confusion.

Catholic doctrine itself distinguishes quite clearly between non-Catholic Christians and the faithful of non-Christian religions. Regarding separated Christians, the Catechism speaks of a “certain communion, though not perfect,” founded on valid baptism and faith in Christ. 

That formulation already shows that the word “communion” is not distributed indiscriminately. It is applied, though imperfectly, where there is baptismal incorporation into Christ and a real, though wounded, bond with the Church. 

That logic cannot be transferred as is to Islam, because Islam does not baptize in Christ, does not confess Jesus Christ as Son of God, does not recognize the Trinity nor participate in the sacramental order of the Church. Between Catholics and Orthodox, one can speak of imperfect communion. Between Christians and Muslims, no.

It is appropriate here to anticipate the usual reply. Lumen gentium 16 or Nostra aetate 3 will be cited immediately, where the Council states that Muslims “with us adore the one, merciful God” and that the Church regards them with esteem, recognizing in them elements of religious truth, a serious moral life, and the practice of prayer, almsgiving, and fasting. All that is true. And precisely because it is true, it is advisable to read it in full and not mutilate it. 

The Council does not say that there is ecclesial communion with Islam. It says something very different: that there is a reference to the Creator, that partial goods and truths exist, and that this justifies respect, dialogue, and collaboration. 

Moreover, Nostra aetate recalls at the same time that the Church “announces and has the obligation to announce constantly Christ,” in whom men find the fullness of religious life. In other words, respect yes; indifferentism, no. Dialogue, yes; doctrinal liquefaction, no.

The problem with the tweet is not, therefore, that it is too kind to Muslims. The problem is that it erases a conceptual boundary that the magisterium itself preserves. One thing is to recognize that a Muslim, as a rational creature, can sincerely seek God, live with moral rectitude, and participate in certain goods that grace does not cease to sow in the world. 

A very different thing is to present that situation as “communion.” Because communion, for the Church, arises from Christ and leads to Christ. It does not simply spring from the common aspiration to dignity, love, justice, and peace. Those aspirations are human and noble, but they do not constitute the supernatural communion of the Church in themselves. Reducing communion to an ethical consensus is to empty it of its specifically Christian content.

The key is not to confuse levels. There can be social coexistence without communion of faith. There can be cooperation for justice without religious unity. There can be mutual esteem without sharing the Christian revelation. It can even be affirmed, with the Council, that Muslims worship the one Creator God, in the sense that their religious intention is not directed toward a plurality of pagan gods, and at the same time maintain without wavering that they reject essential truths of the Christian faith: the Trinity, the divine filiation of Christ, the Incarnation, and the Redemption as confessed by the Church. 

As soon as that is forgotten, the difference between full truth and partial truth disappears under a sentimental fog. And that fog always favors error.

In fact, the Catechism expressly states that the Christian faith cannot accept “revelations” that claim to surpass or correct the definitive Revelation given in Christ, and adds that this is the case with certain non-Christian religions. The phrase has a direct scope for Islam, which historically presents itself as a subsequent revelation that corrects central elements of Christianity. That does not prevent respect toward Muslims as persons, but it does prevent diluting the doctrinal difference under ambiguous expressions. If Christ is the full and definitive revelation of the Father, then one cannot speak lightly of religious communion where that fullness is denied.

Dominus Iesus was also published precisely to cut off these drifts. The document recalls that interreligious dialogue is part of the evangelizing mission, but “does not substitute” the missio ad gentes. And it warns against relativism that disfigures the definitive character of the revelation of Jesus Christ, the uniqueness of the Christian faith, and the unique salvific nature of Christ and the Church. 

Even more: it affirms that men cannot enter into communion with God except through Christ and under the action of the Spirit. That affirmation is enough to measure the lightness of the tweet. Because when the magisterium speaks of communion in a strong sense, it links it to Christ, to the Church, and to the economy of salvation, not to an interreligious atmosphere of shared cordiality.

It will be said that it is pastoral language, not a dogmatic definition. But precisely there lies the danger. Most of the faithful do not read conciliar documents or declarations from the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith. They read headlines, phrases, tweets, and slogans. And if technically incorrect vocabulary is used from official channels, the practical result is deformed catechesis. 

The average faithful ends up concluding that all religions are, in the end, variants of the same experience of God; that the mission no longer consists in announcing Christ, but in accompanying diverse spiritualities; and that the Church must renounce doctrinal precision to be welcoming. That is not pastoral. That is intellectual disarmament.

There is still another significant detail. The tweet places that supposed “communion” under the mantle of Our Lady of Africa and speaks of the maternal love of Lalla Meryem that gathers all as children. The image may sound poetic, but there too a serious ambiguity slips in. Mary occupies in Christianity a place inseparable from the Incarnation of the Word. She is Mother of God because the Son born of her is true God and true man. 

In Islam, on the other hand, Mary is venerated, yes, but within a radically downgraded Christology, where Jesus is not the incarnate Word nor the crucified and risen Redeemer. Invoking Mary as a common mantle without recalling the Christological truth that defines her is another way of using Catholic symbols for vaguely conciliatory purposes, but doctrinally deactivated. 

Nostra aetate recognizes that Muslims honor Mary, but in the same passage recalls that they do not recognize Jesus as God. That precision is not secondary. It is the central issue.

The Church does not need hostility toward Muslims. It needs exactitude. It does not need verbal aggressiveness. It needs conceptual clarity. No one disputes that Christians and Muslims can live together, collaborate for the common good, reject violence, and defend human dignity. 

The Council expressly recommends it. What cannot be done is to call “communion” what, according to Catholic doctrine itself, is at most coexistence, dialogue, cooperation, or a relationship of respect. Changing the name of things does not improve reality. It only makes it more confusing.

The underlying issue is more serious than it seems. When ecclesial language ceases to be precise, the faith becomes blurred. And when the faith becomes blurred, the mission is paralyzed. 

If communion no longer requires the same faith, the same baptism, and the same incorporation into Christ, then there are no longer reasons to evangelize. It will suffice to celebrate differences, praise ethical convergences, and produce well-intentioned texts. But that is not Catholic logic. 

The Church exists to announce Jesus Christ, not to dissolve him into a universal spirituality of diplomatic tone. Lumen gentium opens precisely by affirming that Christ is the light of the nations and that the Church desires to announce the Gospel to every creature. 

And the Catechism insists that the missionary effort begins with the announcement of the Gospel to the peoples who still do not believe in Christ. If that remains true, then one should not speak as if communion were already built where the essential is still lacking.

In sum, the tweet does not scandalize because of excess courtesy, but because of a defect in theology. 

With a single word misused, it blurs the difference between human relationship and supernatural communion, between respect and unity of faith, between dialogue and ecclesial belonging. 

And when a pontifical account normalizes that confusion, it is not building religious peace, but weakening the Catholic intelligence of those who read it. There are terms that a journalist can use lightly. 

A pope cannot. 

And “communion,” certainly, is one of them.

Spain to open office for Catholic Church abuse victims reparations

Spain on Tuesday approved the creation of an office to process compensation claims from victims of sexual abuse in the Catholic Church who were unable to seek justice through the courts.

The new body, operating under the Justice Ministry, will begin operating on Wednesday.

Justice Minister Felix Bolanos described the initiative as “a long-awaited right,” saying it recognizes victims’ suffering and reinforces institutional commitments to truth, justice and reparation.

Earlier this year, the Spanish government struck an agreement with the Catholic Church on how to handle sexual abuse cases.

A 2022 report by the ombudsman estimated that more than 1% of the population had suffered abuse in a religious context, which would mean there are more than 440,000 living victims.

The new office will serve as the first point of contact, handling applications, communicating with victims and collecting documentation before submitting cases to the ombudsman’s office.

The ombudsman will evaluate each case and propose forms of reparation – including financial, restorative or spiritual – within a three-month period.

The proposal will then be reviewed by a Catholic Church body. In cases of disagreement, a joint commission of state institutions, church representatives and victims’ associations will attempt to reach a resolution.

If no agreement is reached within the commission, the ombudsman’s assessment will prevail.

The mechanism is aimed at victims whose cases cannot be prosecuted in regular courts due to factors such as statutes of limitations or the death of the alleged perpetrators.

Bolanos said the government will also launch an information campaign to ensure victims are aware of their options.

Wexford churches to host relics of the first Catholic millennial saint dubbed ‘God's Influencer’

A number of churches across Wexford are set to host relics belonging to the first millennial saint this week.

Carlo Acutis, a young Italian teenager who was born in England, passed away from Leukemia in October 2006 at the age of 15 years old.

He was canonized on September 7, 2025, as the first millennial saint for living a life of "heroic virtue" and for having two posthumous miracles attributed to his intercession.

Despite his modern lifestyle, he was deeply committed to daily mass, the rosary, and charity work with the poor and homeless.

He also created websites cataloguing Eucharistic miracles, showcasing how technology could spread the word of the gospel in the digital space.

After his death in 2006, the Catholic Church officially recognised two miracles attributed to Carlo Acutis’s intercession.

The first one occurred in relation to a three year old boy named Matheus who was born with a rare congenital defect called an annular pancreas, which prevented him from eating solid food and caused constant vomiting.

In 2013 on the seventh anniversary of Carlo’s death, members of the young child’s family attended a service where they touched a relic in the form of a small piece of Carlo’s clothing.

Mattheus rapidly recovered and doctors were said to not be able to explain the change.

In 2022, Valeria, a university student from Costa Rica, suffered severe head trauma and a brain haemorrhage after falling from her bicycle.

After being given a low chance of survival, her mother Liliana, made a pilgrimage to Carlo's tomb in Assisi where she prayed and left a note.

On the same day, Valeria began to breathe on her own and subsequently made a full recovery.

For an event to be officially called a "miracle" for sainthood, it must pass a rigorous investigation by the Dicastery for the Causes of Saints. A board of medical experts must confirm that the healing had no scientific explanation and that it happened specifically after prayers were directed to the aspiring saint.

The relic will be making its first stop in Wexford in St Aidan’s Cathedral at 7.30 p.m. on Sunday, April 19.

The relic will then be in Church of the Assumption on Bride Street on Monday, April 20, St Mary’s Church and St Michaels church in New Ross and St Senan’s Church, Enniscorthy on Tuesday, April 21, and St Michael’s church, Gorey on Wednesday, April 22.

Each church will be scheduled for blessings of the relic, and will have a number of events including talks.

‘My Heart Melted’: Argentinian Priest Finds Newborn Baby on His Doorstep

Argentinian priest Father Fabián Pintos shared a moving testimony after finding a baby left on his doorstep. Rather than judging, he offered a profound reflection that invites us to respond with compassion.

The parish priest of Our Lady of Mount Carmel Church in Villa Berthet, Argentina, posted a video on his Facebook account on March 21 recounting how, earlier that same morning, he discovered a newborn boy at his front door.

The priest explained that he was carrying out one of his usual Saturday tasks - preparing his homilies for the week - when he heard a knock. That unexpected moment would change the course of his day.

“I heard a knock at the door. When I opened it, I found a baby there on my doorstep, wrapped in a towel - and my heart melted.”

He said he fell in love with the baby “at first sight” and, amid the shock, immediately called a trusted doctor. The doctor soon arrived with a nurse to provide the necessary care.

Before the ambulance took the child to the hospital, Father Pintos asked that the baby be called “Juan Francisco” until he received an official name.

“I can say that I have a son in my heart,” he said.

He also confirmed that the baby is healthy and receiving proper care.

An Urgent Call Not to Judge

Father Pintos said that, for him, the situation revealed a beautiful gesture: in the midst of anguish, fear, and pain, someone trusted him to care for their child.

“This person probably knew I would take good care of him or make sure he received the help he needed. And perhaps they also trusted that, if they returned, no one would point a finger at them.”

The priest emphasized that his home is a safe place - not because of security measures, but because of the presence of God.

“In this safe place, someone trusted that a priest could care for this baby, or at least connect him with the necessary public services to accompany him in these first moments of life.”

He also lamented that many people, especially on social media, were quick to harshly judge the baby’s mother.

“I don’t like that. I wouldn’t want a Catholic to say, ‘I’m just sharing my opinion,’ when in reality they are judging. I don’t even know if this baby was abandoned, because he wasn’t discarded. He was left in a safe place, likely by someone in deep distress.”

“This door of the priest’s residence was a safe place. And it fills me with pride that they chose the house of God.”

The priest also invited personal reflection, noting that people often judge from a distance without recognizing their own wounds.

Trust in God and Respond With Prayer

Finally, Father Pintos encouraged trust in God even amid difficult situations, reminding the faithful that the Lord “writes straight on crooked lines and every evil that occurs is for a greater good.”

“I am not justifying this person, nor am I trying to. I simply do not want to stand with those who accuse without knowing the full story.”

He urged people to replace judgment with prayer: to pray for the baby, that he may grow up in a loving home; for his own healing after what he has experienced; and for the mother, that she may find peace and one day be reunited with her son.

What Do We Know About the Baby’s Mother?

According to local media, the baby’s 33-year-old mother later arrived at the hospital. Reports indicate that she gave birth alone in a nearby hotel, without her family knowing she was pregnant.

The child’s grandmother - who had previously reported her daughter missing - has taken temporary custody of the baby while the investigation continues.

Chicago priest resigns after archdiocese discovers misuse of parish funds

A priest in Chicago has resigned after the archdiocese found that he misused parish funds for “personal expenses,” Cardinal Blase Cupich told parishioners this month.

Cupich told St. John Henry Newman Parish in Evanston that the archdiocese had launched a review of the parishʼs finances on March 30 amid “serious questions” about the parishʼs “fiscal administration.”

The prelate said in an April 10 letter to the parish that the review found Father Kenneth Anderson “violated a number of core archdiocesan policies pertaining to the proper exercise of good stewardship of parish resources.”

Among the reported violations included “the creation and maintenance of a separate bank account into which he deposited substantial parish funds,” Cupich said.

Some of those funds “were used to cover costs unrelated to parish needs including his personal expenses.”

Anderson resigned after being presented with the findings of the report, Cupich said. The priest also “accepted [Cupichʼs] instruction that, when the full accounting is complete, he is to make restitution for any funds clearly identified as covering his personal expenses.”

The archdiocese did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the total amount of funds reportedly misused at the parish.

Cupich in his letter said Father Wayne Watts, the pastor of Sts. Joseph and Francis Xavier Parish in nearby Wilmette, oversaw the administration of St. John Henry Newman Parishʼs finances during the review process.

The archbishop further said that he had asked the archdiocesan placement board to recommend a new pastor for the parish by July 1.

Retired priest Father Gerald Gunderson will serve as parish administrator until the new pastor is appointed, Cupich said.

The parish was formed in 2022 after the merging of Sts. Athanasius and Joan of Arc parishes as part of the archdiocesan Renew My Faith campaign.

APOSTOLIC JOURNEY OF POPE LEO XIV TO ALGERIA, CAMEROON, ANGOLA AND EQUATORIAL GUINEA - HOLY MASS

HOMILY OF HIS HOLINESS POPE LEO XIV

Basilica of Saint Augustine (Annaba)

Tuesday, 14 April 2026

_____________________________

Dear brothers and sisters,

The divine Word pervades history and renews it through the human voice of the Savior. Today we listen to the Gospel, the Good News for all time, in this Basilica in Annaba dedicated to Saint Augustine, Bishop of the ancient city of Hippo. 

Over the centuries, the names of the places that welcome us have changed, but the saints continue to serve as our patrons and faithful witnesses of a connection to the land that comes from heaven. It is precisely this dynamic that the Lord revealed at night to Nicodemus: this is the strength that Christ instills in the weakness of his faith and the tenacity of his search.

Sent by the Spirit of God, which “you do not know where it comes from or where it goes” (Jn 3:8), Jesus is a special guest for Nicodemus. In fact, he calls him to a new life, entrusting to his interlocutor — and to us as well — a surprising task: “You must be born from above” (v. 7). 

Such is the invitation for every man and woman who seeks salvation! Jesus’ invitation gives rise to the mission of the whole Church, and consequently to the Christian community in Algeria: to be born again from above, that is, from God. In this perspective, faith overcomes earthly hardships and the Lord’s grace makes the desert blossom. Yet the beauty of this exhortation also brings with it a challenge, which the Gospel calls us to face together.

As a matter of fact, Christ’s words contain all the force of a command: you must be born again from above! Such a command rings in our ears as a feat that would be impossible. However, when we listen attentively to the one who gives the order, we come to understand that this is neither a harsh imposition nor a constraint, and much less a condemnation to failure. 

On the contrary, the obligation expressed by Jesus is a gift of freedom for us, because it reveals an unexpected possibility: we can be born anew from above thanks to God. We should do so, then, according to his loving will, which desires to renew humanity by calling us to a communion of life that begins with faith. While Christ invites us to renew our lives completely, he also gives us the strength to do so. Saint Augustine attests to this well when praying in this way, “Give, O Lord, what you command and command what you will” (Confessions, X, 29, 40).

Therefore, when we ask ourselves how a future of justice, peace, harmony and salvation will be possible, we must remember that we are asking God the same question that Nicodemus asked: can our story truly change? We are so weighed down by problems, hardships and tribulations! Can we truly start our lives over again? Yes! The Lord’s response, so full of love, fills our hearts with hope. 

No matter how weighed down we are by pain or sin: the crucified One carries all these burdens with us and for us. No matter how discouraged we are by our own weaknesses: it is precisely then that God manifests his strength, the God who has raised Christ from the dead in order to give life to the world. Each one of us can experience the freedom of new life that comes from faith in the Redeemer. Once again, Saint Augustine offers us an example of this: we revere him for his conversion even more than for his wisdom. In this rebirth, providentially accompanied by the tears of his mother, Saint Monica, he found himself, exclaiming: “I could not therefore exist, could not exist at all, O my God, unless you were in me. Or should I not rather say, that I could not exist unless I were in you” (Confessions, I, 2).

Christians are truly born from above, regenerated by God as brothers and sisters of Jesus, and the Church that nourishes them with the sacraments is the welcoming bosom for all peoples. As we have just heard, the Acts of the Apostles bears witness to this by describing the lifestyle that characterizes humanity when it has been renewed by the Holy Spirit (cf. Acts 4:32-37). Even today, we must embrace this apostolic rule and put it into practice, meditating on it as an authentic criterion for ecclesial reform: a reform that must begin in the heart, if it is to be genuine, and must encompass everyone if it is to be effective.

First, “the whole group of those who believed were of one heart and soul” (v. 32). This spiritual unity is a concordia: a word that signifies well the communion of hearts that beat as one because they are united with the heart of Christ. The early Church, therefore, was not based on a social contract, but rather on the harmony of faith, affections, ideas and life decisions centered on the love of God who became man to save all the peoples of the earth.

Second, let us admire the tangible effects of the spiritual unity among believers: “everything they owned was held in common” (v. 32). Everyone has everything, sharing in one another’s goods as members of a single body. No one is deprived of anything, because everyone shares what they have. Since possession can be transformed into gift, this fraternal dedication does not represent a utopia. Only hearts divided against one another and souls consumed by greed believe that it is. On the contrary, faith in the one God, Lord of heaven and earth, unites people according to perfect justice, which calls everyone to charity — that is, to love every creature with the love that God gives us in Christ. Therefore, in the face of poverty and oppression, the guiding principle above all for Christians is charity: let us do to those around us, as we would have them do to us (cf. Mt 7:12). Inspired by this law, inscribed in our hearts by God, the Church is continually reborn, for where there is despair she kindles hope, where there is misery she brings dignity, and where there is conflict she brings reconciliation.

Third, the passage from Acts shows us the foundation of this new life, which embraces peoples of every language and culture: “With great power the apostles gave their testimony to the resurrection of the Lord Jesus, and great grace was upon them all” (v. 33). The charity that motivates them is more than a moral commitment; it is a sign of salvation: the Apostles proclaim that our lives can change because Christ has risen from the dead. The primary task of pastors as ministers of the Gospel is therefore to bear witness to God before the world with one heart and one soul, not permitting our concerns to lead us astray through fear, nor trends to undermine us through compromise. Together with you, brothers in the Episcopate and the Priesthood, let us constantly renew this mission for the sake of those entrusted to us, so that through her service, the whole Church may be a message of new life for those we encounter.

Dearest Christians of Algeria, you remain a humble and faithful sign of Christ’s love in this land. Bear witness to the Gospel through simple gestures, genuine relationships and a dialogue lived out day by day: in this way, you bring flavor and light to the places where you live. Your presence in this country is like incense: a glowing grain that spreads fragrance because it gives glory to the Lord and joy and comfort to so many brothers and sisters. This incense is a small, precious element that does not draw attention to itself, but invites us to turn our hearts to God, encouraging one another to persevere amid the difficulties of the present time. From the thurible of our hearts may there rise praise, blessing and supplication, spreading the sweet fragrance (cf. Eph 5:2) of mercy, almsgiving, and forgiveness. Your history is one of generous hospitality and resilience in times of trial. Here the martyrs prayed; here Saint Augustine loved his flock, fervently seeking the truth and serving Christ with ardent faith. Be heirs to this tradition, bearing witness through fraternal charity to the freedom of those born from above as a hope of salvation for the world.

LETTER OF POPE LEO XIV TO THE CARDINALS

Your Eminence,

During this holy season of Easter, I wish to convey to you my heartfelt and fraternal greetings, in the hope that the peace of the risen Lord may sustain and renew our suffering world.

I likewise renew my gratitude for your participation in the Consistory last January. I greatly appreciate the work carried out in the groups, which facilitated free, concrete and spiritually fruitful exchanges, as well as the notable quality of the interventions made during the plenary. The compiled contributions constitute a resource of lasting value, which I hope will be reflected on further, and will mature through ecclesial discernment.

In my concluding remarks in January, I already referred to some elements regarding synodality that emerged from the groups. Now, I wish to focus in particular on what emerged from the groups regarding Evangelii Gaudium, especially concerning mission and the transmission of the faith.

Your contributions make it clear that this Exhortation continues to be a significant point of reference. In addition to introducing new content, it refocuses everything on the kerygma as the heart of our Christian and ecclesial identity. It was recognized as a “breath of fresh air,” capable of initiating processes of pastoral and missionary conversion — rather than producing immediate structural reforms — and thus profoundly guiding the Church’s journey.

Indeed, you emphasized how this perspective challenges the Church at every level. On a personal level, it calls every baptized person to renew their encounter with Christ, moving from a faith merely received to a faith truly lived and experienced. This journey affects the very quality of spiritual life, expressed in the primacy of prayer, in the witness that precedes words, and in the coherence between faith and life. At the community level, it calls for a shift from a pastoral approach of maintenance to one of mission. This requires communities to be living agents of the proclamation — welcoming communities that use accessible language, attentive to the quality of relationships, and capable of offering places for listening, accompaniment and healing. At the diocesan level, the responsibility of Pastors to resolutely support missionary boldness emerges clearly, ensuring that such boldness is not weighed down or stifled by organizational excesses, but is guided by a discernment that helps us to recognize what is essential.

From all this flows a profoundly unified understanding of mission, which is Christ-centered and kerygmatic. It is born of an encounter with Christ that is capable of transforming lives and spreading through attraction rather than conquest. It is an integral mission, holding in balance explicit proclamation, witness, commitment and dialogue, and yielding neither to the temptation of proselytism nor to a merely institutional mentality of preservation or expansion. Even when the Church finds herself in a minority, she is called to live with confident courage, as a small flock bringing hope to all, mindful that the aim of mission is not its own survival, but the communication of the love with which God loves the world.

Among the specific suggestions that emerged, the following deserve to be welcomed and reflected on further: the need to relaunch Evangelii Gaudium through an honest assessment of what has actually been embraced over the years and what, by contrast, remains unfamiliar or unimplemented, with particular attention to the necessary reforms of the processes of Christian initiation; the importance of valuing apostolic and pastoral visits as authentic opportunities for kerygmatic proclamation and for a growth in the quality of relationships; and the similar need to reassess the effectiveness of ecclesial communication, including at the level of the Holy See, from a more explicitly missionary perspective.

With a grateful heart, I renew my thanks for your service and contribution to the life of the Church.  In regard to the forthcoming Consistory, which will take place from 26 to 27 June, more detailed information will be provided in due course to assist with the necessary preparations.

In the risen Lord, source of our hope, I send you my warmest Easter greetings.

With fraternal esteem in Christ,

From the Vatican, 12 April 2026

LEO PP. XIV

APOSTOLIC JOURNEY OF POPE LEO XIV TO ALGERIA, CAMEROON, ANGOLA AND EQUATORIAL GUINEA - MEETING AT THE “MA MAISON” CARE HOME FOR THE ELDERLY

 GREETING OF HIS HOLINESS POPE LEO XIV

“Ma Maison” Care Home for the Elderly (Annaba)

Tuesday, 14 April 2026

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Your Excellencies,

Dear Sisters in consecrated life,

Dear brothers and sisters,

Good morning!  As-salamu alaykum!

Thank you for welcoming me into this home!  I am pleased to make this visit because God dwells here.  Indeed, wherever there is love and service, God is there.

I thank the Little Sisters of the Poor together with the staff of this home.  Thank you, Mother Philomena, for your welcome.

Thank you, Monsignor Desfarges, for your words, your touching words!  Having listened to you, and seeing your presence here amongst our elderly brothers and sisters, it is natural to praise God and give thanks to him.  Just as Jesus rejoiced in the Holy Spirit and said: “I thank you, Father, Lord of heaven and earth, because you have hidden these things from the wise and the intelligent and have revealed them to infants; yes, Father, for such was your gracious will” (Lk 10:21).

I thank Mr Salah Bouchemel for his testimony, which was so beautiful and comforting.  I think that the Lord, looking down from heaven upon a house like this, where people strive to live together in fraternity, would say, “There is hope!”  Yes, because God’s heart is torn apart by wars, violence, injustice and lies.  But our Father’s heart is not with the wicked, the arrogant or the proud.  God’s heart is with the little ones, with the humble, and with them he builds up his Kingdom of love and peace day by day, just as you are striving to do here in your daily service, in your friendship and life together.

Thank you, dear sisters and brothers, for this gathering!  I will keep you in my prayers and I gladly impart my blessing.

MESSAGE OF HIS HOLINESS POPE LEO XIV TO PARTICIPANTS IN THE PLENARY SESSION OF THE PONTIFICAL ACADEMY OF SOCIAL SCIENCES

I was pleased to learn of the plenary session of the Pontifical Academy of Social Sciences taking place from 14 to 16 April 2026, and I send prayerful good wishes to all taking part. I express my gratitude to Cardinal Peter Turkson for his dedicated service as Chancellor of the Academy. I likewise thank your President, Sister Helen Alford, for selecting the theme: “The Uses of Power: Legitimacy, Democracy and the Rewriting of the International Order.” It is a particularly timely topic, focusing our reflection on the exercise of power, which is a critical element for building peace within and among nations at this moment of profound global change.

Catholic social teaching regards power not as an end in itself, but as a means ordered toward the common good. This implies that the legitimacy of authority depends not on the accumulation of economic or technological strength, but on the wisdom and virtue with which it is exercised (cf. Catechism of the Catholic Church, 1903). For wisdom enables us to discern and pursue the true and the good, rather than apparent goods and vainglory, amid the circumstances of daily life. This wisdom is inseparable from the moral virtues, which strengthen our desire to promote the common good. In particular, we know that justice and fortitude are indispensable for sound decision-making and for putting decisions into practice. Temperance also proves essential for the legitimate use of authority, for true temperance restrains inordinate self-exaltation and acts as a guardrail against the abuse of power.

This understanding of legitimate power finds one of its highest expressions in authentic democracy. Far from being a mere procedure, democracy recognises the dignity of every person and calls each citizen to participate responsibly in the pursuit of the common good. Reflecting this conviction, Saint John Paul II affirmed that the Church values democracy because it ensures participation in political choices and “the possibility both of electing and holding accountable those who govern them, and of replacing them through peaceful means when appropriate” (Centesimus Annus, 46). Democracy remains healthy, however, only when rooted in the moral law and a true vision of the human person. Lacking this foundation, it risks becoming either a majoritarian tyranny or a mask for the dominance of economic and technological elites.

The same principles that guide the exercise of authority within nations must likewise inform the international order — a truth that is particularly important to recall at a time when strategic rivalries and shifting alliances are reshaping global relations. We must recall that a just and stable international order cannot emerge from the mere balance of power or from a purely technocratic logic. The concentration of technological, economic and military power in a few hands threatens both democratic participation among peoples and international concord.

In this regard, my predecessors have expressed the need for updated institutions and a universal authority (cf. John Paul II, Centesimus Annus, 58; Pacem in Terris, 137), marked by the principle of subsidiarity (cf. Benedict XVI, Caritas in Veritate, 57). The development of such a global community of fraternity calls for “a better kind of politics, one truly at the service of the common good” (Francis, Fratelli Tutti, 154). Indeed, it is “more necessary than ever to boldly rethink the modalities of international cooperation” (Visit to the FAO Headquarters on the Occasion of World Food Day, 16 October 2025, 7).

In the final analysis, when earthly powers threaten the tranquillitas ordinis — the classic Augustinian definition of peace — we must draw hope from the Kingdom of God, which, though not of this world, sheds light upon the affairs of this world and reveals their eschatological meaning. In this perspective of faith, we are reminded that God’s omnipotence is shown especially in mercy and forgiveness (cf. Thomas Aquinas, Summa Theologiae, I, q. 25, a. 3, ad 3); divine power does not dominate, but rather heals and restores. It is precisely this logic of charity that must animate history, for human activity inspired by charity helps to shape the “earthly city” in unity and peace, rendering it — however imperfectly — an anticipation and a prefiguration of the “City of God” (cf. Benedict XVI, Caritas in Veritate, 7). Such faith strengthens our resolve to build a culture of reconciliation capable of overcoming the pitfalls of indifference and powerlessness (cf. Address in the Presence of Religious Leaders, 28 October 2025).

With these sentiments, I earnestly hope that your reflections during these days will yield valuable insights for clarifying the legitimate uses of power, the criteria of authentic democracy and the kind of international order that serves the common good. In this way, your work will contribute meaningfully to the building of a global culture of reconciliation and peace — a peace that is not merely the fragile absence of conflict, but the fruit of justice, born of authority placed humbly at the service of every human being and the entire human family.

May the Holy Spirit, source of all charity and bond of unity and peace, enlighten your minds and sustain your efforts. I willingly invoke upon all of you God’s abundant blessings.

From the Vatican, 1 April 2026

LEO PP. XIV