Sunday, July 05, 2026

Enoch Burke may not be the perfect messenger — but Ireland should not ignore the warning (Opinion)

“It will take a multifaceted approach to make sure that only those people who absolutely need to be sent to prison are actually sent to prison”

– Chief Inspector of Prisons Mark Kelly, Joint Committee on Justice, Home Affairs and Migration, January 2026

When Mark Kelly appeared before the Oireachtas Justice Committee earlier this year, he was not speaking about Enoch Burke.

He was speaking about a prison system under severe pressure: overcrowding, people sleeping on mattresses on floors, and the urgent need to ensure that prison is used only where it is truly necessary.

As Enoch Burke has been in the news again following the latest High Court developments, those warnings are difficult to ignore. Burke was not in prison because he committed a violent crime. He was not there because he is a danger to the public. He was there because he has refused to obey court orders requiring him to stay away from Wilson’s Hospital School, following the dispute that began with his objection to using a student’s new name and pronouns.

The courts have repeatedly stated that Burke is imprisoned for contempt of court, not for his religious beliefs. In the narrow legal sense, that’s the word. Court orders matter, and the rule of law matters. No serious discussion of this case can pretend otherwise.

But it is also too easy – and too convenient – to stop there.

The dispute did not begin with trespass. It began with a teacher objecting to being directed to use language he believed conflicted with his Christian faith, the school’s founding principles, his conscience, and his non-controversial understanding of male and female. From there came suspension, dismissal, injunctions, daily fines, repeated periods of imprisonment for contempt of court, and continuing legal fallout over court orders and penalties. While Mr Burke has now been released from prison by order of the High Court, the long-running case continues to centre on court orders requiring him to stay away from Wilson’s Hospital School, previous findings of contempt, and fines arising from breaches of those orders.

Whatever one thinks of Burke’s tactics, his tone, or the conduct of members of his family, Ireland should be mature enough to separate the messenger from the issue. It is possible to believe that Burke has handled matters in a counterproductive way, while still recognising that his case raises serious questions this country has been too quick to dismiss.

Can a teacher be compelled to use language that carries a moral and philosophical meaning he, and many others, do not accept? Especially in schools, where the next generation is shaped?

Can inclusion in schools be pursued in a way that makes no space for parental concern, biological reality, safeguarding questions, or the conscience of staff?

In modern Ireland – as seen by the treatment and approach of the courts to this point – many of these issues are treated as if they have already been settled.

The UK Supreme Court has ruled that, for the purposes of the Equality Act, ‘sex’ means biological sex. The US has moved to restore sex-based language in federal policy and to keep males out of women’s sports. The International Olympic Committee has also announced a new policy on the protection of the female category in Olympic sport (following the most recent February 2026 Olympics).

Terms such as ‘preferred pronouns’, ‘gender identity’, ‘affirmation’, “transition’ and ‘inclusion’ are not neutral words that grew naturally out of ordinary conversation. They have been pushed into schools, workplaces, public bodies and media language at remarkable speed, and many people have gone along with them for the overriding reason that they are afraid of being branded backward, unkind or intolerant.

Ask many ordinary people in Ireland what they honestly think of compelled pronouns and they will tell you, bluntly, that they regard it as nonsense.   That, believe it or not, they do not believe someone can be “born in the wrong body”. They may be too polite, too busy or too afraid to say so publicly, but that does not mean they accept it. A new ideological language has been successfully enforced through social pressure, HR caution, institutional fear and emotional blackmail.

Although we may be fatigued hearing about it, that is why the Burke case matters. It is not simply about one teacher and one school. It is about whether public institutions can require people to speak as if they believe something they do not believe.

Schools should be places of kindness, respect and protection. No child should be mocked, humiliated or treated cruelly. But kindness cannot mean that adults abandon judgement. Respect cannot mean that every contested idea must be accepted as fact.   Protection cannot mean that childhood distress, confusion or discomfort with puberty, gender, relationships, society or identity is too quickly interpreted through the language of ‘gender identity’.

Burke’s stand resonates beyond courts, tapping into critiques of gender ideology as a ‘belief system’ imposed on schools. Philosopher Judith Butler’s performativity theory underpins much of this, influencing curricula.

‘Trans youth’ is contested – some see it as innate, others as social contagion, with activists pushing transition as ‘earlier the better’ to avoid ‘wrong puberty’. Burke accuses schools of endangering children, which echoes recent global rollbacks (eg, Sweden’s 2025 restrictions).

Ireland’s Convention on Education was described as a once-in-a-generation opportunity to shape Irish education for decades to come – which makes balance essential.

If education is being reshaped for the long-term, then the conversation cannot be guided by one worldview only. It cannot invite everyone into the room while treating some views as unacceptable before the discussion even begins.

The concern is whether other voices are genuinely welcome: parents who are worried about what is being taught; teachers who fear speaking honestly; doctors and psychologists who urge caution; people of faith who believe conscience matters; women and girls concerned about sex-based language and spaces; and ordinary citizens who believe children should not be encouraged to understand themselves through highly contested adult ideas of gender.

This is not a call to return to a harsh or silent Ireland. There were people in the past who suffered because they were not listened to, not protected, or not allowed to speak.

But it does not follow that every new ideology should be accepted without scrutiny.

‘If education is being reshaped for the long-term, then the conversation cannot be guided by one worldview only. It cannot invite everyone into the room while treating some views as unacceptable before the discussion even begins”

Internationally, the debate has shifted. The Cass Review in England led to a major reassessment of youth gender services. NHS England no longer makes puberty blockers routinely available for under-18s with gender incongruence or gender dysphoria, citing limited evidence around safety, risks, benefits and outcomes. Why should that development not matter in Ireland too? And why should it be branded as (part of) ‘culture wars’?

Schools should not be turned into enforcement arms for contested ideological claims, and parents should not be sidelined. Teachers should not be professionally reprimanded for holding widely accepted beliefs about male and female.

The Burke case is uncomfortable because it exposes a clash Ireland would rather not face.   Courts insist this isn’t about transgenderism but obedience to orders.

Yet, the origins are inseparable.

The school relied on Irish equality law, including the Equal Status Act 2000, in support of its approach to the student’s name and pronouns. Burke’s argument has been that the direction collided with his conscience, religious belief and understanding of truth. Irish courts, however, have so far dealt with the case largely through the lens of suspension, trespass, contempt of court and compliance with court orders, rather than deciding the wider philosophical question of compelled speech in schools.

Any future challenge could be framed under Irish constitutional and equality law, including Article 40.6 on free expression and Article 44 on conscience and religion. Article 42 may be relevant to the wider education debate, especially parental rights, but it is not the strongest direct basis for Burke’s own claim as a teacher.

Enoch Burke may be an uncomfortable figure for modern Ireland, but that does not mean he is wrong. In fact, his case may prove to be one of the clearest warnings yet about what happens when conscience, faith and biological reality collide with the new language being imposed across schools, workplaces and public institutions.

Burke’s dismissal for gross misconduct was upheld by the Court of Appeal in 2023, but he scored a procedural victory in July 2025, securing an injunction against a disciplinary panel which Burke argued was biased, as it included ASTI General Secretary Kieran Christie, a vocal ‘equality’ advocate.

It is not enough to say, “He should have obeyed the court.” Of course court orders matter. But justice is not only about procedure. It is also about proportionality, fairness and moral seriousness.

The Teaching Council register still lists Enoch Burke as registered, and the recent fitness-to-teach inquiry is mainly about alleged trespass/attendance at Wilson’s Hospital School in breach of court orders — not about poor classroom teaching, violence, incompetence, or harm to pupils.

Reports state that the confrontation arose after the principal had directed teachers to address a student by a new name and they/them pronouns. So it is fair to say the legal proceedings later became about suspension, orders and contempt – but the source dispute related to conscience, speech and pronoun use.

The Court of Appeal in July 2025 allowed his appeal concerning the Disciplinary Appeal Panel and found a reasonable apprehension of bias regarding Christie’s involvement, because the appeal would involve the legitimacy of the principal’s pronoun instruction and Christie had an institutional association with ASTI’s publicly expressed position on preferred pronouns.

A later High Court case became moot after two members of another disciplinary appeals panel resigned and the third undertook not to sit on a new panel; the High Court noted Burke had effectively obtained the core relief of a fresh panel not including the named defendants. As the process has been disorderly and messy, public concern is justified.

So this is a dispute that began when compelled language was repeatedly re-framed as conduct, contempt, trespass and procedure – while the underlying conscience/free speech issue was never properly confronted.

When a non-violent man spent more than 700 days in prison in connection with a dispute that began over compelled language in a school, it is reasonable to ask whether something has gone badly wrong.

Ireland’s prison system is overcrowded. Its education system is being reshaped at speed without public consultation, pause or question. At the centre of all this is a man whose approach many people dislike, but whose core warning should not be dismissed simply because it is inconvenient.

Enoch Burke may not be the perfect messenger –  few people are. But imperfect messengers can still raise necessary and very valid questions.

Oslo, first diocese in the world to react by expanding the availability of the Traditional Mass

The Bishop of Oslo, Fredrik Hansen, published on 3 July — the feast of the Apostle Saint Thomas — a statement addressed to his priests and faithful concerning the episcopal consecrations celebrated on 1 July in Écône by the Priestly Fraternity of Saint Pius X (FSSPX) and the Explanatory Note of the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith dated 2 July, which described that act as “schismatic”.

The Norwegian document reiterates the position of the Apostolic See: the two consecrating bishops and the four priests consecrated incurred ipso facto excommunication latae sententiae reserved to the Apostolic See (can. 1387 CIC), and it includes the Note’s statement that the priests of the Fraternity “can no longer validly absolve” in the sacrament of confession. 

Consequently, it asks Catholics in his diocese to refrain from participating in the Masses and activities organized by the FSSPX, and it calls for a Rosary for the unity of the Church on 8 July, the feast of Saint Sunniva, patroness of western Norway.

Yet what is truly newsworthy in the statement lies in its second half. Far from the punitive tone that has characterized other episcopal reactions, Bishop Hansen addresses expressly the faithful of his diocese attached to the pre-conciliar liturgy — including those who had been attending the Fraternity’s Masses — with words of understanding: “I understand that these are difficult and distressing days for you.” 

And he offers a concrete pastoral response: the Mass according to the 1962 Missal will continue to be celebrated every Sunday at the church of Saint Joseph in Oslo, and the bishop undertakes to expand this form of celebration in the diocese “if there is need of it and if it is for the good of the Church and of souls.”

This is one of the first episcopal responses to the crisis opened by Écône that, rather than limiting itself to canonical condemnation, confronts the underlying question: what real alternative does the Church offer to the faithful who seek the traditional liturgy. 

In a context in which numerous dioceses lack any authorized celebration according to the 1962 Missal, the gesture of the young Norwegian bishop — a career diplomat of the Holy See before his appointment — marks a path that other ordinaries would do well to observe: doctrinal firmness regarding communion with Peter, accompanied by liturgical generosity toward those who, precisely because of that lack of generosity, had ended up in the chapels of the Fraternity.

We offer below the complete translation of the statement.


Statement of Bishop Fredrik Hansen on the “FSSPX” and the excommunications

Diocese of Oslo — 3 July 2026

Dear brothers in priestly ministry, dear faithful:

(1) “By unity with the Bishop of Rome, in communion and in the profession of the true faith, the Church of Christ is one flock under the supreme shepherd. This is the teaching of Catholic truth, and no one can depart from it without endangering his own faith and salvation” (First Vatican Council, Pastor Æternus, ch. III).

(2) Our unity with the Bishop of the Church of Rome, with the Pope, is the concrete expression of our belonging to the one, holy, catholic and apostolic Church, which Our Lord Jesus Christ founded to “spread the truth” to all men (Second Vatican Council, Lumen Gentium, 8).

(3) On 1 July —contrary to the sincere and paternal appeal of Pope Leo XIV, and without the required pontifical mandate— four priests belonging to the Priestly Fraternity of Saint Pius X (also known as the “Fraternity of Saint Pius X” or FSSPX) were consecrated bishops in Écône, Switzerland. The consecrating bishop and one of the co-consecrating bishops also belong to that Fraternity.

(4) The two consecrating bishops and the four ordained bishops separated themselves by this act (ipso facto) from ecclesial communion and from unity with the Pope. They thereby incurred the gravest ecclesiastical penalty: excommunication latae sententiae reserved to the Apostolic See (CIC, can. 1387).

(5) The Church and her unity have suffered a grave wound. This is sad and painful, and it calls us to prayer and penance. As a concrete expression of this, I exhort you all to pray the Rosary for the unity of the Church on the feast of Saint Sunniva, 8 July 2026.

(6) The Apostolic See has defined the episcopal consecration of Écône as a “schismatic act” (Explanatory Note of the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith, 2 July 2026). The same document further states that the priests belonging to the Fraternity, now marked by the schismatic act and its consequences, can no longer validly grant absolution in the sacrament of confession.

(7) In order not to extend or aggravate further the consequences of this schismatic act, the call of the Holy See is clear: remain steadfast and secure in unity with the Pope and with the bishops in communion with him. This means that Catholics must refrain from participating in the Masses and other activities organized by the Priestly Fraternity of Saint Pius X.

(8) A word to the Catholics of our diocese who feel attraction and affection for the pre-conciliar liturgy and its associated spirituality, and who have therefore attended Masses celebrated in our diocese by priests of the Fraternity: I understand that these are difficult and distressing days for you. Perhaps you feel pulled in different directions, and perhaps you find yourselves bewildered by all that has happened. Some of you may be experiencing uncertainty about the future.

(9) As your shepherd, I therefore offer you encouragement and some words about what is to come. The encouragement is simple: remain steadfast in unity with our Holy Father, the Bishop of Rome, and with me as Bishop of Oslo.

(10) As for the future: you desire to be able to participate in liturgical celebration according to the 1962 Missal. Many of you also seek a spiritual expression and a spirituality shaped by the pre-conciliar liturgy. I understand this. Masses according to the 1962 Missal are celebrated every Sunday at the church of Saint Joseph in Oslo. This will continue. If there is need of it, and if it is for the good of the Church and of souls, I will also expand this form of celebration of the Mass in our local Church.

(11) To conclude: pray for the unity of the Church. Pray for the Pope. And pray that those who have now placed themselves outside ecclesial communion may repent and return.

Praised be Jesus Christ! Praised be his holy name!

Given at the Curia of Oslo, 3 July 2026, feast of the holy Apostle Thomas.

+ Fredrik Hansen
Bishop of Oslo

The Threshold and the Border: Leo at Lampedusa

The date was not neutral. 

There is one day, on this journey, that says more than any speech could. 

Pope Leo was going to Lampedusa. 

And he did so on the Fourth of July.

The Fourth of July is the national holiday of the United States: the day on which America celebrates its independence, the birth of a nation, and its borders.

And so an American Pope — the first in history — chooses, on that very day, not to celebrate any of it. He chooses, instead, to stand on the wounded threshold of the Mediterranean. This, in itself, is already a statement.

Officially, that Fourth of July slots into an unremarkable calendar of pastoral visits within Italy: between Pavia, on June 20, and Assisi, on August 6. 

But it is precisely this apparent ordinariness that makes the gesture all the more eloquent.

The Fourth of July is the civic liturgy of independence. And Leo, on that same day, celebrated the feast of interdependence among peoples and nations.

Lampedusa, let us not forget, is the place where the logic of the border yields graves. It is the island where the sea, which ought to join its far shores, has instead become a frontier, and, too often, a tomb. 

To go there, on that day, is to overturn the very meaning of the word “independence”: not the self-sufficiency of a nation closing in upon itself, but liberation from indifference.

It will be the renewal, thirteen years on, of the question that Francis posed on his first journey, on July 8, 2013: “Where is your brother?”

Leo places himself, deliberately, in that wake. Nor is this incidental: the program calls for the blessing of the plaque at the Molo Favaloro that names the pier after Francis himself.

First, in the morning, the offering of flowers on the graves in the cemetery; then a pause at the Door of Europe, and a greeting to a handful of migrants; and, at last, Mass, at half past ten, beneath the gaze of the Madonna di Porto Salvo.

A brief itinerary — a matter of hours — but built entirely around memory. To that inheritance, though, Leo has added his own inflection.

The journey comes at a moment when the United States has made shutting its doors to migrants a banner. 

And an American Pope knows this all too well. His was not to be a head-on polemic: Leo did not point fingers, and did not name names.

It will rather be a counterpoint. He chose gestures over slogans, memory over clamor.

He reminded us all that the dignity God grants to every person comes before the border. And that a peace pursued “by force of arms, as a condition for asserting one’s own dominion” is nothing but a counterfeit of peace.

This is why the date is not neutral. 

On that threshold of the sea, on the Fourth of July, the word independence changed its name. 

It will now be called — simply, and revolutionarily — fraternity.

New SSPX bishop invokes Mediatrix of All Graces in first episcopal sermon

Newly consecrated – and now newly excommunicated, according to Cardinal Victor Manuel Fernández, Prefect of the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith – Bishop Pascal Schreiber of the Society of St. Pius X delivered his first episcopal sermon on Thursday.

At a Pontifical High Mass taking place on the “prairie” of the Écône seminary, Schreiber’s message centerd on the Blessed Virgin Mary, the priesthood, and the Society of St. Pius X’s work in the world.

Speaking on the Feast of the Visitation, the day after the Society’s episcopal consecrations, Bishop Schreiber reflected on the Gospel account of Our Lady’s visit to St. Elizabeth, presenting it as a model of a hidden yet powerful work of grace.

The sermon was divided into French, German and English parts. In the German section, Schreiber described the Blessed Virgin as the Mediatrix of all graces, saying that just as grace flowed through her to St. John the Baptist and St. Elizabeth, so too the grace of the episcopate had been bestowed through her maternal mediation.

The newly consecrated bishop also acknowledged the controversy surrounding the consecrations, noting that while many had welcomed the ceremonies with joy, others had branded the Society schismatic.

Nevertheless, he insisted that the Society’s mission remained unchanged: to form holy priests, preserve the traditional Mass and doctrine, and work for the renewal of the Church.

Drawing on an image often associated with composer Gustav Mahler, Bishop Schreiber concluded by urging Catholics not merely to preserve tradition as “ashes” but to pass it on as “fire.”

On the same day, the Vatican issued a decree declaring that Schreiber along with the other five SSPX bishops and all the clergy were schismatic and excommunicated. 

The decree also stated that any laity who “formally adhere” to the Society are similarly schismatic and excommunicated. The validity of the judgment is at best questionable, given that those who preach heresy – like both Leo XIV and Cardinal Fernandez – are incapable of excommunicating others, according to Church teaching.


Bishop Pascal Schreiber SSPX

Pontifical High Mass, 2 July 2026

In the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost. Amen.

Part I, in French

First of all, I wish to express to you, dear confrères and dear faithful – also in the name of the three other newly consecrated bishops – our lively gratitude for your sacrifices and your prayers over the course of recent weeks. I am certain that God will repay you abundantly here below, for all these prayers which you have addressed to him, and will hear your intentions.

We are presently experiencing an admirable moment of great unity within the Society. The task now will be to bring home with us what we all feel in these special days: to our priories, to our families, to our work, and wherever Providence places us.

The Society will continue to work to renew the priesthood. She will likewise do everything in its power to ensure that Tradition fully recovers its rights. Even if the situation within the Catholic Church is still far from this; even if the number of those who remain faithful to traditional doctrine sometimes seems small, this must not discourage us. The history of the Church and of humanity teaches us that it is often minorities who have committed themselves with determination to a cause and have ended by winning the majority over to the good cause. This is why the mission of the Society will not change in the years ahead. The task is to transmit the Catholic faith in its entirety. For this reason, we must be animated by a sincere love for the Church, by the desire to live the priesthood of Jesus Christ faithfully, and to contribute to the safeguarding of Tradition for the good of the Church.

The Catholic faith possesses a marvelous harmony: everything is in its place and in its order. Our Lord Jesus Christ is always at the center. He is King and High Priest. His kingship and his priesthood and his presence subsist until the end of time. This is why we can always rely on this promise: “Behold, I am with you until the end of time.” Strengthened by this certainty, we live the life of grace and find the strength to transmit the truth without alteration.

On this feast day, the Blessed Virgin chants her the magnificent Magnificat. We unite ourselves with this song of joy, and let us sing the praises of God with the heavenly Mother. If we look more closely at the Magnificat, we recognize in the Blessed Virgin two virtues which complement one another wonderfully: on the one hand, magnanimity, and on the other, humility. These are precisely the two virtues of which we have particular need today.

Humility is all the more important because we must remain conscious that we are only instruments of God. Without the good God, we can do nothing. We must expect everything from him. Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre once said:

The members of the Society place at the foundation of their missionary and apostolic activities the conviction that they are merely unprofitable servants, that Our Lord could very well do without them, but that he wills to make use of them, and that this is an honor they do not deserve. They will always remain in this profound consciousness of their own nothingness and of the all of God, placing their trust solely in his grace. The apostolate is essentially a supernatural work of grace.

The task, then, is to remain humble, to remain in one’s place, and to know that we are weak and poor – even sinners. At the same time, this awareness must not prevent us from accomplishing great things for the good God, from committing ourselves to the Church, from transmitting the truth, and from fighting for the safeguarding of Tradition.

On the other hand, magnanimity shows us that everything is possible with God, for God is almighty and directs all things according to his wise plan. What does magnanimous man do? He dares to undertake great works; he dares to undertake honorable things. If he is at the same time humble, he is especially fitted to accomplish his works, because he places all his trust in God. It would be wrong to place one’s trust in oneself and in one’s own strength. Jesus says: “Without me, you can do nothing.” The magnanimous man therefore does not base his great undertakings on human means, but on the help of almighty God.

Let us therefore continue on our way with confidence, humility, and magnanimity, placing Christ ever more at the center of our lives and persevering in the life of grace. So that in the end, he may be glorified by our fidelity, and may His Church be renewed. Amen.

Part II, in German

First of all, I would like to express to you, dear confrères and dear faithful, also in the name of the three other newly consecrated bishops, a heartfelt “God reward you.” Thank you for your sacrifices and your prayers over the past weeks. We are convinced that none of these prayers was in vain. The good God will richly repay you for all of this, even here on earth, and will hear your intentions.

Today’s feast of the Visitation leads us to one of the most beautiful encounters in the Gospel. Outwardly it appears to be a simple visit: the Blessed Virgin Mary comes to her cousin Elizabeth. Yet in secret, something tremendous takes place. In the womb of St Elizabeth, John the Baptist is cleansed from original sin. At the same time, St Elizabeth receives the Holy Ghost. She recognizes that the Redeemer is already present in the womb of the Blessed Virgin Mary.

This scene reveals to us a profound truth. Mary is the Mediatrix of Grace — in this case for Elizabeth and John the Baptist. But she is still much more: she is the Mediatrix of All Graces. As with every grace, so too yesterday the grace of the episcopal office overflowed upon the candidates through the mediation of the Mother of God.

The joy which we have been privileged to experience in these days is extraordinary. Rarely in her history has the Society experienced such enthusiasm and such unity. At last she once again has a sufficient number of bishops. On the one hand, this fills us all with great gratitude. On the other hand, one fact pains us greatly. A year ago we went on pilgrimage to Rome in our thousands, to pray at the tombs of the holy Apostles. And now we are called schismatics by some.

But this does not prevent us from doing everything we can, out of love for the Church and out of love for souls. Precisely in this difficult situation, we wish to hold fast to the Church of Jesus Christ and to work with all our strength for her renewal.

Church history teaches us that many saints suffered not only for the Church, but also through the Church. This may at first sound presumptuous, yet it is a fact and at the same time a great mystery. It should therefore not surprise us that yesterday’s episcopal consecration was not received with joy by all Catholics in the world.

In this time of confusion, two extreme positions must be avoided. Let us avoid, on the one hand, the bitter zeal which our patron, the holy Pope Pius X, condemned in his inaugural encyclical. We fall into this danger of bitter zeal when we combat errors only with harsh reproaches and sharply censure faults. On the other hand, there is the danger of being ready to make false concessions. Those who hold this position wish to please men more than God. They are not heirs of the martyrs.

Virtue lies in the middle, in a balanced equilibrium. It is precisely this balance between two extremes that St Paul urged upon his disciple Timothy: “Convince, entreat, rebuke” — but he adds: “with all patience.”

After the events of recent days, the question inevitably arises: What happens now? We do not know what the future will look like. It lies in the hand of God. But our task we know very well.

The principal task consists in the formation of zealous and doctrinally sound priests and in the sanctification of priests. The central point remains the orientation towards the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass, for which the priest is primarily ordained.

Dear faithful, you too have been placed by Providence in a certain position. There it is your task to fulfil your daily duty faithfully, with the greatest possible love for God and for your fellow men. It is precisely through fidelity in small things that God prepares us for the great tasks.

Part III, in English

First of all, dear confrères and dear faithful, I would like to express my heartfelt gratitude, also on behalf of the three other newly consecrated bishops, for your sacrifices and prayers over the past weeks and months. I’m certain that God will richly reward you for all prayers offered, even here on earth, and will grant your intentions.

When a priest is consecrated a bishop, he does not receive his office for himself, but for the salvation of souls. For example, one of the bishop’s most noble duties is to lay his hands on the deacon, and ordain him as a priest. Through the grace of the sacrament of Holy Orders, the newly ordained priest receives the power of the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass, and to pronounce the words of consecration. Without the bishop’s laying on of hands, the newly ordained priest could not effect the miracle of transubstantiation.

What is tradition? Tradition is not the preservation of ashes, but the passing on of fire. Ashes are something dead, dark, cold, dirty, and grey. Fire, however, brings light and warmth. It is no coincidence that on the day of Pentecost the Holy Ghost descended upon the Apostles in tongues of fire, to bestow his gifts and fruits upon them.

For us in the Society, this means that we do not preserve the Catholic tradition out of nostalgia. We preserve it because we wish to pass on the Catholic faith, the sacraments, and traditional doctrine in their authentic form to the next generation.

The fire is to burn within us, a seal for the spread of the faith, the missionary spirit which has always characterized the Society, and must continue to be so. This is precisely how Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre saw the Society. That is why he originally called the members of the Society “Apostles of Jesus and Mary.”

An Apostle is not one who keeps the faith for himself, but one who joyfully passes it on. Just as the Apostles went out from the upper room at Pentecost and proclaimed the Gospel throughout the world, so too are we called to be witnesses of Jesus Christ in our respective state of life.

Let us therefore ask the Holy Ghost today to rekindle the fire of his love in our hearts. May he preserve us from the coldness of indifference, and from the ashes of a merely outward Christianity. May he grant us apostolic zeal, so that we may remain courageous witnesses to Our Lord Jesus Christ, true devotees of the most Blessed Virgin, and faithful sons of the Catholic Church.

That is why we must never be content merely to preserve. Certainly, we must preserve the true Holy Mass, the sacraments in their traditional form, Catholic doctrine, the Ten Commandments, and the sound spirituality of the Church. But at the same time we must pass all this on. (A treasure that remains buried is of no use to anyone; a light placed under a bushel illuminates no one; a fire that is not fed and goes out.) Then tradition becomes nor preservation of ashes, but truly the passing on of fire. To the glory of God, an the salvation of souls Amen. dead.

For the salvation of souls. Amen.

In the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost. Amen.

Constitutional judge: Churches called for in clarification of legal issues

Federal Constitutional Judge Henning Radtke sees the churches in interpretation questions of their right of self-determination demanded. 

The Code of Criminal Procedure approves a right of refusal of testimony to its clergy, the lawyer said on Sunday in Amberg. 

It would be helpful for secular courts to know which group of people falls under it. Whether, for example, Catholic chaplains who are not ordained priests in this sense are clergymen.

Radtke, in his own words a devout Protestant, said that the Evangelical Church in Germany had enacted its own church law at his suggestion. State case law can now build on this. "Things are that simple sometimes." 

The constitutional judge said that the right of self-determination of the churches is still very well protected by treaties such as concordates, but also religious freedom in the Basic Law. 

Therefore, he is currently "not concerned about a particular party." 

But that could also change quickly, he said.

Religious symbols remain controversial

On the dispute over the use of religious symbols in public spaces such as the Christian cross or the Islamic headscarf, Radtke said that there will continue to be debates about this in the future. 

To his knowledge, not a single decision of the Federal Constitutional Court was passed unanimously in this regard. For teachers, trainees or prosecutors, however, the state neutrality requirement must be observed. 

Those who work in these functions do not act as a private person. 

Radtke commented at the first "Amberger Symposium on the Freedom of Religious Practice".

The Advocate General at the Court of Justice of the European Union (ECJ), Juliane Kokott, pointed out at the symposium that a ban on wearing religious symbols in the workplace is not per se discriminatory in the EU. 

Employers could prevent their female employees from wearing a headscarf, but a ban must also apply to other religious symbols, Kokott said in Amberg. 

The ECJ allows this form of "neutrality policy" in companies. 

With a new development in church employment law, on the other hand, the German lawyer has difficulties in her own words. 

Thus, depending on the proximity of an activity, the churches could graduate loyalty requirements to their employees for their proclamation. This runs counter to the general principle of equality. 

"With us in the court, every doorman must also take the oath," Kokott said.

Dunderrow abuse survivors again told Government needs more time to provide redress

The Dunderrow women have been told again that the Government needs more time before moves can be put in place to provide redress for the child sexual abuse they suffered. 

This is despite a pledge by the Taoiseach in the Dáil two weeks ago that mediation would be initiated to finally bring a solution to their long-standing grievance. 

One of the women told the Irish Examiner at the weekend that she considers this another delaying tactic.

“Why, if the Taoiseach said there will be mediation, do they need more time as we were told on Friday?” she said. 

“It’s like Holly Cairns said in the Dáil: Delay, delay, delay. We have been repeatedly put through this over the years."

The women’s legal representatives had written to the Attorney General early this month, requesting a response by last Friday, July 3.

In a letter from the office, the 19 women were told an extension was required and that a response would be forthcoming on July 17. 

In the event that moves are made towards mediation on that date, it leaves less than two weeks before the end of the law term that shuts down until the first week in October.

The women had all been sexually abused by their former teacher, Leo Hickey, in Dunderrow National School in West Cork in the 1960s and 1970s. 

Hickey pleaded guilty to sample charges in 1998, and was jailed for three years. Following a European Court of Human Rights ruling in favour of one former pupil, Louise O’Keeffe, in 2014, the government was forced to set up a redress scheme for others who had been abused as children.

The scheme was controversial and difficult to access, and it was abandoned following a review in 2019. Another scheme was subsequently set up, but again most applicants were told they did not qualify. 

Two weeks ago, a number of the women, now in their sixties and seventies, spoke anonymously in the media in an attempt to get the State to finally comply with the European court’s ruling.

On June 23, the Taoiseach told the Dáil that it was “important that their voices are heard and listened to".

He said the women’s legal representatives had sought mediation. 

“We will enter into a mediation in good faith, and we will engage constructively,” he said.

One of the women, using the name Martha, told the Irish Examiner that the latest delay “makes me very suspicious".

“It was debated at length in the Dáil but, at this stage, it’s very questionable as to why it has to be extended out to July 17. I’m not sure why they have to keep extending it out. We have been through this again and again.”

Gänswein: "Francis was wrong with Traditionis Custodes and that error must be corrected"

Archbishop Georg Gänswein, personal secretary to Benedict XVI for two decades and currently apostolic nuncio to the Baltic states, has stated that Pope Francis “made a mistake” by restricting the celebration of the traditional Latin Mass through Traditionis Custodes and has maintained that this decision “can and must be corrected.”

In an interview granted to the Italian daily Corriere della Sera, Gänswein argues that Rome should now show itself “more flexible, generous and paternal” toward the faithful attached to the traditional rite, especially those institutes and communities that celebrate the 1962 Missal in full communion with the Holy See.

The former secretary of Benedict XVI’s remarks come just days after the episcopal consecrations carried out by the Priestly Fraternity of Saint Pius X in Écône, a gesture that has once again highlighted the distance between the FSSPX and Rome. Gänswein nevertheless distinguishes between the doctrinal problem of the Fraternity and the liturgical question, and warns that not all traditional-Mass faithful should be identified with positions of rupture.

“The hardest sectors prevailed” in the FSSPX

Gänswein recalls that Benedict XVI sought to build bridges with the Priestly Fraternity of Saint Pius X, especially in 2009, when he lifted the excommunication of the four bishops ordained by Marcel Lefebvre. According to the German prelate, that gesture was that of “a father seeking to make peace,” yet the outstretched hand was not accepted.

“There was a radical fringe that prevailed: it did not want reconciliation then and does not want it now,” Gänswein states, showing particular severity toward the Fraternity’s recent evolution. In his view, the events in Écône demonstrate that the FSSPX is “even more hardened” than in Benedict XVI’s time.

The archbishop describes as “horrible” the claim, voiced in Écône, that Church authorities have been animated since the Second Vatican Council by a spirit contrary to the faith and have acted against Tradition. For Gänswein, that conception is not true tradition but a fixation on Catholic tradition up to Pius XII, as though everything afterward were marked solely by error.

The FSSPX problem is not liturgical

The nuncio insists that the Lefebvrist case cannot be reduced to a liturgical question. According to him, the underlying problem is not the traditional Mass but communion with the Pope and with the Church.

In this regard, he recalls that within the Church there are faithful and institutes that celebrate according to the traditional rite in full obedience to Rome. He expressly cites the Priestly Fraternity of Saint Peter, which celebrates the traditional liturgy “cum Petro and sub Petro,” that is, with Peter and under Peter, never against the Pope.

Gänswein further emphasizes that the post–Vatican II liturgical reform did not eliminate Latin from the liturgy and recalls that the constitution Sacrosanctum Concilium was also signed by Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre as a conciliar father.

Direct criticism of Traditionis Custodes

It is in his assessment of Traditionis Custodes, the motu proprio by which Francis in 2021 restricted the possibilities opened by Benedict XVI in Summorum Pontificum, that Gänswein is most explicit.

“I believe Pope Francis made a mistake, without realizing it,” the archbishop states. In his judgment, the decision to limit the traditional Mass across the board did not produce the desired effect but the opposite.

Francis justified those restrictions by arguing that the openness promoted by Benedict XVI had been used in some circles to increase distances, harden differences and create oppositions within the Church. Gänswein does not deny that abuses occurred, but he considers that those abuses did not justify a general prohibition or restriction.

Abusus non tollit usum,” the prelate recalls: abuse does not eliminate use. According to Gänswein, the existence of some excesses was not sufficient reason to deprive all the faithful of the possibility of celebrating or attending the traditional Mass.

Recovering liturgical peace

Benedict XVI’s former secretary maintains that Summorum Pontificum had borne positive fruit for years and that the experience after 2007 showed that a broader liturgical coexistence within the Church was possible.

Therefore, he argues that Rome should now have “the courage and conviction” to correct a mistaken decision. In his view, greater openness toward the traditional Mass would allow the recovery of a liturgical peace that has been damaged by the restrictions imposed in recent years.

Gänswein’s thesis is clear: the Holy See must not confuse the legitimate liturgical sensibility of many faithful with the position of rupture held by the FSSPX. The challenge, according to the prelate, is to maintain firmness toward those who reject communion with Rome, yet without punishing those who live the liturgical tradition within ecclesial obedience.

Pope begins his summer break in Castel Gandolfo

Pope Leo XIV has begun his summer rest period this Sunday by moving to the Apostolic Palace of Castel Gandolfo, where he will remain until July 27. 

It will be the Pontiff’s second extended stay at the summer residence since the beginning of his pontificate, reviving a tradition that for decades formed part of the popes’ regular calendar.

According to the Prefecture of the Papal Household, general audiences on Wednesdays, as well as private and special audiences, will be suspended during these weeks. 

The Pope’s ordinary activity will resume on August 5, when the traditional general audiences will once again be held in the Vatican.

Although he will significantly reduce his public schedule, Leo XIV will not completely disappear from the public life of the Church. 

As is customary during the summer period, he will lead the recitation of the Angelus on the Sundays of July from the Liberty Square of Castel Gandolfo, where pilgrims and residents of this town, located about 25 kilometers from Rome, are expected to gather.

A return to the popes’ summer residence

For centuries, Castel Gandolfo was the place chosen by the pontiffs to rest during the hottest months of the year. From Urban VIII to Benedict XVI, the residence hosted numerous summer periods for the popes, who from there continued to attend to some of their responsibilities while maintaining a reduced work pace.

In recent years, the complex had partially lost that residential function. Leo XIV’s decision to spend several weeks in Castel Gandolfo represents a return to a custom closely linked to the Roman pontificate and restores prominence to a place deeply connected to the recent history of the papacy.

During his stay, the Pope will maintain only the commitments scheduled for Sundays, while dedicating these weeks to rest before fully resuming his public activity at the end of July and restarting the general audiences in August.

Radcliffe denies having blessed the same-sex couple at the controversial London mass

Following the controversy sparked by the Mass celebrated on 13 June at the Church of the Holy Apostles in London, during which a same-sex couple received a public blessing at the end of the liturgy, Cardinal Timothy Radcliffe has broken his silence. 

In exclusive statements to the outlet AdVaticanum, the British Dominican denies having taken part in that blessing and states that he was unaware it was going to take place.

The celebration, which InfoVaticana reported on this week, marked the fiftieth anniversary of the life together of Julian Filochowski and Martin Pendergast, two well-known activists in ministry with homosexual persons in the Archdiocese of Westminster. 

At the conclusion of the Mass, the clergy present imparted a blessing using a text prepared for the couple, a gesture that raised questions due to its apparent incompatibility with the limits set by the declaration Fiducia supplicans, which expressly excludes ritualized blessings in a liturgical context for couples in irregular situations.

“I did not give a blessing to anyone and I did not know that any blessing was going to be imparted,” Radcliffe stated. The cardinal insisted that his participation was limited to preaching the homily and denied that he had intended to present the relationship of those being honored as an object of ecclesial celebration.

According to him, his reflection focused on Christian friendship. “I said that friendship is a participation in the life of God. That is perfectly orthodox. I was not referring specifically to theirs. The Mass was a celebration of all friendship,” he affirmed. He added that references to Filochowski and Pendergast were made only “in connection with their shared passion for justice,” for which, he said, both are known within the Church.

Defends that the event should have remained private

Radcliffe also maintained that the celebration had been conceived as a private event precisely to avoid misinterpretations.

“The guidelines given by the Church are that any occasion of this kind should be private so as not to cause misunderstandings. It was agreed that this celebration would be private. I do not know why that privacy was not respected,” he stated.

Along the same lines, he rejected the idea that the Mass could be interpreted as a celebration of a homosexual relationship. “It was not conceived to celebrate homosexual relationships as such. To present it that way would be to distort it. Doing so with the purpose of provoking scandal would be morally incorrect,” he added.

A public blessing during the Mass

However, images released by the organizers themselves show that, at the end of the celebration, a public blessing was imparted to the couple through a previously prepared text, inspired  -according to the organizers — by a form approved by the bishops of Belgium. 

In it, God’s grace was invoked upon both on the occasion of the fiftieth anniversary of their relationship and that their love might continue to grow.

The ceremony also included other elements that sparked controversy, among them the dialogued proclamation of the Gospel by several laypeople — including Sister Jeannine Gramick and theologian James Alison — and the distribution of the Most Precious Blood by one of those being honored during Communion.

Radcliffe’s statements constitute the cardinal’s first public explanation following the controversy generated by a celebration that, to date, has not prompted any official statement from either the Archdiocese of Westminster or the Holy See.

Little Sisters of the Poor could leave France because of the new euthanasia law

The Little Sisters of the Poor have warned that they may be forced to close some of their residences in France if the future law on the end of life obliges them to allow euthanasia in their facilities.

The warning comes after the French National Assembly rejected the inclusion of an institutional conscience clause that would have allowed healthcare and care centers, including those of religious inspiration, to refuse to practice so-called “aid in dying” in their facilities.

According to France-Soir, the sisters care for around 2,500 elderly people in some thirty homes across France and categorically reject “giving death” in their centers. For the congregation, accepting euthanasia in their residences would mean betraying their mission of accompanying the elderly until the natural end of life.

No institutional conscience clause

During the processing of the bill, several parliamentarians attempted to introduce a collective conscience clause to protect establishments that, for ethical or religious reasons, oppose euthanasia. The proposal did not succeed.

The text does provide for an individual conscience clause for healthcare professionals, but does not recognize the same right for institutions. In this way, Catholic centers could be forced to organize the practice of euthanasia in their facilities, even if it contradicts their founding principles.

The Little Sisters of the Poor are considering taking legal action to defend their freedom of conscience. Ultimately, they do not rule out closing some homes if the application of the law compromises their identity and mission.

A law that reopens the debate on religious freedom

One of the main supporters of the bill, deputy Olivier Falorni, argued during the debate that “walls have no conscience,” referring to the refusal to recognize an institutional objection for care centers.

The statement has raised concerns, as this stance poses a risk to religious freedom and to the continuity of works that, for decades, have cared for vulnerable people precisely from the commitment never to cause death.

The position of the Little Sisters of the Poor thus raises a fundamental question: whether the State can compel institutions created to care until the natural end of life to participate in a practice they consider incompatible with human dignity and the teaching of the Church.

Fraternity of Saint Vincent Ferrer asks Leo XIV to protect the faithful linked to tradition

The Fraternity of Saint Vincent Ferrer (FSVF), a French religious institute that celebrates the traditional liturgy in full communion with the Holy See, has issued a statement following the episcopal consecrations carried out by the Priestly Fraternity of Saint Pius X (FSSPX) on July 1.

In the text, the community expresses its “deep sorrow” over consecrations performed “against the will of the Supreme Pontiff,” rejects the notion that a supposed “state of necessity” could justify the act, and calls on Leo XIV for a more decisive intervention against the doctrinal errors that, in its view, currently affect the Church.

The statement also reaffirms the Fraternity of Saint Vincent Ferrer’s commitment to remain faithful both to the liturgical tradition and to visible communion with the Roman Pontiff, while urging the Holy See to give special attention to the faithful attached to traditional liturgical forms.

The following is the full text of the communiqué issued by the Fraternity of Saint Vincent Ferrer on July 2, 2026:

1. The Fraternity of Saint Vincent Ferrer (FSVF) takes note of the episcopal consecrations conferred within the Priestly Fraternity of Saint Pius X (FSSPX) on July 1, 2026, against the will of the Supreme Pontiff. It deeply regrets this act, which tears the seamless garment of Christ. The FSSPX invokes a “state of necessity.” Yet no state of necessity can ever permit acting against what belongs to the divine constitution of the Church.

2. The communiqué of February 12, 2026, from the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith (DDF) recalls the existence of the “various degrees of adherence required by the different texts of Vatican II.” This traditional doctrine allows Catholics to adopt a just position of adherence to the Magisterium while respectfully criticizing the deficiencies of certain texts.

3. Furthermore, the FSVF observes, together with numerous clerics and laypeople, the existence of internal currents in the Church that, “no longer enduring sound doctrine” (2 Tim 4:3), call into question the great dogmatic and moral truths through a process of self-secularization. It implores the Holy Father to condemn these errors and, for the protection of the Christian people, to disavow the priests or bishops who promote them, and to encourage all those who oppose them.

4. The FSVF intends, in this dramatic context, to continue its mission with humility and charity, without compromise with error, in intact fidelity to the liturgical disciplines and traditional pedagogies, in visible communion with the one Church of Christ and her legitimate hierarchy.

5. With a keen awareness of the tensions and divisions that will affect consciences and families, the FSVF encourages the faithful, anxious or disoriented, to maintain and cultivate, with the strength given by faith and the gifts of the Holy Spirit, this double fidelity, in which a coherent and fruitful path is found. It asks, with respect and insistence, that the Holy See manifest its paternal solicitude for “all those Catholic faithful who feel attached to some earlier liturgical and disciplinary forms of the Latin tradition” (motu proprio Ecclesia Dei, no. 5c).

July 2, 2026, feast of the Visitation of Our Lady.

Thunderous silence of the Catholic media regarding Cardinal Radcliffe's LGBT sacrilege

InfoVaticana published this week a story with real impact on that much-discussed seamless tunic of Christ these days. 

A truly relevant piece of news, one that causes scandal: a cardinal of the Church who participated barely a year ago in the conclave that elected Leo XIV — and with significant involvement — has publicly concelebrated a Mass of thanksgiving for the 50th anniversary of a homosexual couple, whom he also ritually blessed.

We are not talking about just any cleric. 

Timothy Radcliffe not only took part in the conclave: he was the cardinal chosen by Leo XIV to open with his meditation the first consistory of cardinals of his pontificate, in January 2026. We are therefore speaking of one of the figures of greatest doctrinal influence in the Catholic Church today.

What happened in London

According to what we published in InfoVaticana — and it is something perfectly public, because it was a public Mass, broadcast on video by the organizers themselves — on June 13, the church of Holy Apostles in London hosted a “Mass of thanksgiving for 50 years of friendship, union, and commitment” in honor of Julian Filochowski and Martin Pendergast, two well-known homosexual activists who have lived together as a couple since 1976.

Radcliffe preached the homily and concelebrated alongside two English emeritus bishops. At the end of the celebration, all the clergy present imparted a ritual blessing with a fixed text to the couple. 

And, adding extreme gravity, one of the two honorees distributed the Blood of Christ to the attendees during Communion, under the cardinal’s gaze.

This is extremely serious. This truly tears the tunic: not in administrative terms, but in doctrinal ones. It breaks the meaning of the sacraments, the sense of the sacredness of the family, what the Church has understood and understands about love and its proper channels, about the holy sacrifice of the Mass, about blessings. 

And the tear has been caused by one of the cardinals recognized today as a current doctrinal reference.

The silence of the Catholic media

So far, there has been no statement from Rome. But beyond the catastrophic absence of reaction from the Roman authorities, what also calls for deep reflection is that there has been no statement from virtually any Catholic media outlet.

Let us review. The thematic Catholic media in Spanish, which the reader surely already knows, the international agencies — some with television, others only press agencies — not a single one has said absolutely anything. 

Mention must be made of the exception of the North American outlet LifeSite and the Italian La Nuova Bussola; the rest of the Catholic press around the world, all in unison, has decided to remain silent.

“Don’t talk about the issue and, perhaps, if we don’t talk about it, it doesn’t exist.” That may be the theory. It may also be an explicit strategy of protecting the hierarchy, of protecting the Pope - Radcliffe is a person chosen by him to preach to his peers. 

But then we have already assumed that the truth must be hidden, that the scandal must be concealed, that it must be deliberately covered up.

We understand, from an informational standpoint, the bitter, sour position of so often being the bearers of bad news. But in our internal discernment, we believe that bad news is necessary for purification, for general reflection, and for the improvement of the Church.

And the reaction of the media to this matter gives us a sense of loneliness and sorrow, because editors, colleagues, and journalists are observing ecclesial reality with a level of self-censorship and fear that is not proper to Catholics.

Double standards

This is news that should have made the rounds of the world in all Catholic media. Now then: rivers of ink have flowed these days over the Priestly Fraternity of Saint Pius X. There has been no problem there; it is not, therefore, that controversial topics are avoided. Some are avoided and others are aired.

So, what is in the minds of our colleagues, of our fellow journalists from other outlets? What role does Catholic information really play, and where is it heading, if we lower these standards?

Anglican Church of Canada normalizes euthanasia with a ritual that includes confession, communion, and blessings

Anglicans in Canada have approved a document authorizing their ministers to offer pastoral accompaniment and, with the corresponding bishop’s authorization, to impart blessings to persons who have chosen to undergo medical assistance in dying (MAiD).

The text, titled Pastoral Liturgies at the Time of Death in Contexts of Medically Assisted Dying, not only contemplates the presence of Anglican ministers before the induced death but also develops a complete liturgical itinerary that may include confession, the laying on of hands, anointing, Holy Communion, blessings, prayers during the procedure, and intercessions after death. 

All of this remains subject to the corresponding bishop’s authorization and the pastoral discretion of each community.

Paradoxically, the document begins by stating that “it is not our intention to enter into the ethical arguments” about euthanasia or to offer “a moral argument for or against.” 

Instead of addressing the issue from a Christian moral standpoint, its authors maintain that the Church’s duty is to accompany pastorally those who request spiritual assistance at that moment.

A ritual specifically conceived for euthanasia

The document provides for different liturgical moments according to the circumstances. Before the procedure, a rite of preparation may be celebrated with biblical readings, psalms, an examination of conscience, individual confession, anointing, and the distribution of Communion. 

Specific forms of intercessions and blessings are also offered for those who are to receive medical assistance in dying.

Once the medical team’s intervention has begun, the ritual continues with new prayers while the procedure is administered. After death, prayers of farewell, blessings for the family, and forms for the subsequent accompaniment of loved ones are included.

The document avoids judging the moral licitness of euthanasia

The drafters maintain that the Church must respond pastorally “where people are” and accompany those who have freely chosen medical assistance in dying. 

The document states that many of these patients have lived for years with complex illnesses, wish to end their suffering, and want to face their death “with the grace and blessing of God” and with the presence of the ecclesial community.

At the same time, the text attempts to establish a distinction between blessing the person and blessing the decision to resort to euthanasia. 

However, it acknowledges that this difference may be difficult to perceive and recommends that ministers act prudently to avoid confusion among the faithful.

The expansion of medical assistance in dying in Canada

Canada has had a legal framework since 2016 that permits medical assistance in dying (Medical Assistance in Dying, MAiD), whose application has been progressively expanded in recent years. 

Currently, persons suffering from serious and irreversible illnesses and who meet the requirements established by federal legislation may avail themselves of this procedure.

Ten years after the legalization of the so-called Medical Assistance in Dying (MAiD), more than 100,000 people have died through this procedure, and the country currently records the highest number of deaths by euthanasia in the world.

In 2024 alone, official figures show 16,499 deaths by medical assistance in dying, the highest annual figure since the law came into force in 2016. 

Although the Canadian government maintains that the growth is beginning to stabilize, the number of cases continues to rise year after year.