Wednesday, February 18, 2026

Rhode Island Bishop Laments ‘Senseless’ Deadly Shooting at Hockey Game

Providence, Rhode Island, Bishop Bruce Lewandowski mourned a deadly shooting at a hockey match that occurred in the diocese.

Police said a father on Feb. 16 opened fire during a hockey game at the Lynch Arena in Pawtucket, located several miles north of Providence.

The shooter — identified by authorities as Robert Dorgan — reportedly shot and killed his ex-wife and one of his children while injuring several other attendees before shooting and killing himself.

Police said Dorgan — who had allegedly undergone transgender-related surgeries — also went by the name of “Roberta Esposito.”

In his Feb. 17 statement, Bishop Lewandowski described the shooting as “senseless.” He said one of the high school teams at the arena included a Catholic school.

“No one should ever have to experience this kind of violence, especially students,” he said, calling for prayers “for those who lost their lives in that hockey arena yesterday” as well as “for the healing and comfort of those who were injured and traumatized.”

“May the God of all mercies restore their hope for a more peaceful world,” the bishop said.

Lewandowski added that the diocese will review its internal safety protocols “to do our part keeping communities safe from such violence.”

Police had not yet revealed a motive of the attack on Feb. 18. Court records, however, reportedly indicate that Dorgan’s ex-wife cited “gender reassignment surgery” as a factor in their marital breakdown.

Knoxville Bishop Richard Stika, who resigned after Vatican mismanagement investigation, dies at 68

Bishop Richard Stika, who resigned from leading the Diocese of Knoxville, Tennessee, in 2023 after a Vatican investigation into alleged mismanagement, died on Feb. 17. He was 68 years old.

His death was announced via an obituary published online as well as by the Knoxville Diocese. The diocese urged the faithful to pray for the repose of his soul.

Born in St. Louis on July 4, 1957, he was ordained a priest in the Archdiocese of St. Louis on Dec. 14, 1985. 

He served as chancellor there for 10 years, from 1994 to 2004, and helped coordinate Pope John Paul II’s visit to the city in 1999.

Pope Benedict XVI appointed him bishop of Knoxville in 2009, with Stika ordained and installed there on March 19 of that year. 

As bishop, he oversaw the construction of the Cathedral of the Most Sacred Heart of Jesus.

The bishop’s tenure in Knoxville came to an abrupt end on June 27, 2023, when he resigned from his post at age 65, 10 years before the customary retirement age of bishops.

Pope Francis had reportedly decided to ask for Stika’s resignation after the results of a Vatican investigation. 

The inquiry had looked into reports of diocesan mismanagement on Stika’s part, with multiple priests reportedly petitioning the Vatican to investigate his conduct as bishop.

The prelate was also the subject of a lawsuit alleging that he protected a seminarian accused of multiple counts of rape, including claims that Stika intimidated an alleged victim.

Acknowledging at the time of his retirement that “questions about [his] leadership have played out publicly in recent months,” Stika said: “I would be less than honest if I didn’t admit that some of this has weighed on me physically and emotionally.”

He cited numerous health issues as contributing to his retirement, though he offered a “genuine and heartfelt apology to anyone I have disappointed over the years.”

His obituary, meanwhile, said his “dedication to his faith and his service to the Catholic community remained central to his life” and that he “leaves behind a legacy of pastoral care and significant contributions to the dioceses he served.”

Irish bishop braves bitter cold to distribute ashes in Waterford City streets

Bishop Alphonsus Cullinan of Waterford and Lismore in Ireland spent Ash Wednesday on the streets of Waterford City administering ashes to the city’s Catholic population. 

In doing so, he continued a ministry for which he has become well known.

When asked on Shrove Tuesday evening if he was intending to continue his Ash Wednesday ministry of distributing ashes in the streets, Cullinan told EWTN News: “Weather permitting, yes indeed.” 

And today, as promised, the 65-year-old bishop braved the bitter cold and wet weather conditions in Waterford and continued what has now become an annual tradition in his episcopacy.

“I think that we have to bring Christ out into the street. He does not want to remain only in the tabernacle,” Cullinan said.

“I am always humbled by the response from young and old. The wearing of ashes in the sign of the cross touches something deep within, impossible to explain fully. We remind ourselves of our mortality,” he said.

Cullinan spoke of the worry etched on people’s faces but said he believes he is doing what the Church needs to do in going to the margins to proclaim Christ’s healing in a very public way.

“But Jesus is the victor, and by his cross we can defeat death and enter with him in eternal happiness.”

He added: “Ash Wednesday is such a wonderful start to the 40 days of preparation for the Resurrection at Easter. As St. Paul says, ‘If we die with him we shall rise with him.’”

Bishop Alphonsus Cullinan of Waterford and Lismore in Ireland spent Ash Wednesday on the streets of Waterford City administering ashes. He is also known for carrying a cross through the city on Good Friday. | Credit: Photo courtesy of Bishop Alphonsus Cullinan

In the past, in addition to administering ashes outside in Waterford on Ash Wednesday, Cullinan has carried a cross through the city streets on Good Friday and has said openly that the Church has to go where people are.

In his role as chair of the Bishops’ Council for Vocations this month he launched a new vocations monstrance blessed by Pope Leo XIV to be used to gather the faithful for prayerful Eucharistic adoration for vocations to the priesthood and religious life.

The bishop also recently published a book, “The Priesthood in Ireland,” which includes 16 reflections on the priesthood in Ireland today.

Lowest percentage of Catholic applicants to the PSNI in over a decade has raised concern

CONCERN HAS BEEN voiced at the lowest percentage of Catholic applicants to the PSNI in more than a decade.

Police announced more than 4,000 had applied for their latest student officer recruitment campaign.

According to police data, more than 65.6% who applied to the student officer campaign were Protestant, 26.7% were Catholic and 7.7% were undetermined.

Some 63.5% of applicants were male, 36.5% were female, 7.3% were from the LGBT community, and 4.2% were from ethnic minorities.

The percentage of Catholic applicants dropped from 28.8% in 2025. This percentage is the lowest since 2013, according to police figures.

According to the 2021 census, 45.7% of the population of Northern Ireland is Catholic.

The recruitment process closed last Wednesday with 4,104 applications received.

PSNI officer numbers dropped to 6,190 last summer, well below the target of 7,500 set in the Patten Report in 1999.

SDLP MLA and Policing Board member Colin McGrath said the lowest number of Catholic applicants in more than decade should ring alarm bells.

“There will be much commentary around this 13-year low in Catholic applicants to join the PSNI, but unfortunately this trajectory has been clear for some time and these figures are in no way surprising,” he said.

“Unless we see drastic changes things will only get worse, with Policing Board projections putting the number of officers from a Catholic background at just 23% in 10 years’ time.”

McGrath described the reasons for the decline as “complex”, adding: “There are no easy answers.”

“The threat from dissidents still looms in the background, the handling of legacy cases and a number of high-profile mistakes, including the data breach, would give many pause when considering a career in policing. I welcome and appreciate the efforts of Chief Constable Jon Boutcher to address these issues,” he said.

“Last year SDLP leader Claire Hanna called for an independent review of policing and the rule of law institutions to stop this slide backwards.

“This must be taken seriously by the PSNI, the Executive and particularly the Justice Minister, alongside the UK and Irish governments.

“Without a major intervention this situation will only get worse in the years ahead, with serious consequences for confidence in policing and society as a whole.”

Earlier this month Boutcher called for “buy-in” from all quarters to support police to become representative of all communities.

Speaking at a meeting of the Policing Board, Boutcher referred to a “very small section of society” who try to disrupt events such as police visits to schools or community meetings.

He spoke of his frustration, describing “bigoted” and “out-of-date” attitudes of some people based on “views that go back decades” and before the PSNI.

Today, Boutcher appealed to people from all backgrounds to consider a career in policing.

“Policing is a unique career. It’s not simply a job, it’s a vocation,” he said.

“It’s a role that people can be quick to criticise, yet those very critics will always call us when they need help, and we will always be there for them whatever their background, culture or religion. We are a police service for everyone.”

‘It was the best thing I’ve ever done’: Abuse victim details papal meeting

Feb. 2 marked a turning point in the life of David Ryan, a 61-year-old Irishman who suffered sexual abuse as a teenager. 

More than 40 years later, he was able to share his story face-to-face with Pope Leo XIV in the first private meeting the pontiff has held alone with a victim of abuse.

While the Holy Father had already met with other victims of abuse, those meetings were in groups. 

The meeting with Ryan was different: For almost an hour, he was able to share everything he thought and still thinks about what happened to him and about the reaction of the Catholic Church in Ireland, which he felt did not listen to him.

“He’s a lovely man, and a lovely experience… Wow. I’m so glad I‘ve done it today, I’m really so glad I’ve done it. I didn’t hold back, I told him about the abuse and asked him, ‘Why are these priests still doing this?’” Ryan told reporters in Rome who were waiting for him outside the Apostolic Palace in the Vatican.

“His sympathy, his empathy toward the survivors, myself and my family, toward my close friends… He felt this, he was sorry, and it was genuine. I knew it was genuine,” he emphasized.

Ryan suffered sexual abuse when he was roughly between the ages of 11 and 17 while attending Blackrock and Willow Park School in Dublin. His brother, Mark, who died at age 62, was also a victim of abuse but never revealed what had happened to him. “It ruined my life. It ruined Mark’s life, and my brother is now gone,” Ryan, who brought a photo of Mark to Rome, told EWTN News.

When Ryan’s story came to light in a documentary titled “Blackrock Boys” on RTÉ radio, it shocked the nation. Following the broadcast, the Irish government commissioned a report that revealed widespread allegations of sexual abuse at hundreds of schools over several decades — a total of 2,400 cases. This was made possible by the courage of Ryan and others like him who shared their stories.

Ryan, who felt he was not being heard by the Church, wrote to Pope Leo XIV and received a reply to meet with him, an appointment he attended with Deirdre Kenny, CEO of One in Four, an Irish charity that advises and supports adults who have suffered sexual abuse.

‘I’m so sorry for you’

EWTN Vatican correspondent Colm Flynn spoke with Ryan after his meeting with the pope. He recounted that he told Leo XIV “that I wanted an apology, and the first thing he said to me was, ‘David, all I can say is that I’m so sorry for your pain and hurt, what your family went through, what Mark and the other survivors went through. I can feel your pain, but I don’t know your pain.’ And he looked me straight in the eyes and just said, ‘I’m so sorry for you.’”

“But I could feel a kind of energy coming down when he told me, because I knew he meant it, and it’s like a whole new experience for me. It’s still going down; I still can’t believe I’ve been there. I thought this day would never come,” he emphasized.

‘I just wanted him to hear my voice, my story’

After explaining that he wanted to express his anger to the pope and get a response from him, Ryan clarified that with the Holy Father, “I wasn’t going to shout and scream; there was no point in doing that. I just wanted him to hear my voice, I wanted him to hear my story, and he heard. He apologized in a way I wasn’t expecting, and his empathy toward me… it was just quiet and surreal.”

“And I didn’t hold back, I told him I had been raped three times. It’s not pleasant, but many men are afraid to talk about it, and a lot of men don’t cry,” he said. However, he shared that in his case, he managed “to talk about it, I have cried.”

Ryan also said the pope “was shocked to hear how many people had been abused and that the Church had hidden it for so long. I asked him why they did that, and he replied, ‘David, I don’t have an answer yet for you, but I will have an answer when I can.’”

‘It wasn’t your fault’

Ryan also told Flynn that he shared his story so that others “would want to come forward and speak out about clerical abuse, because a lot of men don’t talk and keep it quiet.”

“And as I told the pope: It wasn’t my fault. And that took me a long time to admit: It wasn’t my fault. He shook his head and said to me, ‘Yes, it wasn’t your fault, David.’ And that really did hit me. We shook hands afterwards, and I know he understands. It was the best thing I’ve ever done,” he concluded.

EU Parliament condemns Turkey for expelling Christian missionaries as ‘security threats’

The European Parliament has voted in favor of a resolution condemning Turkey’s expulsion of Christian missionaries.

On February 12, the EU legislative body adopted the text by 502 votes in favor, two against, and 59 abstentions, demonstrating broad cross-party consensus on the issue.

The resolution said Turkey is expelling Christians missionaries under an opaque “national security” pretext. It urged the government to uphold freedom of religion and allow the expelled Christians to return to the country.

Dutch Member of the European Parliament Bert-Jan Ruissen said during the debate, “You bring the good news of the Gospel, the message of peace and reconciliation through Jesus Christ. Then you are considered a threat to national security and are no longer allowed to enter the country. That is the harsh reality of missionaries working in Turkey.”

He called on Turkish authorities to “take freedom of religion seriously.”

“Turkey must stop targeting churches, guarantee freedom of religion or belief, and allow Christians to share their faith freely,” he stated.

According to Christian legal advocacy group ADF International, a minimum of 160 foreign Christian workers and their families have been expelled from Turkey or denied entry in the recent past. These families often lived in the country for decades.

These bans are issued under national security classifications and often without explanation or a legal remedy, making it impossible for missionaries to challenge their expulsion.

According to ADF International, about 20 such cases are currently before the European Court of Human Rights.

The resolution passed by the EU legislative body is not legally binding, but it applies diplomatic pressure and can prompt the European Commission and the EU’s diplomatic service, the European External Action Service, to discuss the issue with Turkish government authorities.

Pope’s Lenten message: Abstain from harsh words and rash judgement

Ahead of the start of Lent, Pope Leo XIV invites Catholics to open ourselves to listening, fasting, and community, urging us to abstain from words of hatred in order to make space for words of hope and peace.

“I would like to invite you to a very practical and frequently unappreciated form of abstinence: that of refraining from words that offend and hurt our neighbor.”

Pope Leo XIV made that invitation at the heart of his message for Lent 2026, which was released on Friday.

As Lent begins on Ash Wednesday, February 18, the Pope said this liturgical season offers Christians an opportunity to place the mystery of God back at the center of our lives.

Every journey of conversion, he said, begins by letting God’s word touch our hearts, so that we may renew our commitment to follow Christ in the mystery of His saving passion, death, and resurrection.

Pope Leo focused on the importance of listening to God and to those around us, allowing ourselves to enter into authentic relationships.

“In the midst of the many voices present in our personal lives and in society,” he said, “Sacred Scripture helps us to recognize and respond to the cry of those who are anguished and suffering.”

Christians, said the Pope, can cultivate inner openness to listening, as God does, by growing in awareness that the poor challenge our lives and economic systems, as well as the Church.

Pope Leo XIV then turned to how fasting helps open us to the deep desire for justice, which he said frees us from complacency.

“Precisely because it involves the body, fasting makes it easier to recognize what we ‘hunger’ for and what we deem necessary for our sustenance,” he said. “Moreover, it helps us to identify and order our ‘appetites,’ keeping our hunger and thirst for justice alive”.

Fasting, he added, teaches us to govern our desire by purifying, freeing, and expanding it, in order to direct our desire toward God and good deeds.

However, we must fast in faith, humility, and communion with the Lord, and not in a way that leads to pride, said the Pope, adding that other forms of self-denial also lead to a more sober lifestyle.

Pope Leo then pointed to an under-appreciated form of abstinance, which is refraining from hurtful words.

“Let us begin by disarming our language, avoiding harsh words and rash judgement, refraining from slander and speaking ill of those who are not present and cannot defend themselves,” he said. “Instead, let us strive to measure our words and cultivate kindness and respect in our families, among our friends, at work, on social media, in political debates, in the media and in Christian communities.”

If we do so, we will let words of hatred “give way to words of hope and peace.”

Pope Leo went on to emphasize the communal aspect of listening and fasting, which can be lived out in our parishes, families, and religious communities.

By listening to the cry of the poor and setting our hearts on a path of conversion to Christ, we train our conscience and improve the quality of our lives and relationships, he said.

“It means allowing ourselves to be challenged by reality and recognizing what truly guides our desires—both within our ecclesial communities and as regards humanity’s thirst for justice and reconciliation.”

Pope Leo XIV concluded his 2026 Lenten Message with a call for Christian communities to become places where those who suffer find welcome.

“Let us ask for the strength that comes from the type of fasting that also extends to our use of language,” he said, “so that hurtful words may diminish and give way to a greater space for the voice of others.”

New church in conflict-hit Chin state seen as symbol of hope

Catholics in Myanmar’s Chin State have opened a new church, which Church leaders describe as a sign of hope and resilience in the conflict-scarred Christian-majority region.

The Church of St. Joseph in Matupi township, under the Diocese of Hakha, was formally opened on Feb. 12, reported Fides, the Vatican news agency, on Feb. 17.

Chin state, in northwestern Myanmar, is home to about 500,000 people, roughly 85 percent of whom are Christians, predominantly Baptists. Catholics number about 70,000. 

Myanmar has been engulfed in conflict since the military coup of February 2021 that ousted the elected government of Aung San Suu Kyi. Anti-coup protests erupted nationwide and fighting intensified between ethnic armed groups and junta forces.  

The violence has displaced an estimated half of Chin state’s population and devastated towns and infrastructure. The city of Thantlang became a symbol of the destruction after the military launched an arson campaign between late 2021 and early 2022, forcing all residents to flee. Of the city’s 22 churches, only one remains standing, Fides reported. 

Rights activists say churches belonging to Catholics, Methodists, Presbyterians, Pentecostals and Seventh-day Adventists were branded “resistance centers” and deliberately burned. A Chin-based human rights organization reports that more than 107 religious buildings, including 67 churches, have been destroyed in the state since 2021.  

Much of Chin state is now reportedly under the control of anti-junta forces. Among Catholic sites damaged in recent attacks was Christ the King Church in Falam, in the Diocese of Hakha, which was targeted in April 2025, according to Fides. 

 In February 2025, an airstrike damaged Sacred Heart Church in Mindat, which was set to become the cathedral of the newly established Diocese of Mindat.  

Despite the devastation, Bishop Lucius Hre Kung of Hakha, who presided over the inauguration in Matupi, hailed the new church as a milestone for local Catholics.  

“There are few events in the life of a parish more significant and joyous than the dedication of a new church,” he said, calling it “a true sign of God’s love” at a time of suffering. “Let us remain steadfast in prayer and communion,” the bishop added, urging unity amid ongoing hardship.

In Vatican change, Leo dissolves Children's Day commission

Pope Leo XIV dissolved this month the Pontifical Commission for World Children’s Day, another recent reversal of a measure passed by his predecessor in the recent past.

The move comes as the latest in the quiet rollback of several measures taken by Pope Francis in the last year of his pontificate, including as the reorganization of the Diocese of Rome, the creation of a donations commission, and reforms of the Vatican bank.

While the pope had made headlines confirming some elements and motifs of his predecessor’s pontificate, some new decisions could suggest the Leo is aiming for streamlined internal governance in the Vatican, and quietly making decisions to that effect.

The pope’s Feb. 13 chirograph opens up by dissolving the Pontifical Commission for the World Children’s Day and repealing its statutes, relieving the president, vice president, and all members of the committee of their duties, of stating that “any acts and regulations adopted to date by the Pontifical Commission that cease to have legal effect in canon law and civil law are also repealed.”

The chirograph says that the Dicastery for the Laity, Family and Life is competent for any matters assigned to the committee and that it should “settle the commission’s outstanding accounts and submit a final liquidation balance sheet to the Secretariat for the Economy for approval and for any decision regarding the allocation of the remaining assets.”

The commission was established in Nov. 2024 after the celebration of the first Vatican-sponsored World Children’s Day in May that year.

Pope Francis established the Pontifical Commission for World Children’s Day to organize the event and to coordinate and promote the celebration with bishops’ conferences and local dioceses throughout the world. The commission was not initially placed under the authority of any Vatican dicastery.

While the commission has been abolished, the Vatican will continue to hold the World Children’s Day celebration, scheduled for Sept. 25 through 27 this year.

But after Pope Leo’s decision it will be organized by the Dicastery for the Laity, Family and Life instead of an independent committee.

The dissolution of the commission leaves controversial Fr. Enzo Fortunato, OFM Conv., the commission’s president, without a Vatican post.

Before he led the Children’s Day commission, Fortunato was in January 2024 appointed communications director of Saint Peter’s Basilica by Cardinal Mauro Gambetti, OFM Conv. the archpriest of Saint Peter’s Basilica. 

Fortunato had earlier served as communications director of the Basilica of Assisi, where Gambetti served as General Custos between 2013 and 2020.

The position of communications director at Saint Peter’s Basilica didn’t exist before Gambetti appointed Fortunato to the job. But the priest wouldn’t last long in that position — he would resign in February 2025.

Speculation linked his resignation to the uproar after a security breach in which a man climbed the main altar of Saint Peter’s Basilica and destroyed six candlesticks. Fortunato was on vacation at the time and did not issue a public response in his capacity as press director.

Moreover, Fortunato brokered a video message from Pope Francis’ to the 2025 Sanremo Music Festival in 2025. 

The message proved controversial, after media outlets claimed the pope wasn’t informed that the video would be sent to the festival, and that it had instead been been produced as a thank-you message for artists who participated in the 2024 World Children’s Day. 

The situation was widely interpreted in Italy to suggest that the pope’s message was used for the music festival without his authorization, at Fortunato’s behest.

No replacement for Fortunato was appointed after his resignation at the helm of Saint Peter’s Basilica’s communications.

The dissolution of the Children’s Day commission is the last of a series of reversals of decisions taken by Francis in the last years of pontificate.

On Feb. 1, the pope reversed a 2023 Francis policy that had ended free or subsidized housing for upcoming senior Vatican officials and cardinals.

In Dec. 2025, Pope Leo suppressed a controversial donations commission that was created by Francis on Feb. 11, 2025.

Leo’s chirograph suppressing the commission said that the move came as a recommendation of the Vatican’s Council for the Economy, which “devoted particular attention to studying this issue, reexamining it and consulting with experts in the field.”

The commission’s president was Msgr. Roberto Campisi, who had served as the Secretariat of State’s assessor for general affairs until Leo appointed him as the Holy See’s permanent observer to UNESCO, the Paris-based UN culture body on Sept. 27, 2025.

In Nov. 2025, Pope Leo abrogated a reorganization of the Diocese of Rome approved by Pope Francis in Oct. 2024.

Pope Leo’s motu proprio Immota manet ordered that five prefectures – groups of parishes – in the Diocese of Rome be united — again — as the central sector of the diocese, which had been abolished by Francis after a public divide between the priests of the sector and their vicar.

The Vatican also announced Oct. 6 that Pope Leo had revoked a 2022 rescript issued by Pope Francis that required all curial assets, accounts, and investments to be placed under APSA, which in turn was required to conduct its business through the Institute for Works of Religion, the Vatican’s sole for-profit commercial financial institution.

Adult baptisms in Belgium increased by 30 percent

The number of adults in Belgium who want to be baptized is rising sharply. 

As the Belgian Bishops' Conference announced on Wednesday, 689 registrations were recorded this year. This was an increase of almost 30 percent compared to the previous year, when 534 adults were baptized. 

In 2016, only 229 catechumens were admitted to the Catholic Church. "In 2026, we are thus seeing a tripling to ten years ago, confirming the growth we have also observed in recent years," the release said.

Next Sunday, the baptismal candidates would celebrate in their respective diocese of a rite of admission, with which the bishop officially confirms the suitability for baptism, First Communion and Confirmation. 

The sacraments would then be imparted on Easter night.

In recent years, some European countries have reported a growing interest of adults in a christening. 

France is considered a pioneer in particular, where over 10,000 adults and over 7,400 young people aged 11 to 17 were baptized on Easter last year. 

In Germany, a total of 2,075 people were christened in 2024, the 14th. had already reached the age of the year. 

"This continues a small positive trend in both absolute figures and the percentage of adult baptisms in the total number of baptisms," according to the annual statistics of the German Bishops' Conference published in 2025.

Salesians have abuse in their community investigated

Salesians Don Boscos have commissioned a study to deal with sexual abuse of minors. 

As the Order announced on Wednesday, a research team from Jena and Munich will investigate cases from the years 1945 to 2023 in Community institutions. 

Through an online platform, those affected and contemporary witnesses can share their experiences – anonymously on request.

The investigation takes two years. 

It consists of a church-historical analysis and a psychosocial study. An interdisciplinary advisory board accompanies the project. Those affected also belong to the Advisory Board.

Requirements of the processing

The study is based on existing reports from those affected. In addition, the researchers evaluate historical documents. For this, they have unrestricted access to the archives of the Order. 

The study will also review the previous prevention measures of the Order. 

With the study, the Order implements guidelines for the processing of sexualized violence in German religious communities.

The Salesians Don Boscos (SDB) are a male order of the Catholic Church with around 14,000 members in 135 countries. 

The Order was founded by the Italian priest and educator Johannes Bosco (1815–1888). 

The German Province has about 180 members of the Order. 

They work at around 30 locations in Germany, German-speaking Switzerland and Turkey together with about 2,000 employees and numerous volunteers.

Archdiocese of Vaduz publishes priestly acts for reappraisal

The Archdiocese of Vaduz is now providing personnel files of priests for the Swiss reprocessing study. 

The prerequisite for the transfer of the files to the research group of the University of Zurich is the approval of the priests concerned, as the archdiocese announced on Tuesday. 

Six of the seven still living priests who moved from the diocese of Chur to the newly built Archdiocese of Vaduz in 1997 have therefore given their consent. 

The files in question would now be transmitted in copy to the Diocese of Chur so that they could be included in the study where appropriate.

In November, the archdiocese found that the legal situation in Liechtenstein did not allow the transfer of personnel files to foreign third parties. 

The research team of the University of Zurich, which developed the Swiss reappraisal study, had asked for insight into the files of the priests who had belonged to the diocese of Chur before the establishment of the Archdiocese of Vaduz. 

The archdiocese was formed in 1997 from the Liechtenstein parts of the Swiss diocese of Chur.

The problem of the Liechtenstein files has already been raised in the research group's report. Accordingly, the files of the former dean's office Liechtenstein were handed over to the Liechtenstein State Archives. 

The files of the Diocese of Chur with reference to the Principality of Liechtenstein had been transferred from the Chur Archive to Vaduz. 

"This situation presents researchers with a special source problem: For a large part of the investigation period (1950–1997), the territories of the Principality of Liechtenstein belonged to the Diocese of Chur. However, the source situation was subsequently changed in such a way that research into sexual abuse in this region of the diocese is significantly more difficult and sometimes almost impossible," the report said.

Vatican publishes condolence letters for Pope Francis

The sympathy of world diplomacy in the death of Pope Francis last April can now be quantified: Official letters of condolence came from 136 nations in the Vatican, 160 delegations of states and international law subjects were present at the funeral, as can be seen from the now published Sedisvacance edition of the Official Journal of the Holy See, the Acta Apostolicae Sedes. 

For Germany, Bundestag President Julia Klöckner and the then Chancellor Olaf Scholz have sent a letter of condolence, Federal President Frank-Walter Steinmeier led the German delegation at the funeral service.

Klöckner, in her letter, paid tribute to Pope Francis as “extraordinary spiritual leader.” Even at the beginning of his pontificate, it turned out that this pope would be different: “Francis wanted to be close to the people, spoke in simple words and refrained from excessive pomp.” He was a pontiff who “took the Church back to earth, as it were, a spiritual leader who lived earthing and humanity.” 

In her letter, the President of the Bundestag highlighted other aspects of the pontificate: the interfaith dialogue and its role in the rapprochement between the USA and Cuba. “He built bridges of reconciliation where there were previously rifts of suspicion, and was thus actually a global bridge builder, as we were rarely allowed to experience it,” Klöckner said.

Federal Chancellor: Strength, confidence and inspiration

Scholz emphasized the “tireless commitment to faith and its calls for humanity and brotherhood.” In doing so, he gave people worldwide strength, confidence and inspiration.

The Federal President's letter of condolence is missing from the collection. Steinmeier, in his letter to Cardinal Dean Giovanni Battista Re Francis published by the Federal Presidential Office, had praised Francis as a credible witness to the Christian message: "With Francis, the world is losing a shining sign of hope, a credible advocate of humanity and a convincing Christian. His modesty, spontaneity and humor, but above all his perceptibly deep faith have touched people all over the world – and given support, strength and orientation.”

The special edition collects, in addition to condolences, all official documents related to the Sedisvacancy, including the official determination of the death of the Pope by Cardinal Joseph Farrell, the Camerlengo, the Pope's will, and the biographical document that Francis was added to the tomb, the Rogitum.

Currently, 184 countries maintain diplomatic relations with the Holy See, 93 diplomatic missions are accredited. These include the European Union and the Sovereign Order of Malta. 

In addition to the letters of condolence of the representatives of states, the declarations of condolences from other churches and religious communities as well as from international organizations are also printed in the Official Journal.

Bishop Leahy’s statement marking the beginning of Lent and Ramadan

This year, Christians and Muslims are marking Lent and Ramadan at the same time.   

Through its message from the Vatican’s department for Inter-religious Dialogue, the global Catholic Church expresses our solidarity with Muslims. The message invites us all to renew our gaze on God who is the Almighty, the Most Merciful, the only Just One. 

Recently there has been an attack on a mosque in Limerick, and in 2025 both the Islamic Centre in Belfast, and a mosque in Portlaoise, were attacked. 

The Irish Muslim Council has expressed its alarm at the growing levels of anti-Muslim sentiment.

Noting how the start of the holy Christian season of Lent, and Ramadan, coincide this year, Bishop Brendan Leahy is inviting Catholics, “to make a special effort to express spiritual closeness to Muslim neighbours or colleagues at work. It can simply be by showing greater ‘neighbourly spirit’ to neighbours who are Muslim, sharing their joys and sorrows, and not just living side by side without interaction. It can be friendly greetings at the school gate while waiting for the children to come out from school or in the local playground while their children play. At a time of bereavement, for instance, it is good to offer condolences and help in any practical way possible. In the workplace, it might be that a Muslim coworker needs a quiet space and time for daily prayers during Ramadan.”

“The fact that this year we are sharing in common a sacred time of prayer, fasting and concrete acts of goodness is a reminder that we all want to let ourselves be transformed so that we can do our part to restore peace to our broken world. Pope Leo XIV speaks of peace coming about from the ‘disarmament of heart, mind and life.’ We can encourage each other in that and hold one another in prayer,” Bishop Leahy said. 

Bishop Labaka, in the process of beatification by Leo XIV, recounted how he allowed young indigenous people to touch his genitals

The portal Infocatólica has highlighted the deep controversy surrounding the beatification process of Mons. Alejandro Labaka, opened in May 2025 by Leo XIV. 

And it has done so by recalling something that for years has remained in a discreet second plane: the explicit texts, written and published by the protagonist himself, which describe situations of systematic nudity, sexualized coexistence with young people, and a conception of inculturation based on liberation theology, which did not intend to modify local customs but to idealize them and integrate into them: a failed and absurd vision that also seriously challenged the moral tradition of the Church and its missionaries.

It is important to note that in the analysis of Bishop Labaka’s autobiography, we are not dealing with rumors or hostile reconstructions. We are dealing with pages printed in the Crónica Huaorani and in other autobiographical writings by Labaka himself. 

His beatification process was officially opened on May 22, 2025, when Pope Leo XIV authorized the promulgation of the decrees recognizing his life as an “offering of life” and his venerability, thus marking the initial phase of the path toward beatification in the Catholic Church.

That act is not merely a formality: it implies that the Holy See recognizes that Labaka lived his missionary vocation with heroic dedication until death, and it places him in the stage of “Venerable Servant of God,” a necessary prior step before he can be declared blessed and, in the future, a saint, if the conditions are met.

Precisely for that reason, what appears there demands serious, direct reflection without euphemisms. The discussion cannot be reduced to personal sympathies or emotional judgments about his violent death. With an open beatification process, it is important to examine the texts, the concrete pastoral decisions, and their coherence with the moral doctrine of this bishop in Catholic teaching.

“Blessed Nudism”: when adaptation becomes ideology

Labaka, a missionary bishop in the Amazon, does not simply describe a cultural adaptation forced by the climate or necessity. He elevates nudism to an almost theological category:

“Blessed nudism of the Huaorani, who do not need cloths to safeguard their norms of natural morality!” (CH, 39).

And he adds:

“They lived naked and I too was often naked like them”.

It is not merely a matter of tolerating a local custom while proclaiming the Gospel. It is about assuming it as an original moral paradigm, as a return to the “Paradise before sin”:

“God has wanted to preserve in this people the way of life, the natural morality as in Paradise before sin” (CH, 57).

The issue is not the fabric, but the theology. In the Christian tradition, modesty is not a secondary cultural convention, but an anthropological expression linked to the consciousness of original sin and the dignity of the body. Presenting a specific culture as an intact preservation of prelapsarian “natural morality” implies a profound theological idealization.

Inculturation, according to the magisterium, involves assuming what is true and good in each people, but always in the light of the Gospel. When adaptation is formulated in terms of original moral superiority, the risk is no longer practical, but doctrinal.

Sexualized coexistence with young people: texts that admit no makeup

The truly grave point is not abstract nudism, but the scenes that Labaka himself narrates with unsettling frankness.

He describes repeated dynamics of excitement among young people:

“I observed the ease, or rather the almost generalized practice as something ritual, of exciting themselves among the males frequently (…) not to mention other games of homosexual aspect in their long family gatherings” (CH, 57).

And in that context, he explains that he decided to bathe and coexist naked with them:

“Starting from their reality required me to bathe with them or like them, or in the sight of young people and children, with complete naturalness; intentionally performing the full grooming of an adult male; allowing to satisfy the natural curiosity to touch and see in what they see us different…”

The situation does not end there. He himself acknowledges attempts at provocation:

“One of the adolescents wanted to excite me and I prevented it with smiling energy”.

In another passage, he recounts:

“Peigo stayed, apparently, without a hammock and approached my bed (…) I shared the bed lying down naked under the same mosquito net” (CH, 51-52).

And even more explicit:

“The young people were more playful than ever, abound in words and signs that figured the union of sexes, allowing touches on the genitals. This time they especially bothered me, until confirming with uproar that male reactions are identical between us and the Huaorani. In any case, they did not insist either with me or among themselves in a way that pollution occurred. I tried not to make any drama and made an effort to act with naturalness, laugh with them and dissuade them from the game” (CH, 146).

Deliberately placing oneself in a repeated context of sexual excitement with young people, sharing nudity and nighttime space, and describing it as a pastoral method raises a grave scandal regarding prudence, continence, and moral judgment.

In an ecclesial context especially sensitized by abuses, these texts cannot be minimized as mere cultural anecdotes.

From personal decision to pastoral method

The issue worsens when this practice is not reduced to a debatable individual option, but is presented as a missionary model.

“The missionary does not have to wait to be undressed, but will do better to take the lead in doing so to show appreciation and esteem for the Huaorani people’s culture” (CH, 144).

Nudity ceases to be a tolerated circumstance to become a programmatic gesture. Moreover, the described scenes include coexistence in mixed contexts, with the participation of religious sisters in situations where nudity is normalized as a communicative tool.

An inculturation without a purifying dimension

The theological core of the problem is even deeper. In Labaka’s texts, an inculturation appears that seems to dilute the corrective dimension of the Gospel.

He himself describes practices that he qualifies as “games of homosexual aspect” or ritualized excitement dynamics. However, no clear horizon of moral transformation or call to a gradual pedagogy of purification is apparent.

The Catholic tradition has always taught that the Gospel assumes what is true and good in cultures, but purifies what is disordered. Inculturation is not uncritical fusion, but transformative insertion.

When sexualized practices are naturalized under the category of “extraordinary sexual maturity” and any moral confrontation is avoided for fear of “creating complexes,” the mission runs the risk of becoming neutral accompaniment rather than salvific proclamation.

That shift is not minor: it affects the very concept of evangelization.

Beatification and ecclesial responsibility

Mons. Labaka died violently in 1987. That fact is tragic and no one disputes it. But beatification does not canonize dramatic circumstances; it examines heroic virtues, doctrinal orthodoxy, and integral moral coherence.

In a Church marked by the wound of abuses, is it prudent to proceed without an exhaustive examination of writings where a priest describes naked coexistence with young people who attempt to excite him and scenes of genital touching in his immediate environment? 

Raising these questions is not puritanism. It is ecclesial responsibility. Holiness does not fear the light. The Church must have the courage to recognize the errors of liberation theology and of missionaries who had an atrophied vision of an “inculturated” evangelization in error.

Literal quotes from Mons. Alejandro Labaka

    1. “Blessed nudism of the Huaorani, who do not need cloths to safeguard their norms of natural morality!” (Crónica Huaorani, 39; from now on, CH).

    2. “They [the Huaorani] went naked, we began to go that way too. (…) They lived naked and I too was often naked like them” (Tras el rito de las lanzas, Vida y lucha de Alejandro Labaka, CICAME, Coca, Ecuador, 2003, 199-200).

    3. “God has wanted to preserve in this people the way of life, the natural morality as in Paradise before sin” (CH, 57).

    4. “As I was, in underwear, I advanced to the head of the family, Inihua and Pahua, his wife; next to me was already the eldest son. With the words father, mother, sisters, family I strove to explain to them that they, from now on, constituted my parents, siblings; that we were all one family… I undressed completely and kissed the hands of my Huaorani father and mother and siblings, reaffirming that we are a true family” (CH, 37).

    5. “I feared being a rejection for the Huaorani culture and customs if I showed myself too rigid (…). In those circumstances, I understood that the missionary, if he has to walk through the jungle with them, must walk like them to be able to dress when the occasion of the night’s cold arrives” (CH, 38).

    6. “Missionaries must behave with complete naturalness among them; not be surprised by their nudism or certain curiosities they may have with us, and even we must undress voluntarily in some circumstances, not in a plan of exhibitionism but to not create guilt complexes in a culture of extraordinary sexual maturity” (CH, 103).

    7. “Every time new missionaries join the team, the same concerns arise from our first contacts with the Amazonian culture of the ‘naked man.’ The concern, turned almost into obsession, was that the Huaorani undressed everyone. Admitting all that nudity was legal within their culture, it constituted, however, one of the greatest difficulties for the entry of missionary personnel, especially religious sisters. Very soon we realized that the missionary does not have to wait to be undressed, but will do better to take the lead in doing so to show appreciation and esteem for the Huaorani people’s culture” (CH, 144).

    8. “At one point, we find that the path is lost in a deep swamp of about five hundred meters in extent. Without hesitating a moment Deta (an indigenous woman) undresses and advances naked with the water up to above the waist; upon reaching the opposite shore she encourages us smiling, while we walk cautiously, without daring to imitate her example because of our educational prejudices. After a couple of hours we return by the same path. Deta, this time, does not take off her shorts and crosses the swamp, followed by the Sisters. Shortly after we arrive: Neñene, with her child in her arms, indicates that I help her untie the knot of her shorts which, then, she hands me so that I pass it to her. Before this sign of trust and naturalness, I also undress and we cross the swamp that way” (CH, 145).

    9. “This is the only occasion in which the whole group equally lived in the presence of the Creator a beautiful chapter of the Bible (Gen. 2, 25)” (CH, 113).

    10. “I observed the ease, or rather the almost generalized practice as something ritual, of exciting themselves among the males frequently and whenever they do their needs; not to mention other games of homosexual aspect in their long family gatherings. Starting from their reality required me to bathe with them or like them, or in the sight of young people and children, with complete naturalness; intentionally performing the full grooming of an adult male; allowing to satisfy the natural curiosity to touch and see in what they see us different, like, the hairy parts of the body. But right there the opportunity was offered to me to give a lesson, when one of the adolescents wanted to excite me and I prevented it with smiling energy” (CH, 57).

    11. “Peigo [a young Huaorani] stayed, apparently, without a hammock and approached my bed. On previous days I had rejected him, for I feared him because of his gestures and provocative homosexual attempts. This time I had another understanding of ‘accept everything, except sin’ and I shared the bed lying down naked under the same mosquito net” (CH, 51-52).

    12. “We went to bed very early, as soon as it got dark. The house consists of a single room: In one corner is the stove, between the hammocks of the spouses Inihua and Pahua. On the other side are the remaining hammocks, taken from the Company workers, with their awnings and blankets, in an east-west direction. My bed they put behind, in a north-south direction, on the floor, so that we can hold hands with the young man who sleeps next to me in the hammock. I am soaked in sweat and I take off my shirt and pants” (CH, 36).

    13. “My mother Pahua insisted that we all sleep in her house, despite there being almost no physical space for it (…). The young people were more playful than ever, abound in words and signs that figured the union of sexes, allowing touches on the genitals. This time they especially bothered me, until confirming with uproar that male reactions are identical between us and the Huaorani. In any case, they did not insist either with me or among themselves in a way that pollution occurred. I tried not to make any drama and made an effort to act with naturalness, laugh with them and dissuade them from the game (…). In this concrete circumstance nothing would have been so ridiculous nor produced so much hilarity as the erection achieved in Captain ‘Memo’ [that was Fr. Labaka’s nickname, in Aguarico]. When they came back to bed, I had just asked forgiveness from God in case I had become ‘an old green homosexual’” (CH, 146).

Bishop of Málaga supports homosexual blessings

The Bishop of Málaga, José Antonio Satué, has addressed in an interview granted to Málaga Hoy some of the most sensitive issues in the current ecclesial debate: homosexuality, marriage, and the role of women in the Church.

The prelate states clearly that “being homosexual is not a sin” and maintains that in the Church there has been “greater awareness that a person cannot be discriminated against for being homosexual, nor can we add more suffering to stories that unfortunately have had a lot of suffering.”

«Being homosexual is not a sin. Indeed, it is not. And in that sense, the contribution of Pope Francis has been wonderful, because it has made us realize something that is very important, and that is that the Gospel, the life of faith, is not for those who consider themselves saints, not for those who are fulfilling all the norms from the outside, but for everyone. I think we have become more aware that a person cannot be discriminated against for being homosexual, nor can we add more suffering to stories that unfortunately have had a lot of suffering.»

Marriage and blessings

When asked about the possibility of same-sex marriages being celebrated in the Church, Satué responds that “there will never be a marriage between same-sex people,” since marriage, from the Catholic perspective, is between a man and a woman. “Marriage for us will always be, I believe, man and woman,” he states.

However, in his opinion, “the blessing of people who have a same-sex couple project is a step forward” and he adds that “we will have to find a way to better fit this undeniable reality into our practice.”

«I believe there will never be a marriage between same-sex people, because marriage for us is between a man and a woman. But, well, the blessing of people who have a same-sex couple project yes, in my point of view, is a step forward. That is, marriage for us will always be, I believe, man and woman, but certainly, we will have to find a way to better fit this undeniable reality into our practice.»

Women in the Church

Regarding the role of women, the bishop acknowledges that female ordination “is a door that is currently closed” and that it is not a near possibility. Nevertheless, he points to a prior challenge that he considers urgent:

«I think we have a previous challenge, and that is for women to participate in everything that is possible for them to participate in, and that they still do not participate in, or not sufficiently. It is still news that a woman is head of a Dicastery, there is one. That has to become natural. In our dioceses, there have to be more women in areas of responsibility.»

The interview, which also covers issues such as housing, migration, Málaga’s Holy Week, secularization, or abuses within the Church, thus provides a broad panorama of Satué’s pastoral vision in the diocese of Málaga.

Radcliffe is annoyed with those who label him as progressive: "labels are fine for jam jars"

Dominican Cardinal Timothy Radcliffe has firmly responded to those who pigeonhole him as a “progressive,” after some conservative sectors criticized his selection to open the consistory convened by Leo XIV with a meditation. 

In an interview granted to La Repubblica, the English cardinal laments that he is reduced to an ideological label and states that “labels are fine for jam jars, not for human beings.”

Radcliffe assures that many of those who judge him “have not read a single word” of his books or articles and maintains that the polarization between “traditionalists” and “progressives” is alien to the essence of Catholicism. 

In his view, faith lives from a fruitful tension between fidelity to tradition and openness to the renewing action of the Spirit, not from a radical opposition between the old and the new.

Defense of the Synodal Impulse

The cardinal, chosen by Francis to preach at the Synod and now invited by Leo XIV to speak before the cardinals, considers that the current Pontiff continues the synodal path initiated by his predecessor. In fact, he defines the last consistory as “profoundly synodal,” in which—as he recounts—the cardinals voted on the topics they wished to address.

Radcliffe holds that Francis’s “extraordinary creativity” and Leo XIV’s “ministry of unity” are “perfectly complementary.” In his opinion, the Church needed the reformist impulse of the Argentine Pope and now requires specific work of reconciliation for those who felt uneasy about certain changes.

Tensions in the Church

Regarding internal tensions, he admits that documents like Fiducia Supplicans provoked “indignation and anger” in numerous bishops and recognizes that a broader process of listening would have been desirable before its publication, without thereby renouncing the idea of a Church that is a “home for all.”

In that same framework of ecclesial debate, he reaffirms his stance “totally in favor” of the female diaconate. 

Radcliffe sees no decisive theological objections against it and, although he recognizes the reservations expressed by Francis about clericalization, he says he understands the frustration of many women who demand greater recognition of their authority in the life of the Church.

On synodality, Radcliffe admits that there is fear of a loss of authority in a general context of institutional crisis. 

However, he maintains that authority is not weakened when the People of God are listened to, but rather strengthened. 

Therefore, to overcome internal polarization, the cardinal does not propose a simple middle ground between extremes, but rather to seriously address deep concerns. Unity, he concludes, is not built with labels, but from communion and mutual listening.

There is No Unity Without the Truth

The Church is not built on labels or on circumstantial majorities, but on the revealed and transmitted Truth. The unity that is invoked today will only be solid if it is rooted in the apostolic tradition and in doctrinal clarity. 

Everything else—including good intentions—increases confusion; the faithful need certainties, not ambiguities.

Ouellet defends Francis's decisions on the appointment of laypeople in the Roman Curia

Cardinal Marc Ouellet, emeritus prefect of the Dicastery for Bishops, published this Monday on Vatican News a theological reflection on the appointment of laypeople and religious women to positions of authority within the Roman Curia, supporting one of the most significant decisions promoted by Pope Francis in the framework of the reform contained in the Apostolic Constitution Praedicate Evangelium.

Francis’s reform and the synodal logic

At that time, Francis justified this innovation by appealing to the synodal principle and to greater participation of the faithful in the communion and mission of the Church as a fulfillment of the Second Vatican Council:

«We can say that the last Ecumenical Council has not yet been fully understood, lived, and applied. We are on a journey, and a fundamental stage of this journey is the one we are living with the Synod, which asks us to move out of the logic of ‘that’s how it’s always been done,’ of applying the same old schemes, of the reductionism that ends up wanting to frame everything always in what is already known and practiced.»

(Francis, preface to the book «John XXIII. The Vatican II a Council for the world», 2022)

However, as Ouellet rightly recalls, the canonical justification presented with Praedicate Evangelium did not achieve general consensus. 

Some experts considered that the issue—debated for centuries among theologians and canonists—was resolved in a voluntaristic manner, adopting a doctrinal position without sufficiently broad prior dialogue.

Current cases such as that of Sister Raffaella Petrini—whose initial appointment generated legal questions and was subsequently regularized by Leo XIV through normative modifications—or that of Sister Simona Brambilla, at the head of a dicastery, serve as examples to see the practical application of Francis’s decisions.

A debated issue in the canonical sphere

Ouellet acknowledges that this decision has generated discomfort, since ecclesial tradition has historically linked governance in the Church to the ordained ministry. 

The Second Vatican Council, the cardinal recalls, affirmed the sacramentality of the episcopate (Lumen Gentium, 21) and the relationship between the sacrament of Holy Orders and the functions of teaching, sanctifying, and governing.

However, the prelate emphasizes that this does not imply that the sacrament of Holy Orders is the only source of all exercise of authority. 

In his view, the debate cannot be reduced to a question of legal technique, but requires a broader theological reading.

A reading from pneumatology

In his reflection, Ouellet proposes considering the issue from a «pneumatological» perspective, that is, from the action of the Holy Spirit in the Church. He points out that sacramental theology has extensively developed its Christological dimension, but has paid less attention to the role of the Holy Spirit.

The Spirit, he states, not only accompanies the sacramental acts of the risen Christ, but also acts beyond them through charisms and diverse ministries. 

This charismatic dimension was revalued by the Second Vatican Council after centuries of lesser theological development in this area.

From this perspective, authority in the Church is not exhausted in the power of orders. Canon law already contemplates the possibility that laypeople cooperate in the exercise of the power of governance (c. 129 §2), which allows integrating recognized charisms into administrative, legal, or pastoral tasks that do not require sacramental ordination.

In areas such as administrative management, cultural or political discernment, financial administration, or ecumenical dialogue, it may be appropriate for competence not to depend necessarily on sacramental ordination, but on the suitability and experience of the designated person

Temporary measure or ecclesiological development?

In the final part of his reflection, the Canadian cardinal raises whether it is a provisional concession or an ecclesiological advance. 

In his judgment, Francis’s gesture opened a promising path by recognizing the authority of charisms in communion with hierarchical authority, in line with the conciliar orientations that invite pastors to recognize the ministries and charisms of the laity (Lumen Gentium, 30-33).

Ouellet thus considers that this integration can contribute to renewing the image of pastoral authority, particularly in a context in which clericalism and certain forms of exercise of power disconnected from service have been denounced.

Archbishop declares the trans marriage held in Argentina null

The Archbishop of Corrientes (Argentina), Mons. José Adolfo Larregaín, has declared that the marriage celebrated on January 28 in the Church of Our Lady of Pompeii between two transgender people lacks canonical validity and will be annulled by formal decree. 

The prelate himself reported this in statements collected by Crux.

The ceremony was celebrated according to the Catholic rite by Fr. Fernando Luis Gómez and had as contracting parties Solange Ayala —a person born male who identifies as female— and Isaías Díaz Núñez —a person born female who identifies as male. 

According to Ayala, the couple followed the usual procedures and initially received pastoral approval to celebrate the marriage.

Reaction from the Archdiocese

After the celebration became public, both the Archdiocese of Corrientes and the parish issued statements.

In its statement of February 8, the Archdiocese recalled that marriage, as a sacrament, requires the fulfillment of essential conditions for its validity and lawfulness in accordance with canon law and the tradition of the Church. 

The document pointed out that the omission of such conditions can generate confusion among the faithful and that the archdiocesan see had not received the required ecclesiastical documentation for the formal processing of the case.

Mons. Larregaín explained to Crux that, in situations like this, the marriage is considered null “ipso facto”, that is, by the very fact of not meeting the requirements of “matter and form” necessary for a valid sacrament. 

He added that, although the nullity operates automatically, a formal decree will be issued to provide legal record.

The archbishop emphasized that pastoral welcome to all people, including those who identify as transgender, does not imply the administration of sacraments when the conditions required by the Church are not met. 

He also referred to Pope Francis’s declaration Fiducia Supplicans on blessings, insisting on the need to avoid confusion with the marriage rite.

The Parish and the Pastor

For its part, the Parish of Our Lady of Pompeii did not issue further statements or declarations after the publication of a letter from its pastor, Fernando Luis Gómez, in which they committed to strengthening the interview, preparation, and verification procedures for the contracting parties in order to avoid similar situations in the future.

By the Voice of a Few

According to canon law expert Ricardo Lugo, cited by Crux, the request was initially accepted because, from a civil and registry perspective, the contracting parties were listed with different sexes, which in his opinion would meet the formal requirements both civil and ecclesiastical. 

Lugo stated that the majority of the local community did not express objections, although a minority group filed a complaint with the archbishop, which initiated the canonical procedure.

LGBT Activists Expect a Cultural Transformation

For his part, Sergio Petroni, an LGBT Catholic activist in Buenos Aires, told Crux that changes in the Church regarding the sacramental recognition of same-sex or transgender couples are processes that advance slowly. 

Petroni expressed that he considers it unlikely that the celebration of LGBT marriages will be authorized in the short term, although he defended the active presence of LGBT faithful within ecclesial life as a path to cultural transformation.