Saturday, June 06, 2026

Leo thanks Spain for "respect and fidelity to international law and multilateralism" in his first speech

In his first speech on Spanish soil, delivered this Saturday at the Royal Palace of Madrid before King Felipe VI and Queen Letizia, the highest authorities of the State, representatives of civil society and members of the diplomatic corps, Pope Leo XIV thanked Spain for its “fidelity to international law and multilateralism” and encouraged strengthening dialogue, social friendship and the pursuit of peace.

The Pontiff’s address followed the welcoming words of King Felipe VI, who highlighted Spain’s deep Christian roots, praised the Church’s social and missionary work, and stressed the need to defend human dignity, human rights and democratic values at a time of profound cultural and technological change.

Below is the full text of Leo XIV’s address:

Your Majesties,

Your Royal Highnesses,

distinguished Authorities and members of the Diplomatic Corps,

ladies and gentlemen:

I thank the Lord for this meeting and express my gratitude for the invitation to undertake this apostolic journey to Spain: an itinerary in several stages, each of which will reveal some aspect of the multifaceted richness of a great country that, for nearly two millennia, has welcomed the Word of the Gospel. 

Tradition has always linked the first evangelization of the Iberian Peninsula to the preaching of the Apostle James the Greater. 

This bond carries considerable theological significance, because it expresses the local Church’s awareness of being in continuity with the apostolic mission born at Pentecost. 

The ancient link between the Christian faith and this land, while on the one hand not exhausting the manifold identity of your people, has on the other profoundly shaped its culture and represents a source of hope and guidance amid the challenges that today, as a human family, we must face together. 

I think of the expressions of popular faith that, in every city and town, constitute an authentic drama of salvation in rhythm with the year and in the various contexts of life. 

Together with the artistic and musical heritage, with the many confraternities and charitable associations, they bear witness to the fruitful encounter between Jesus Christ and your people. It is a people full of passion, that loves life and shows it!

I come among you to confirm, encourage and inspire a renewed fidelity of believers to the Gospel, as well as a deeper reconciliation and cooperation among the various forces of this Nation. 

Indeed, your own history suggests that it is not the culture of confrontation, but that of encounter, which generates stability and prosperity. 

The message of peace that in these times, unfortunately, sounds to some naïve and to others provocative, finds welcome among those who do not shut themselves up in prefabricated ideologies, but open themselves to the truth. 

As Pope Francis has taught us, there is, in fact, “a bipolar tension between idea and reality. Reality simply is, the idea is elaborated. Between the two there must be constant dialogue, lest the idea end up separated from reality. It is dangerous to live in the realm of words alone, of images, of sophistry” (Evangelii gaudium, 231). 

Indeed - he concluded - “reality is greater than ideas” (ibid.). Truth is always greater than we are and therefore surprises us and draws us toward paths of purification and reconciliation, in which dialogue with others - and with the Other with a capital O - becomes fundamental.

In this regard, I would like to refer to two figures of this country who, for five centuries, have nourished the life of the Church and the spiritual search of many, even beyond its visible borders. They are John of the Cross and Teresa of Ávila, who became friends in their passion for the divine Mystery. Theirs is a mysticism with open eyes, that is, not detached from history, but on the contrary reaching to the root of questions, to the heart of reality. 

In particular, in interpreting the transformations and enduring the tensions that make our epoch so dark, the theme of night, so dear to Saint John of the Cross, whose Jubilee Year we are celebrating, helps us. In his thirst for light, paradoxically, he learned to appreciate darkness - “O happy night” (Dark Night, 3) - as the time when the soul is freed from what it presumed to know and possess. 

Today too, what frightens us most, what in many provokes the darkness of reason and the violence of emotions, is the unknown, before which the feeling of no longer having maps, of disorientation, can prevail. That is why we also need, in public life, men and women who sense, in the darkness, the light; in the end, a possible beginning, almost the irruption of a truth like a light that still blinds, but which - if we trust and find peace - will gently lead us to itself: “O night that guided me! O night more lovely than the dawn! O night that joined Beloved with lover, lover transformed in the Beloved!” (ibid., 5).

Our age, which apparently is shaken by terrible imbalances and conflicts, cries out from its depths for peace, for a new knowledge of the human person and of his or her inviolable dignity, for the civilization of love (cf. Magnifica humanitas, 186).

Saint Teresa describes this same journey with the image of the interior castle. Advancing from room to room toward the most intimate place - that is, each one toward his or her own heart, sanctuary of truth - the space widens, the mind opens, contradictions are resolved, tensions dissolve, others find their place, the universe becomes home. 

It is not an intimist escape, but a radical openness to the totus Alius et semper Novus, which is realized when we return to ourselves. This dimension of the human being is the reason why religious freedom and freedom of conscience must be protected.

Today, the temptation to gain popularity by fanning the flames of polarization seems to grow rather than diminish; human dignity continues to be violated. That is why we need culture, interiority, a free and quality education, we need transcendence. 

And yet, from these dark nights, men and women faithful to the truth have been impelled to move from room to room until the point where, in conscience, justice and peace embrace. It is from their freedom that we learn to be free.

The Catholic Church is at the service of this thirst of the human heart. Not in an imposing way, but with the evangelical witness supported by a multitude of martyrs and saints, and today it is ready to place itself at the service of the future of a people that seeks reconciliation and peace.

I invite everyone, for love of the truth, to abandon the divisive and polarizing narratives of your social reality and its history, to move from sterile simplifications to a fruitful appreciation of complexity. I see here a specific vocation of Europe, of which Spain is an original and fundamental protagonist. 

It is the gift that the Old Continent can offer the world if it wishes to remain young, for young is the one who feels that he or she still has a future and a mission that continue to challenge. 

To appreciate complexity and study it, to learn not to deny it and to live it as a blessing, to flee from those identitarian approaches that seem to clarify everything but populate the world with ghosts and enemies: this is the task of those who have a great history behind them. 

New technologies have become an artificial environment in which our fundamental choices are tested: within it, prejudices are exacerbated, critical thinking weakens, overbearing interests sow impulses of death. 

On the other hand, good can resist and be communicated.

It is necessary, especially on the part of those who bear economic, political and institutional responsibilities, to make a qualitative leap, a change of course in investments destined for schools, universities and research, for local communities and civil society as seedbeds of participation and cultural mediation. 

Security, which too often we delude ourselves comes from weapons and walls, matures rather by learning to walk alongside the other, to grow together, side by side. Your own history attests to this. The presence of Islam in the Iberian Peninsula, for example, constituted a political, cultural and religious reality of long duration. 

During that period there was not only confrontation, but an attempt to create a space of contact, conversation and dialogue on the meaning of truth among Christians, Muslims and Jews. 

In the school of translators of Alfonso X the Wise, experts belonging to the three religions collaborated in translating the rich Arabic, Greek and Hebrew heritage, contributing to the dissemination of texts such as, among others, those of the philosophers Averroes (1126-1198) and Maimonides (1138-1204). 

In particular, cities such as Córdoba and Toledo became places of mediation between languages, religions and knowledge. But this is the truth told by European cities, their historical stratification, the fabric of solidarity that over the centuries has shaped their differences, transforming inevitable conflicts into points of departure.

As another noble son of this land taught us, in trials and failures it is possible to rethink everything: Ignatius of Loyola had this audacity, giving credit to the desolations and consolations of his heart, in an exercise of discernment and imagination by which he preferred peace to arms and saints to the powerful. He understood that the good to which he felt drawn was not utopian, and then his crisis was transformed into grace. 

The same can happen with the “novelties” that unsettle us today and about which our sensibilities are divided. 

“Let us avoid words that humiliate or confront. Let us choose the clarity that illuminates and the frankness that opens paths. Let us not bless naïve enthusiasms nor feed sterile fears. Rather, let us point to criteria of discernment - the dignity of the person, the universal destination of goods, the option for the poor, care for our common home, peace—and translate them into practices: responsible planning, assessments of human and social impact, inclusion of the most vulnerable, digital literacy, research and industry oriented toward justice and peace” (Magnifica humanitas, 14).

Your Majesties, Your Royal Highnesses, ladies and gentlemen, I express my gratitude to your country for its fidelity to international law and multilateralism, which translates into an active commitment to peace and solidarity among peoples. 

At the same time, I encourage you also to cultivate within yourselves dialogue and social friendship, to take into account the perspectives of the poor and the young when imagining the future, to harmonize the demands of autonomy and unity, and to drive forward the process of European union, not in opposition to other powers, but as a gift for the entire human family.

May God bless Spain!

Why some bishops will not be with Leo XIV in Madrid during the Corpus Christi Mass

The visit of Leo XIV to Spain will leave the image of a Pope celebrating the solemnity of Corpus Christi outside Rome. 

However, several Spanish bishops have decided to remain in their dioceses to preside over the local celebrations of one of the most important feasts in the liturgical calendar, a decision that reflects the deep roots this solemnity maintains in numerous particular Churches.

While numerous bishops will take part in the Mass that the Pontiff will celebrate this Sunday in Madrid’s Plaza de Cibeles, others have considered it a priority to accompany the faithful of their respective dioceses in the traditional Corpus celebrations.

Valencia celebrates the 700th anniversary of its historic Corpus feast

The Archbishop of Valencia, Enrique Benavent, will preside over the pontifical Mass in Valencia Cathedral and will later take part in the traditional Eucharistic procession through the streets of the historic center.

This year Valencia commemorates the 700th anniversary of the celebration of Corpus Christi in the city, a feast popularly known as the festa grossa and considered one of the most emblematic religious expressions in the Valencian calendar.

Galician bishops will accompany their faithful in the solemnity

The bishops of Tui-Vigo and Mondoñedo-Ferrol will also remain in Galicia to preside over the diocesan celebrations.

Antonio Valín will lead the solemn Mass and the subsequent procession through the streets of Vigo, while Fernando García Cadiñanos will take part in the youth vigil with the Pope in Madrid, but will return to his diocese to celebrate Corpus both in Mondoñedo and in Ferrol.

In Cadiñanos’s case, the bishop will later return to Madrid to continue accompanying the Holy Father for the rest of his visit to Spain.

Other prelates have adjusted their schedules to be with the Pope

The presence of Leo XIV in Madrid has led numerous dioceses to reorganize timetables and celebrations to facilitate their bishops’ participation in this extraordinary event.

Some prelates have moved the planned events forward or backward, while others have chosen to combine both responsibilities. 

This is the case of the Bishop of Vitoria, Juan Carlos Elizalde, and the Bishop of Cuenca, José María Yanguas, who will attend the morning celebration presided over by the Pope in Madrid and will later return to their dioceses to preside over the Corpus celebrations in the afternoon.

A sign of the vitality of the particular Churches

The coincidence of the papal visit and the solemnity of Corpus Christi has forced many bishops to make exceptional pastoral decisions. 

Far from being interpreted as an absence from the Pope, the decision of some prelates to remain in their dioceses reflects the importance this feast continues to hold in numerous Spanish cities, where Eucharistic processions remain among the most significant moments of annual religious life.

Visit of Leo XIV revives the historic ties between the Royal Guard and the Swiss Guard

The apostolic visit of Leo XIV to Spain has also served to recall a little-known but decades-long relationship between the Spanish Royal Guard and the Pontifical Swiss Guard. Coinciding with the Pope’s presence in the country, the Royal Guard has recovered historical images of some of the institutional encounters held with the corps responsible for protecting the Roman Pontiff.

Through a post shared on its social media, the Royal Guard has sought to highlight the bonds built around tradition, ceremonial practice, and institutional service - elements that both units share despite performing different functions.

A historic encounter in the Vatican

Among the recovered images are those from May 2006, when a detachment of the Halberdier Section of the Royal Guard took part in events organized in Vatican City to mark the swearing-in ceremony and the 500th anniversary of the Pontifical Swiss Guard.

That visit helped strengthen the relationship between two of Europe’s most emblematic ceremonial units. 

The Spanish halberdiers shared ceremonies and formations with the Swiss Guards, whose mission to protect the Pope dates back to 1506.

The Swiss Guard marched in Madrid

The relationship between the two institutions became visible again years later. 

In July 2014, a section of the Pontifical Swiss Guard traveled to Madrid to participate in the solemn changing of the guard held at the Royal Palace.

The image of both guards sharing one of the representative ceremonies of the Spanish Royal Household attested to a collaboration marked by mutual respect and admiration for traditions that have remained alive through the centuries.

A Vatican treasure in the Royal Guard Museum

The Royal Guard’s post also highlights a singular item preserved in its Historical Room: the only official uniform of the Pontifical Swiss Guard on display outside Vatican City.

This garment forms part of the Royal Guard Museum’s collection and constitutes one of the most visible testimonies of the relationship between the two institutions. 

Its presence also allows the Spanish public to view one of the most recognizable images of the papal environment.

Tradition, service, and continuity

The recovery of these photographs coincides with a papal visit that is generating numerous historic images for the Church in Spain. 

The presence of Leo XIV has also provided an opportunity to recall the institutional ties built over the years between the Spanish Crown and the Holy See through two of their most representative units.

Pope Leo to meet with abuse victims and migrants during Spain visit

POPE LEO XIV has arrived in Madrid for a seven-day visit to Spain, which will include a meeting with abuse victims and migrants.

As the pontiff began the papal visit, he told reporters that sexual abuse within the Catholic Church “is still an open wound”.

During his visit, Leo will also bless the new tower of the Sagrada Família Basilica in Barcelona, now the world’s tallest church.

On Sunday, around a million people are set to attend a Mass in the city centre.

And on Monday, Real Madrid’s Santiago Bernabéu Stadium will host a papal event.

Meanwhile, Leo acknowledged he is competing with another VIP in Madrid this weekend, with Puerto Rican sensation Bad Bunny performing two shows of his 10-concert Spanish tour in the capital.

“If they are confronted with the question ‘Do you want to go see Bad Bunny or do you want to go to see the pope?’ I think many will see Bad Bunny,” Leo said.

“But I think there will also be a few here to see the pope. And that says something, you know.”

The papal visit started with a welcome at the royal palace in Madrid from Spain’s King Felipe VI and Queen Letizia.

Leo will end his first day in Spain with a prayer vigil with young people in the Plaza de Lima.

Meanwhile, Leo’s visit to Spain will include a meeting with abuse victims.

This was confirmed on Friday following media reports in Spain.

The Vatican’s press office said the meeting was organised by the Spanish Church and that “further information may be provided after the meeting itself, with respect for the victims, their wishes, and their privacy”.

Vatican News has remarked that the “issue of abuse remains a painful one for the Spanish Church” and that in recent years “various initiatives aimed at prevention and reparation” have been implemented.

Some 200,000 minors are estimated to have suffered such abuse in Spain since 1940, according to a 2023 report from Spain’s national ombudsman.

In March of this year, Pedro Sanchez’s government and the Catholic Church in Spain signed an agreement to compensate victims.

Vatican News described this as an attempt by the Church to “address this painful reality with truth and justice”.

Later next week, on Thursday, Leo will visit the Canary Islands and meet with migrants and the organisations helping them.

The Canaries – Spanish islands off the coast of West Africa - have become the main entry point for irregular migrants into Spain after long and dangerous trips from Africa.

The UN’s International Organisation for Migration estimates 1,172 migrants died or went missing along the route in 2025 – a figure only slightly lower than the 1,215 people in 2024.

Spain under prime minister Pedro Sanchez has a relatively liberal immigration policy.

But his government is under pressure from the Popular Party and extreme-right Vox, the third political force in the country, which sums up its programme with a slogan calling for the “defence of Spain, the family and life”.

The late Pope Francis had wanted to visit migrants in the Canary Islands, but illness prevented this journey.

Leo will now make this journey instead, alongside Sanchez, to honour thousands of migrants who have died trying to reach Europe.

Ousseynou Fall, who fled Senegal and now lives on Gran Canaria, had a letter delivered to Francis, via a Spanish journalist, inviting the late pontiff to the Canaries.

He is a former fisherman who now works as a chef.

Fall told Vatican News: “If I could speak with the Pope, the first thing I would ask is that he help us do much more for migrants who die along the way.

“People who wanted to come here but never made it. My brother also died on the journey. And so did many others.”

‘Polarised country’

The papal visit comes as Sanchez is under attack from critics over several corruption scandals involving his inner circle.

His wife, brother, former top Socialist officials, and ex-prime minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero are embroiled in separate cases.

The scandals have embarrassed Sanchez, who took power in 2018 promising to clean up Spanish politics after the Popular Party became mired in its own corruption affair.

Sanchez has rebuffed opposition demands to resign, insisting his minority coalition will see out its term until the next scheduled vote in 2027.

Leo “is arriving in a polarised country where different players could try to take advantage of the visit”, said Rafael Rubio, the Church’s spokesman for the Spanish visit.

“Ensuring that his message reaches everyone and speaks to everyone is a major challenge,” he said.

Some 15,000 members of the national police and Guardia Civil are being deployed for the visit, alongside local police forces.

It is the US-born pope’s first trip to an EU country outside of Italy and the first state visit to Spain by a pope since Benedict XVI came in 2010.

Pope acknowledges stiff competition with Bad Bunny this weekend in Spain

Pope Leo XIV acknowledged as he headed to Spain that he is competing with another VIP in Madrid this weekend – Puerto Rican sensation Bad Bunny is performing two shows of his 10-concert Spanish tour in the capital.

Speaking to reporters aboard the papal plane, Leo acknowledged the Bad Bunny draw when he referred to anecdotal reports of a newfound spiritual awakening especially among young people in Spain.

The American pope said he understood that young adults are sensing a lack of meaning in their lives and mused that his visit might help “awaken” something in them.

“If they are confronted with the question ‘Do you want to go see Bad Bunny or do you want to go to see the pope?’ I think many will see Bad Bunny,” Leo said.

“But I think there will also be a few here to see the pope. And that says something, you know.”

Leo is opening a week-long visit to Spain that, after Madrid, will also take him to Barcelona and the Canary Islands.

He is hoping to bring a message of unity in a country polarised with political and church scandals.

Leo was also asked about news that plans are moving ahead for his beloved Chicago Bears to move to Hammond, Indiana.

The board of the team voted this week to move forward with a stadium development project in Hammond.

Asked if he had any words of consolation for Illinois, the Chicago-born pope quipped: “That’s out of my pay (scale).”

In other sporting comments, Leo confirmed he would root for the US in the upcoming World Cup but showed his true team colours when asked about whether he would root in Spain for Real Madrid or Barcelona.

“That’s easy,” he said.

“The pope is for all teams, but Prevost is Real Madrid,” he said, referring to his birth name.

Friday, June 05, 2026

Sacraments administered by convicted priest still valid, ‘prayers focus on victims,’ says bishop

A Texas bishop is assuring the faithful their sacraments remain valid after the priest who administered them was sentenced to life imprisonment for sexual assaults of several women in his spiritual care — with the criminal trial allegedly revealing information unreported to the diocese.

Life Sentence Handed Down

Bishop Daniel E. Garcia of Austin released a June 3 pastoral message a day after Father Anthony Odiong received life in prison plus two 20-year prison terms and $30,000 in fines.

The 57-year-old priest had been convicted of one charge of sexual assault in the first degree and two in the second degree in a May 29 verdict delivered at the 19th State District Court in Waco, Texas.

Under Texas law, clergy abuse of adults in their pastoral care is a felony. Other states, such as Georgia, have also criminalized such conduct.

The case — which has been extensively covered since 2023 by investigative journalist Ramon Antonio Vargas for The Guardian — highlights the Catholic Church’s ongoing challenges in addressing clergy sexual predation of adults in situations where they are vulnerable, particularly in relationships of pastoral care or spiritual guidance.

Father Odiong, who had pleaded not guilty on May 27, will serve the two 20-year prison terms concurrently. 

Judge Thomas West gave the priest credit for time served in the McLennan County Jail, where Father Odiong had been incarcerated since 2024. He cannot seek parole until he has been credited with at least 30 years of his sentence.

Bishop responds, assures faithful

In his message, which was posted to the Diocese of Austin’s website, Bishop Garcia said he was “grateful for the investigation and work of the local enforcement officials,” with whom he said diocesan officials had cooperated during the investigation.

“I also want to thank the victims for testifying,” said Bishop Garcia.

“I have been informed that an appeal is likely,” he noted, adding, “We will continue our prayers for a just result and cooperate as necessary.”

He stressed that “the sacraments administered by Fr. Odiong … were and remain valid.”

Referencing the teaching of St. Augustine, he said, “The validity of the Sacrament depends on Christ and the form, matter, and intent of the Sacrament, not on the moral status of the minister.”

Bishop Garcia also clarified that “Anthony Odiong remains a priest but is without faculties to generally engage in priestly ministry.”

Questions over what the diocese knew

The bishop acknowledged in his statement that “there have been questions and speculation about what the diocese knew in 2012 when Fr. Odiong left the diocese regarding any inappropriate behavior on his part at that time.”

The bishop said that “while the diocese did receive allegations of misconduct before Fr. Odiong left on his own, the information known to us at the time did not indicate the level of criminality and egregious nature of the details revealed in court testimony.”

Bishop Garcia noted that “allegations of criminal sexual assault were first reported to local law enforcement by the victims in 2024.”

In a December 2023 article for The Guardian, Vargas noted that Father Odiong had been allowed to minister in the Diocese of Austin in 2006, led at the time by then-Bishop Gregory M. Aymond, who was appointed archbishop of New Orleans in 2009. 

(Archbishop Aymond’s canonically required retirement was accepted in 2026, with Archbishop James F. Checchio, who had been appointed coadjutor in 2025, succeeding him.)

In a May 29 statement provided to OSV News shortly after the trial verdict was announced, the Archdiocese of New Orleans — which called Father Odiong’s actions “reprehensible” — confirmed the priest arrived in that archdiocese “in 2015 at the request of the Bishop of Uyo in Nigeria as he continued the studies he began in Rome.”

Then-Bishop Aymond had received “no complaints” against the priest in the Diocese of Austin, said the Archdiocese of New Orleans.

However, the archdiocese confirmed Father Odiong had been removed from ministry and as pastor of St. Anthony of Padua Parish in Luling, Louisiana, in 2023 “following a series of inflammatory comments made from the altar and additional information reported to the archdiocese.”

The archdiocese said its officials “first learned of the allegation he fathered a child through media coverage of his criminal trial in Texas.”

Canonical proceedings ahead

Bishop Garcia said Father Odiong’s guilty verdict and sentence mark “the first of potentially many steps that will follow including his appeal, civil and pastoral conversations with the victims, and canonical inquiries or proceedings.”  

The bishop said he has been “asked if canonical proceedings will begin to seek the dismissal of Fr. Odiong from the clerical state” and admitted, “This is a question that I, alone cannot answer.”

Bishop Garcia said he “must seek counsel from the proper dicastery in the Holy See as well as the bishop of Fr. Odiong’s home Diocese of Uyo.”

He noted, “It is typical that canonical proceedings are not initiated or are paused while criminal or civil litigation occurs, so as not to jeopardize the fair and equitable administration of justice. It is my intention to make the proper inquiries.”

A prayer for healing

Bishop Garcia said his “prayers focus on the victims, their families, law enforcement, investigators, and the community of the faithful in the diocese, especially in the Waco and West areas.”

“I pray that this process has brought them some peace,” he said. “The longer process of healing continues. I also pray for God’s wisdom and mercy to be bestowed on all who so desperately need His mercy and consolation.”

Pope Leo XIV will visit the UNESCO headquarters in September during his trip to France

The Holy See has confirmed that Leo XIV will visit the UNESCO headquarters in Paris next September, as part of his apostolic journey to France. 

The news was announced following the audience the Pontiff granted this Friday to the Director-General of the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO), Khaled Ahmed El-Enany Ali Ezz.

According to the Holy See Press Office, the head of the international organization was subsequently received by Cardinal Pietro Parolin, Secretary of State, accompanied by Archbishop Paul Richard Gallagher, Secretary for Relations with States and International Organizations.

The Vatican highlights the good relationship with UNESCO

During the meetings held at the Vatican, both sides emphasized the good relations existing between the Holy See and UNESCO, a cooperation that will once again take center stage with the visit Leo XIV will make to the international organization during his stay in France.

Education, artificial intelligence, and dialogue between cultures

The interlocutors also addressed various current issues of concern to both the Holy See and the international organization.

According to the official communiqué, a significant part of the conversation was devoted to the need to promote the integral development of the person through education, an issue that Leo XIV has repeatedly highlighted as a priority for the Church in the contemporary world.

Likewise, the opportunities and challenges posed by the development of artificial intelligence were discussed, a topic in which the current Pontiff has shown particular interest since the beginning of his ministry.

Peace and the protection of cultural heritage

Another highlighted issue was the importance of fostering dialogue between cultures as a privileged instrument for building peace.

The Holy See and UNESCO agreed, the communiqué states, in pointing out that education for dialogue is especially necessary in an international context marked by conflicts, geopolitical tensions, and growing social fractures.

They also stressed the need to protect the cultural heritage of humanity, a recurring concern for both the Church and the international organization, especially in light of the threats arising from wars, extremism, and the deliberate destruction of cultural assets.

A new international dimension of the pontificate

Leo XIV’s upcoming visit to UNESCO will allow for an assessment of some of the priorities beginning to take shape in his international action: the promotion of human dignity through education, the ethical use of new technologies, and the defense of culture as an instrument of encounter among peoples.

Cardinal Fernández's interpretation of the Jon Sobrino case: a reading in the light of Ratzinger

The conference by Cardinal Víctor Manuel Fernández on “contextual theology” raises important theological and ecclesiological questions, especially regarding the interpretation of the Notification issued in 2006 by the then Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith on the works of Jon Sobrino, under the authority of the then Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger.

Although Cardinal Fernández seeks to portray the Notification as excessively restrictive or disconnected from Latin American pastoral reality, a careful reading of the document shows precisely the opposite: the Congregation’s central concern was not to deny the importance of the poor, of historical experience, or of cultural context, but to preserve the objective primacy of divine Revelation over any sociological, political, or existential mediation.

The fundamental issue was never whether the poor possess theological significance. 

The Catholic tradition has always recognized this. 

The Gospel itself places the poor at the center of Christ’s mission. 

The Church’s social doctrine, especially from Pope Leo XIII to Pope Leo XIV, constantly reaffirms the preferential option for the poor.

The problem identified by the Congregation concerned a methodological inversion: when the historical experience of the poor ceases to be an object illuminated by Revelation and instead becomes the determining hermeneutical principle of Christological faith itself.

The 2006 Notification correctly insisted that “the fundamental theological locus is solely the faith of the Church.” 

This statement does not exclude historical reality but recalls a classic principle of Catholic theology: divine Revelation ontologically precedes all human experience. 

The faith of the Church does not arise from historical experience; rather, historical experience must be judged, illuminated, and purified by the Revelation received from the Apostles.

On this point, the Congregation’s position finds solid grounding in the Dogmatic Constitution Dei Verbum, which teaches that the deposit of faith was entrusted to the Church and transmitted apostolically. 

Theology does not create Revelation from human experience; it deepens the understanding of the Revelation already given by God in Christ.

Cardinal Fernández cites the instruction Libertatis Conscientia to argue that the Congregation had previously admitted a theology “starting from a particular experience.” 

However, such an interpretation requires precision.

The 1986 instruction legitimately recognizes that concrete historical experiences can help to make explicit aspects of the Word of God that have not yet been fully perceived. 

Nevertheless, this does not mean granting historical experience the status of a constitutive norm of faith. 

The document itself insists that all reflection must remain rigorously subordinate to Revelation, the Magisterium, and apostolic tradition.

There is, therefore, a decisive difference between:

* a theology illuminated by historical experience; 

and 

* a theology whose normativity arises from historical experience. 

The Congregation rejected the second hypothesis.

This point is particularly important because certain currents of liberation theology ended up absorbing Marxist categories of historical analysis, in which social praxis tends to become the criterion of theological truth. 

It was precisely against this risk that the Congregation intervened repeatedly in the documents Libertatis Nuntius and Libertatis Conscientia.

Furthermore, Cardinal Fernández’s reference to Benedict XVI’s phrase “whoever closes his eyes to his neighbor also becomes blind to God” does not contradict the position of the Notification. On the contrary: Benedict XVI never claimed that human suffering could replace or relativize the revealed foundation of faith. 

Throughout his theological work, Ratzinger vigorously insisted on the priority of the Logos over praxis, of Revelation over experience, and of apostolic faith over transient sociological constructs.

Also noteworthy is the fact that Fernández himself acknowledges that he later needed to reformulate his positions, explicitly reaffirming that the faith of the Church is “the most solid and profound foundation” for seeing the poor as God sees them. 

This correction aligns precisely with what the Congregation sought to safeguard from the beginning.

In summary, the Notification on Jon Sobrino did not represent a rejection of the preferential option for the poor, nor a denial of the historical dimension of theology. 

Its aim was to protect the integrity of Catholic Christology against the risk of subordinating the mystery of Christ to variable historical categories.

The Catholic tradition has always recognized that the poor evangelize the Church, challenge its conscience, and manifest in a privileged way the suffering face of Christ. 

However, they do not replace apostolic Revelation as the constitutive foundation of faith. 

The Church contemplates Christ in the poor precisely because it first received Him in the Revelation transmitted by the Apostles.

Separating the option for the poor from the priority of Revelation inevitably leads to a sociological reduction of Christianity. 

On the contrary, when the poor are viewed in the light of apostolic faith, charity and social justice find their true supernatural and Christological foundation.

Cobo advances the axes of the papal visit: dialogue, migration and the common good

Pope Leo XIV’s visit to Spain is surrounded by notable anticipation, not only within the Church but also in broad sectors of society. 

This was stated by Cardinal José Cobo, Archbishop of Madrid, in an interview given to La Nación just hours before the Pontiff’s arrival. 

As host of the first leg of the trip, Cobo explained that the announcement of the visit sparked a reaction that even surprised the organizers themselves. 

“We live in a time when people feel discouraged and very worried, and when we said the Pope was coming, we were the ones who were surprised,” he affirmed. 

According to the cardinal, the expectation is not limited to ecclesial circles: “Suddenly we noticed that institutions, foundations, and the civil world showed great anticipation.”

For the Archbishop of Madrid, one of the reasons for this interest lies in the Pope’s ability to bring together diverse sensibilities in a moment marked by polarization. 

“Doing something together that rises above politics, ideologies, and narrow interests - doing something together - excites people,” he said. “Many people have mobilized for this visit,” he added.

A Pope of Reflection and Firm Decisions

Cobo has known Robert Prevost personally since before his election to the papacy. 

Both were created cardinals by Francis in September 2023 and worked together for years at the Dicastery for Bishops, then led by Leo XIV.

Describing him, the Spanish cardinal especially highlighted his spiritual profile and his approach to decision-making. 

“He is a great Augustinian, a very profound man; he has deeply integrated Augustinian spirituality,” he noted. 

He also emphasized his capacity for listening and discernment: “When something is said to him, one senses that he is internalizing and understanding it, and if not, he asks.” 

In Cobo’s view, one of Leo XIV’s main qualities is that “he is a courageous man who knows how to make decisions at the right moment” and “manages timing very well.”

Asked about the international presence the Pontiff has gained during this first year of his pontificate, the Madrid archbishop considered that his voice has gradually gained space on the world stage. 

“The Pope is carving out his space; after a year, both he and his voice are also occupying a special place in the world,” he stated.

The Congress and the Need to “Raise Our Gaze”

One of the most notable moments of the trip will be Leo XIV’s address to the Congress of Deputies. 

The visit comes at a particularly delicate political moment for the Spanish government, marked by various corruption scandals.

However, Cobo preferred to focus on the institutional dimension of politics. “We have the opportunity to raise our gaze,” he said, referencing the papal visit’s motto. 

In his opinion, the Pope’s speech can serve to “thank politicians, because there are good politicians and people who are giving their lives to politics with a capital P.”

The cardinal insisted that the Church’s mission is to point to broader horizons beyond daily confrontation. 

“How good it is that we can have a horizon, that the Church also extends its hand to all those working for the common good and for a better society,” he noted.

Immigration as the Challenge of Our Time

The migration issue will be one of the central topics of the final leg of the trip, which will take Leo XIV to the Canary Islands. 

On this subject, Cobo defended the need to respond to those who already live and work in Spain without fully regularized status.

“There is a sector that is already building citizenship, paying taxes, working here, and yet has no rights,” he said. In his view, these are people “who have come and are building our cities and our country.”

At the same time, he acknowledged that the migration issue is not limited to regularization. 

“This is not the whole problem of migration, because there is also the issue of arrival flows, the regularization of borders, and the stance we must take from Brussels,” he explained. In any case, he maintained that the Church sees immigration as one of the great issues of our time. 

“Since Pope Francis, the Church has directly confronted the migration challenge as a reality of our century,” he stated.

Abuses, Human Dignity, and Challenges for the Church

During the interview, the archbishop also referred to the possibility that Leo XIV might meet with abuse victims during his stay in Spain. 

While avoiding confirming specific meetings, he noted that “there are proposals” and recalled that the Pope’s private audiences are usually announced only after they have taken place.

Regarding the work carried out by the Spanish Church in this area, he highlighted the experience of the Archdiocese of Madrid. 

“For eight years we have had a project to assist victims” that addresses not only sexual abuse of minors but also “abuses of conscience and all the ramifications they entail.” 

According to him, this reality “is demanding integral care for individuals.”

Speaking about the challenges currently facing the Church in Spain, Cobo placed growing social polarization at the forefront. 

“We have a long list,” he acknowledged. Among the most important challenges, he mentioned “confrontation, the ideologization of everything,” and the need to recover a shared reflection on the common good and human dignity. 

“Looking at society through the lens of human dignity” is especially necessary, he said, “at a time when human rights are beginning to be restricted and democracy is being eroded from many angles.”

A Church Different from That of 2011

The last papal visit to Spain took place in 2011 with Benedict XVI. Since then, both society and the Church have undergone profound transformations.

“The Church and society have changed a great deal,” Cobo stated. “We have gone through a coronavirus, a democratic evolution, and a growing sense of despair.” 

Nevertheless, he believes one element remains unchanged. “What remains - and in Spain this is certainly true - is enthusiasm for the Pope,” he affirmed.

Further infant remains uncovered at former mother-and-baby home

The team excavating the site of a former mother-and-baby institution has found a further eight sets of infant remains, bringing the total number recovered to 77.

Experts who are carrying out the dig at Tuam in County Galway have published their latest regular update.

The institution for unmarried mothers and their children was in operation from 1925 until 1961.

It came to international attention in 2014, after local historian Catherine Corless discovered there were 796 death certificates for children and babies who died there, but no burial records.

The remains recovered were in an area on the western edge of the site, which has been identified in historical documents as a "burial ground", although there were no markers on the surface to indicate there were graves beneath.

The Irish government has commissioned an agency known as the Office of the Director of Authorised Intervention, Tuam (ODAIT), to carry out the excavation, which began in July 2025.

ODAIT's latest update covers its work in April and May of this year.

During that period, the team found a further eight sets of infant remains, in coffins.

Other hand excavations have revealed what the experts are describing as "evidence of additional potential graves of child or infant size".

Work has also begun to excavate soil deposits within an underground "vaulted structure".

ODAIT said it believed the structure "formed part of a wastewater management system" which was constructed when there was a workhouse on the site from 1841 until 1918.

The agency said it was "unclear" whether the wastewater system was in operation at the time the mother-and-baby institution was operating.

ODAIT has also recovered some separate bones, belonging to adults and infants, which are not from the sets of remains which have already been recovered.

Scientists are finding out whether the bones are from the time of the mother-and-baby institution, or from an earlier period.

Full excavation has not yet begun in the area of a memorial garden, where in 2017 investigators found "significant quantities" of remains" in underground chambers.

'Disrespectful and unacceptable'

ODAIT is taking DNA samples from relatives of people were in the institution to try to help to identify bodies.

It has collected 22 further samples, bringing the total number to 55.

A team has travelled to the US, the UK and Canada to meet families, and also organisations representing the Irish diaspora.

The institution at Tuam was owned by Galway County Council and run by a religious order, the Bon Secours Sisters.

The order has previously acknowledged that children and infants were "buried in a disrespectful and unacceptable way", and apologised.

It has contributed £2.14m towards the cost of the excavation.

Galway County Council also apologised for "failing mothers and children" after the inquiry report in 2021.

The excavation is expected to continue until 2027, with follow-up work expected to last several more years.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

'A kind of revelation' 

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Relationship with the sisters 'built over time'

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

The long path to a deal

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

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

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

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

The report also examined 487 known cases.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Mr Monaghan objected to the submission.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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