Thursday, February 26, 2026

Priest who married a trans couple in Argentina leaves the province on the recommendation of his superiors

Friar Fernando Luis Gómez, the priest who officiated the religious marriage of an LGBT collective militant and her partner in the Nuestra Señora de Pompeya parish, in Corrientes, left the province on the recommendation of his superiors amid the controversy unleashed by that pastoral decision.

According to the Argentine newspaper Clarín, the religious —belonging to the Order of Friars Minor— left Corrientes after being at the center of a strong ecclesial and media debate, following formal complaints raised by some faithful to the Archdiocese regarding the wedding celebrated on January 28.

From the parish, they limited themselves to communicating that “Friar Fernando will be out of Corrientes until the end of the month”, without offering further details on his canonical situation or officially confirming the opening of a file.

In the center of the controversy

The case prompted the direct intervention of the Archbishop of Corrientes, Monsignor José Alfredo Larregain, who recalled in a statement that sacramental marriage requires essential conditions for its validity and lawfulness according to Canon Law and the tradition of the Church.

The Archdiocese attributed to the priest the responsibility for not having submitted the corresponding documentation for the marriage processing, and stated that it would act “ex officio” in accordance with canonical norms, initiating the nullity process.

In that context, Father Gómez’s temporary departure appears as a measure aimed at defusing the situation while the ecclesiastical authority evaluates the next steps.

Background and stance of the religious

The couple assured they had not received any official communication from either the parish or the Archdiocese regarding the nullity of the sacrament. 

In radio statements, Solange Ayala (the biological man) defended the celebration of the union and maintained that they acted “with transparency” from the first moment. 

According to her version, they exposed their situation to the priest and he even would have previously consulted the archbishop, who would not have raised initial objections. 

“We based ourselves on Canon Law, which speaks of the biology of woman and man”, she affirmed, insisting that they did not fail to tell the truth.

The young person also questioned the possibility of an annulment, pointing out that “if it were easy to annul a marriage, divorce should exist within the Church”, and recalled the evangelical expression that “what God has joined together, no human being must separate”. 

Additionally, she announced that together with her partner they are willing to dialogue with the archbishop and will seek to meet with Father Gómez to express their support

Pope Leo’s visit to Spain could spark a much-needed ‘spiritual revival’

With the Vatican confirming Pope Leo XIV’s trip to Spain in June, plans for the upcoming visit are full steam ahead, the organizer of the visit said.

Speaking to OSV News Feb. 25, Yago de La Cierva, who was appointed by the Spanish bishops’ conference as the general coordinator of the visit, said he is hopeful that, like past papal visits, Pope Leo will come with a powerful message that “will be a revival” for the people of Spain.

“I would say the real effects of any papal visit can be measured in a spiritual change, in a spiritual revival, in people, in individuals, in families, in communities, in cities,” he said. “This is our hope, and we are working hard so that this visit is not just superficial, but that it goes deep into the souls of many people.”

The pope’s visit, he added, would also serve as an “important push to recover our identity as a welcoming society that is (concerned) for the underprivileged and those who are vulnerable.”

Acknowledging that the country faces political, economic and social tensions, de La Cierva said many hope the pope will help heal divisions and encourage unity.

“We really, really hope that the pope can give us not only guidance and suggestions to improve the situation, but also to put like a balsamic oil on many wounds and will be able to tell all Spaniards, ‘Hey, you can do better. You can work together even if you don’t think in the same way.'”

In a statement published Feb. 25, the Vatican press office also confirmed several other papal visits, including Monaco, Algeria, Cameroon, Angola and Equatorial Guinea.

Logistical Challenges

Although Vatican spokesman Matteo Bruni said the program of the June 6-12 trip “will be announced in due course,” the destination cities — Madrid, Barcelona and the Canary Islands — were first confirmed in January by Cardinal José Cobo of Madrid, who, along with a delegation of Spanish bishops, met with the Secretariat of State to discuss initial plans for the visit.

The last time a pope visited Spain was in 2011, when Pope Benedict XVI traveled to Madrid for World Youth Day, where he presided over the final Mass attended by over a million young people.

De La Cierva noted that the preparation period for Pope Leo’s visit is dramatically shorter, at just over three months.

“The main difficulty is that for World Youth Day, normally you have two years to prepare for the trip. And this time, we are 101 days ahead, which (means) that everything is much more complicated,” he said.

Despite the logistical hurdles, de La Cierva praised the cooperation from public officials.

“After contacting the local authorities, the mayor … of the Madrid community, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, it has been a full collaboration,” he told OSV News, expressing hope that the visit “will also be a manifestation of teamwork.”

Madrid, he said, is expected to draw Catholics from across Spain because of its accessibility and central location.

“We told every diocese in the country that they are welcome to come,” de La Cierva said. While travel to the Canary Islands or Barcelona may prove more difficult, “I think Madrid will be a place in which many people from around the country will come and will attend the events.”

“It would be a really, really joyful gathering,” he added.

Initially the iconic Bernabeu soccer stadium was supposed to be a venue for youth vigil, but organizers say its 85,000 capacity is too small for the estimated 300,000 young people expected as they’re working with local authorities to find a bigger space. 

Bernabeu may be used for another papal event however, OSV News was told.

De La Cierva confirmed to OSV News that a Vatican delegation will arrive in Madrid March 2 and visit “places in which the local bishops have asked the pope to meet people.”

The delegation will then head to Las Palmas and Tenerife on the Canary Islands, before finally visiting Barcelona. 

The pope is expected to mark the June 10 centenary of the death of Antoni Gaudí — the legendary architect of one of the world’s most iconic churches, the Basilica of the Holy Family in Barcelona, known in Spanish as Sagrada Familia.

A historic moment

The upper arm of the cross atop the tower of Jesus Christ was installed Feb. 20. 

At over 564 feet in height, the tower makes the basilica the tallest Catholic church in the world, surpassing the Basilica of Our Lady of Peace in Yamoussoukro, Ivory Coast, which stands at 518 feet.

It also surpasses the Ulmer Münster Lutheran Church in Germany, which stands at 530 feet, making it the tallest church of any denomination in the world.

Construction of the basilica began in 1882, and it is considered a masterpiece of Gaudí, a Catholic whose cause for sainthood is underway.

A UNESCO World Heritage site, the basilica faced numerous delays and challenges in its over 140-year construction, including the Spanish Civil War and the COVID-19 pandemic.

While the main building is expected to be completed in 2026, coinciding with the 100th anniversary of Gaudi’s death, work on statues and other areas of the basilica is expected to continue until 2034.

De La Cierva told OSV News Pope Leo’s presence would be a key event that represents a full-circle moment.

“I think that would be one of the main events of the trip to Spain because the altar was blessed by Pope Benedict XIV in 2010. And this is like the close of the circle with this magnificent basilica,” he said.

In Pope Francis’ footsteps

Another full-circle moment, according to de La Cierva, would be Pope Leo’s visit to the Canary Islands, a trip his predecessor, Pope Francis, had wanted to make.

The archipelago, which is geographically in Africa, is the destination each year for thousands of sub-Saharan migrants seeking a better future. They arrive in poor and fragile boats called “callucos,” and many die in transit.

Pope Leo, he said, is continuing “the legacy of Pope Francis,” who he said had “expressed his wish to go there because it has been the center of an important element in immigration.”

“I think Pope Leo is trying to continue the path of Pope Francis when he made his historical trip to Lampedusa,” de La Cierva said.

“And this is probably his intention of putting in front of Europe the need to be a welcoming society and accepting people as human beings and not as a threat. That we have to deal with each one of them as a person, not as a menace,” he said.

“I think this is why the pope is visiting the Canary Islands for the first time in history,” he said, adding “everybody” in Spain is “so happy” with the trip.

“We were hoping for a papal visit for 15 years. And for a Catholic country it is a lot,” he said, emphasizing that many generous donors are willing to support the trip, fully financed by “the Church, faithful and people of goodwill.”

St. John Paul II visited Spain five times, including the iconic 1989 Santiago de Compostela World Youth Day, with Pope Benedict returning twice — in 2010, and 2011 — for World Youth Day in Madrid.

Notre Dame: Pro-abortion professor withdraws as institute director

An outspoken abortion advocate will not assume the directorship of an academic institute at the University of Notre Dame, following widespread condemnation of the appointment by students, university donors, and bishops.

Susan Ostermann, a researcher and professor at the University of Notre Dame’s Keough School of Global Affairs, had been announced as the incoming director of the Liu Institute for Asia and Asian Studies within the Keough School, and was due to assume the role in July.

However, in an email to faculty Feb. 26, the dean of the Keough School informed said that Ostermann had “decided not to move forward as director” of the institute, following widespread criticism of her appointment.

Announcing her decision not to go forward in the role, Dean Mary Gallagher praised Ostermann as a “respected scholar of South Asian politics and regulatory governance whose research and teaching reflect the intellectual rigor and interdisciplinary excellence at the heart of both the Liu Institute and the Keough School of Global Affairs.”

“I am grateful for her willingness to serve and her thoughtfulness in approaching this decision,” Gallagher said.

Sources close to the university told The Pillar that public opposition to Ostermann’s promotion to lead the Liu Institute had come from students and faculty, as well as a number of bishops from around the country, led by local Bishop Kevin Rhoades of Fort Wayne-South Bend, but also privately from trustees and major benefactors of the university, including of the Liu Institute itself.

One senior member of the university community described donors as “livid” in response to Ostermann’s appointment as director, announced in January.

Multiple sources close to the university’s senior administration also told The Pillar that the appointment — and reaction to it — had caught Notre Dame president Fr. Robert Dowd “completely by surprise” and that he had not been aware of Ostermann’s promotion or its likely significance to the university community and public image.

Sources close to the president’s office told The Pillar that Dowd had been “blindsided” by the strength of opposition to Ostermann’s nomination and the number of serving bishops who had contacted his office to voice their concerns. “And it was many more [bishops] than made their names public,” said one university source. In addition to the bishops who spoke out publicly against the appointment, nearly a dozen others raised private objections to Dowd, sources said.

The same sources said that the appointment had been passed by the office of the university provost, John McGreevy, who did not raise concerns about Ostermann’s nomination.

Ostermann has worked as a professor at Notre Dame since 2017, her appointment to a position of leadership prompted widespread backlash, due to her extensive record of advocating vocally for legal abortion and her criticism of the pro-life movement.

Among the objections to Ostermann’s appointment, two professors affiliated with the Liu Institute resigned in protest, and the university’s Right to Life executive board called for the appointment to be rescinded.

Ostermann, a public advocate of legal abortion has written or co-written numerous op-eds on the subject in recent years, defending abortion as critical for the freedom and wellbeing of women, and criticizing pregnancy help centers as deceptive and pro-life laws as oppressive.

In one instance in 2022, the previous university president, Fr. John Jenkins CSC wrote an open letter to the Chicago Tribune disavowing Ostermann’s views and distancing the university from them, while also defending the principle of academic freedom.

Ostermann has said that abortion respects the dignity of women and that laws against abortion “have their roots in white supremacy and racism,” and has made the argument that abortion is consistent with “integral human development,” a Catholic social principle cited by Notre Dame’s Keough School of Global Affairs as foundational in its work.

Ostermann also serves as a consultant for the Population Council, an international group that advocates for abortion and contraception overseas.

In a statement earlier this month, South Bend Bishop Kevin Rhoades called Ostermann’s appointment to lead the Liu Institute a “scandal,” while voicing his “dismay” and “strong opposition” to it.

In addition to highlighting the concerns of students, faculty, and the wider American Catholic community, Rhoades also took issue with the argument that Ostermann’s appointment was justified by the principle of academic freedom, saying “academic freedom concerns the liberty of faculty to conduct research according to their own professional judgment and interests.”

“This appointment, by contrast, concerns the official administrative appointment to lead an academic unit. Such appointments have profound impact on the integrity of Notre Dame’s public witness as a Catholic university,” Rhoades said.

The bishop called on university leadership to “rectify this situation.” He also led a prayer vigil in the grotto at Notre Dame for the Catholic identity of the university.

Solicitor says each review into Derry priest Edward Gallagher’s case ‘seems to get longer and longer’

A solicitor for a former Inishowen Parish Priest facing sexual communication charges and indecent images of children has said that each review into the case “seems to get longer and longer.”

Fr Edward Gallagher (58), of Orchard Park, Lifford, had been charged with one count of attempted sexual communication with a child on dates between April 2 and April 17, 2025.

He was also charged with seven further offences, including inciting a child to engage in sexual activity and causing a child to watch sexual activity, as well as charges of possessing indecent images of children.

At the latest hearing at Derry Magistrate's Court on Thursday, February 26, a prosecutor said that a report on the categorisation of the images was still outstanding, and when that is received, the full file would be ready.

Defence solicitor Derwin Harvey said that when the case was last mentioned, they had been told the report would be ready in one week.

He said that he was 'trying to keep a short leash' on the case as the delay got longer with every appearance. 

Mr Harvey said his client had been in custody since last April.

The case was adjourned until March 26 and the accused remains in custody.

Fr Gallagher, who was parish priest in Moville from 2022 until 2024, remains suspended from ministry. Most recently, he served as a curate at the Clonleigh, Camus and Leckpatrick parishes.

Mother and baby home campaigners vow to challenge Bessborough planning decision in Cork

Mother and baby home campaigners have vowed to challenge a decision by Cork City Council to grant planning permission for 140 apartments on the site of one of Ireland's most notorious facilities.

Cork City Council has granted planning with strict conditions for 140 apartments on the site of the former Bessborough mother and baby home.

This was despite separate previous development applications for the site being rejected.

Estuary View Enterprises has now been given permission to develop 140 units built across three blocks and comprising a mix of one-and two-bedroom apartments as well as one three-bedroom unit.

However, planning was granted subject to 70 conditions.

Bessborough ranked as one of Ireland's largest mother and baby homes.

It operated from 1922 to 1998.

Over that time, over 9,700 women were admitted.

The Bessborough mother and baby home suffered not only from a frighteningly high infant mortality rate in the 1930s, 40s and 50s but was also the focus of controversial Irish vaccine trials and allegations of arranged adoptions to the US.

Pioneering research by historian Michael Dwyer revealed that 2,051 children drawn from the Sacred Heart of Jesus and Mary facilities at Bessborough and Sean Ross Abbey in Tipperary were part of secret vaccine trials almost 70 years ago.

Of the more than 900 babies who died at Bessborough or in Cork hospitals having been transferred from the mother and baby home over the course of seven decades, less than 70 have known burial sites.

Campaigners are convinced that the graves of babies remain undiscovered at the site.

They want the entire area preserved for a thorough examination for possible burials before it is considered for some type of special memorial garden and community resource.

Carmel Cantwell said there is widespread opposition to development at the site.

Her mother, Bridget, gave birth to a baby boy called William at Bessborough in 1960.

She was subsequently told by the nuns who ran Bessborough that the baby had died and was buried on the grounds.

"These grounds have never been fully examined," she said.

"Is it too much to ask that the 60 acres surrounding the Bessborough and farm buildings) be preserved as a park in memory of the 923 babies who died there," she said.

She said there are witnesses who recall burials in the area near the farm buildings which are the focus of the development proposal.

Councillor Peter Horgan, who has campaigned for the State to buy back the Bessborough lands, said he was "devastated" by the planning decision.

An appeal against the planning is already under consideration.

Part of the Bessborough site adjoins the Blackrock Greenway which was developed on the old Blackrock railway line.

Mother and baby home campaigners and their supporters have created a moving memorial to the children who died at Bessborough in the form of a collection of soft toys, photos and candles on a walkway near the former facility.

Special vigils are organised near the site to honour those who died and to highlight how mother and babies were treated.

Nobody cared, nobody listened, says mum of boy allegedly abused by priest

Allegations a priest sexually assaulted a 15-year-old boy were covered up by the Church in Wales over three decades allowing Anthony Pierce to rise through the ranks to become a bishop, a report has found.

Four Archbishops of Wales including Dr Rowan Williams were referred to in the report which lists a "catalogue of failures" by the Church.

The alleged victim has since died. His mother told BBC Wales "nobody cared, nobody was listening" and it was "too little too late for him".

Current Archbishop Cherry Vann said: "The review shows in painful detail the missed opportunities, the harmful assumptions and the inadequate processes which characterised the Church's response to these allegations."

Pierce, who had served as Bishop of Swansea and Brecon for nine years from 1999, was jailed last year for historical sexual abuse of a different boy.

Between 1986 and 2010, concerns over Pierce were raised on four occasions with some of the most senior members of the church, the report says.

But nothing was done in a "don't ask, don't tell" culture, with it being felt it was "safe to hush it up", the review led by barrister Gabrielle Higgins found.

Speaking out for the first time the alleged victim's mother Brenda, not her real name, told BBC Wales: "The only person who believed him was me... it was dismissed. He had no trust in the system.

"It was all brushed under the carpet. And the church as an institution, as a self-serving institution as far as I'm concerned, doesn't know what to do with something like this, or it would prefer to protect its own reputation."

The alarm was first raised over Pierce's behaviour by male students at Swansea University in 1986 where Pierce, now 85, was a chaplain.

This was uncovered by a BBC Wales investigation into historic abuse in the Church, which heard from victims and whistleblowers who said abuse was ignored.

The review said it was reported to the then Bishop of Swansea and Brecon, Benjamin Vaughan, but nothing was done.

In 1993, Brenda made an allegation of sexual assault by Pierce on the alleged victim and Pierce, in his late 40s at the time, "implicitly admitted that something inappropriate had happened with the boy".

The priest offered his resignation over the alleged assault which was said to have been in or around 1990, but it was refused and no action was taken.

The then Bishop Dewi Bridges knew police were already making "unrelated enquiries" about Pierce and "sexual abuse", according to the report.

The review took a year from when it was announced in February 2025, with the Church in Wales initially stating it should be concluded within three months, "if possible".

Findings included the alleged sexual assault of the 15-year-old altar server being seen as "not paedophilia" because it involved a boy, not a girl.

"This catalogue of failures can only be a source of shame for the Church," said Vann.

In 1999, Pierce was elected to become Bishop of Swansea and Brecon despite "rumours" about his conduct circulating among those who elected him including Williams, then Bishop of Monmouth, and Barry Morgan, then Bishop of Llandaff.

The then Archbishop of Wales, Alwyn Rice Jones, tried to put the concerns to rest saying he had spoken to Pierce and been reassured.

Before he was enthroned as Bishop, Brenda wrote to the Church reporting the abuse again.

A handwritten report about the allegation containing an admission of a criminal act was then prepared by a "friend" of Pierce's who hand-delivered it to Rice Jones.

This report, not included in the review but which BBC Wales has previously seen, said Pierce had been "naive" but "could not escape the reality that he was an adult" while the victim was a child.

"He was frightened of his own shame being made public, and of losing his ministry," it reads.

But Rice Jones was said to have seen the assault allegation, and Pierce's admission, as "a bit of a hiccup and as evidence of homosexuality not paedophilia and that this was a blip and it should just be put to one side".

'Chucked on the rubbish heap'

Brenda told BBC Wales the alleged victim was "an emotionally fragile boy" at the time.

She said: "If you are going to take anything like this forward - it's a delicate process from making an allegation through to seeing the process through.

"They need nurturing, they need looking after, they need being believing, they need to be wrapped up and cared for, not chucked on the rubbish heap as we felt that's what happened."

The review said: "It seems doubtful that allegations of sexual activity, with an admission of an improper incident, involving an allegedly 15-year-old girl would have been put to one side in the same way.

"The approach seems to have been driven more by a reluctance to inquire into homosexual orientation, blinding recognition of child sexual abuse."

The handwritten report was given to Williams by Rice Jones when he took over as Archbishop of Wales for "safekeeping" and "should any further questions arise" about Pierce, saying its contents might help.

Williams "merely glanced briefly at the contents" and assumed it provided information about the person who made the allegations. He said he didn't know the allegation involved a child.

He took it to Lambeth Palace with personal papers in 2002 when he became Archbishop of Canterbury, where it remained until it was tracked down in 2010 as part of the Historic Cases Review – carried out by the Church in Wales into its handling of safeguarding cases.

At this point Williams located the report and "stated his dismay" at the admission of guilt.

The alleged victim died in 2004.

"He was very troubled he couldn't find a way of being in the world, I think it haunted him," his mother said.

"The abuse always laid heavy on him."

Williams said he was aware of a certain amount of gossip about Pierce, but never criminal allegations, and told BBC Wales he accepted it was an error to take the report to Lambeth Palace.

He said: "I regret it very much if my delay in reading it further complicated the process of dealing with the criminal activity.

"I am very conscious that Pierce's victims and their families will feel that the processes of the Church did not adequately protect them at that time, and am very sorry indeed for any ways in which I contributed to this, however inadvertently."

Evidence about Pierce was brought together and the Church referred it to the police, although the review found not all information held was provided – including the 1999 handwritten report.

Morgan - Archbishop of Wales at the time - said he had assumed all the information the Church had at the time had been given to the police.

He added: "It was not until this review that I discovered that not all documents had been handed to those bodies and I was very shocked to learn that to be the case."

John Davies, then Bishop of Swansea and Brecon emailed Morgan, who was Archbishop of Wales at that time, and said he hoped Pierce would get a caution at worst or "nothing further done at best". Morgan didn't reply.

When challenged on this by the review Davies, who went to become Archbishop of Wales, said the prospect Pierce might have committed other offences involving other victims "did not occur to him".

Davies later reinstated Pierce's permission to officiate; the report says he did not think he "asked or informed anyone", including child protection officers, before doing this.

Davies told BBC Wales whilst he accepted "errors of judgement" and expressed his "utter abhorrence of what Pierce did", he understood the allegation to be an "isolated incident" for which "no prosecution had been pursued or envisaged".

"Given his admission, I believed Pierce might properly be spoken to and cautioned by police," he said.

Pierce was suspended again in 2016 when the 1999 letter was discovered.

In 2023 another man who was abused by Pierce as a boy told the Church in Wales.

Pierce remains in jail after last year admitting sexually assaulting the then 15-year-old five times between 1985 and 1990.

South Wales Police confirmed the investigation into Pierce is still active.

The independent review said since the 1990s a "number of changes" had been made with the introduction of safeguarding officers to the Church, development of policies, and increased scrutiny and safeguarding checks in bishops' appointments.

However, some "continuing weaknesses" were identified in the appointments process for bishops.

The reviewer made recommendations to improve this but, she said, these would have been "highly unlikely" to change the outcome in Pierce's case.

In the last year Pierce has been deposed from holy orders and he is no longer a priest.

The review did not include an assessment of the Church in Wales' current systems and processes except in the appointment of bishops and archdeacons.

Brenda said: "People knew. Throughout this time. And yet nobody was joining up those dots.

"I don't want the Church to say 'we will learn from this'. They've already said that 40 years ago, 30 years ago, 20 years ago, 10 years ago and they're saying it again now. I would need to see something that would persuades me that, yes, that's OK now, that will be OK. And at this point I don't see that.

"But I do have image of him smiling, saying thanks mum, for taking it forward. Thanks for not letting it go. Thanks for still believing in me."

The Church in Wales was formed in 1920 following disestablishment from the Church of England, but it is a member of the Anglican communion.

Survivors devastated by council's permission for 140 units at Bessborough

The decision by Cork City Council to grant planning for 140 apartments on the site of the former Bessborough mother and baby institution has been slammed by survivors, who say they are “devastated” at the news.

The council’s planning department granted permission to Estuary View Enterprises 2020 despite several previous planning refusals and concerns that the site may contain the unmarked graves of hundreds of children.

Between 1922 and 1998, the Congregation of the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary ran Bessborough as a mother and baby institution, during which time 9,768 mothers and 8,938 babies were admitted.

According to the Mother and Baby Homes Commission, 923 children died at Bessborough, or after being transferred from there. Burial records exist for only 64 of those children.

In previous rulings on two applications relating to one area near the Bessborough folly, beside the nuns’ graveyard, the then An Bord Pleanála said the potential existed for the presence of human remains and/or burials at those proposed development sites.

Reacting to the council decision to grant planning permission, Carmel Cantwell of the Bessborough Mother and Baby Home Support Group said survivors were “deeply saddened” at the thought of development on a site of “profound national significance”.

“We objected to this planning application because we believe that this site is one containing a landscape of trauma, loss and unmarked burials,” Ms Cantwell said.

Ms Cantwell’s brother William was born in Bessborough in 1960 and was buried in the old Famine graveyard in Carr’s Hill, but this information was kept from his mother for fully 59 years.

“There is so much unfinished business at Bessborough, and the grounds were not exhaustively investigated to find the burial places of the missing children,” Ms Cantwell said.

“In all 859 children are unaccounted for. For this reason, no one should ever touch what remains of Bessborough.” Ms Cantwell said the group was calling for a full forensic investigation of the former Bessborough site.

Last July, An Coimisiún Pleanála refused plans previously submitted by Estuary View because of its unit mix, and did not adopt a recommendation by its own planning inspector that the application should also be refused due to concerns around possible burials.

In its new application, the developer said it had previously consulted with the Cork Survivors & Supporters Alliance (CSSA), saying: "We understand that the CSSA had no objection to the principle of the proposed development."

Despite objections, Cork City Council approved the plans, saying the plans would not seriously injure the area’s residential or visual amenities, and were in accordance with the proper planning and sustainable development of the area.

The approved plans will see 140 units built across three blocks, comprising a mix of one- and two-bedroom apartments, one three-bedroom unit.

Local Fianna Fáil city councillor and former lord mayor Terry Shannon, whose late wife Ursula was a prominent adoption rights advocate, said it was “a bad decision and shows just how out of touch our planners are with members of council and the local community”. 

“It is an area that needs proper commemoration, but it’s also an area that should be kept as a regional park for the general population of that side of the city, where there is a dearth of green areas,” Mr Shannon said.

“The area is a bottleneck already, so the concern I would have is that in giving permission for 140 units in there, it’s giving precedent for more.

There are 70 conditions attached to the council’s decision to grant planning permission, ranging from archaeological to ecological to public health.

Labour Party city councillor Peter Horgan noted that five of the 70 conditions referred to the potential for discovery of human remains during construction on the site.

“This in itself outlines that this is not an ordinary site,” he said.

My godly son should not be in jail, Enoch’s mother tells judge

A High Court judge told Enoch Burke’s mother her son could be released from prison today, while she and her daughter face jail for contempt of court.

Judge Brian Cregan questioned why Martina Burke does not use her influence to help Enoch walk free from jail. Yesterday, Mrs Burke accused the court of being an ‘abomination’ and ‘a blot on the administration of justice’.

She and her daughter, Ammi, face being sent to prison for contempt, following what the judge described as their ‘shouting and roaring’ in the court last week.

Mrs Burke yesterday defended her ‘duty to speak the truth’. She said her son was ‘languishing in Mountjoy’, describing him as ‘upright, genuine, sincere, righteous, godly, an excellent teacher, a young man’.

She accused the courts of not standing up for Mr Burke’s constitutional right to practise his religion as a teacher at Wilson’s Hospital School.

‘He’s still behind bars,’ she shouted. ‘That’s the blood that is dripping from the hands of the judiciary. And the citizens of this country know [Enoch] should not be in prison.’

The judge said to her: ‘Even allowing for the fact you are incensed your son has been imprisoned, and you say he has been imprisoned because of his religious beliefs, you have read all of the judgments of the High Court that say (a) he is entitled to his religious belief, but (b) there is a court order that he should not trespass on the school.

‘You know perfectly well he is not imprisoned because of his religious beliefs, he is imprisoned because of his trespass on the school… I would have thought you would have supported him in his stand against transgender ideology, but have accepted… he should not trespass.’

Mrs Burke said Wilson’s Hospital had no right to ‘command’ him to use the ‘they’ pronoun when referring to a transitioning child.

Judge Cregan said he had been dismissed for gross misconduct due to not only his refusal to accept the direction, but also his conduct in relation to the refusal.

Mrs Burke called this a ‘concocted lie… because you don’t want to deal with the transgender issue… and every Christian will stand for the truth’.

Judge Cregan said he decided to invoke criminal contempt proceedings in relation to Martina and Ammi’s conduct last week, during a hearing relating to Enoch’s appeal.

Addressing Ammi Burke, he said: ‘You are a solicitor and an officer of the court, so you know perfectly well it is completely unacceptable to interrupt a court hearing, and to interfere with the administration of justice, and yet you did so.’

Ammi Burke replied: ‘I won’t sit by while constitutional rights are being denied, or lies are being told in court.’

Judge Cregan said he would reserve his judgment on the contempt issue and deliver it next Wednesday.

He also said he would reserve judgment on a request from Enoch to refer an affidavit by former Disciplinary Appeals Panel chairman Seán Ó Longáin to the DPP for alleged perjury, which is denied by Mr Ó Longáin.

Finally, the judge said an element of costs claimed by Wilson’s Hospital School will be referred to a legal adjudicator.

Trump’s border Czar says Pope 'oughta fix the Church' before commenting on US immigration policy

DONALD TRUMP’S BORDER Czar has hit out at comments from Pope Leo XIV about US immigration policy.

Tom Homan, who is a practicing Catholic, said the religion supports law enforcement, and the Pope “should too”.

Since he was elected last May, the Chicago-born pontiff has taken a clear stand against some decisions by US President Donald Trump’s administration.

Pope Leo has denounced the “inhuman” treatment of migrants in the US, urged dialogue in Venezuela and lamented a “diplomacy of force”.

He recently declined an invitation to join Trump’s “Board of Peace”, which the president says aims to resolve international conflicts. Trump has been handpicking world leaders to sit on the board, and chose himself to chair.

Asked to respond to the Pope’s comments on US policy, border Czar Homan said he “oughta be fixing the Catholic Church, because they got their own issues”.

Tom Homan speaks as President Donald Trump listens at an event last year Alamy

“Bottom line is, if we jump the wall of the Vatican, the penalties for doing that are much harder than ones here in United States,” he said.

Homan said thousands of migrants, who he called “aliens”, die trying to enter the United States illegally.

“When you’re overwhelmed at border patrol, all the bad things happen. Sex trafficking increases. Fentanyl increases,” he said.

“Securing the border saves lives.”

Homan claimed Trump is “saving thousands of lives” through his extreme policies.

Homan is an ally of Trump’s and has decades of experience in immigration policy across both Republican and Democratic administrations.

Cautiously opposed

“Leo is very cautious. He knows his voice is universal. As an American, he is somewhat the natural opponent of Trumpism,” a Vatican source told AFP on condition of anonymity.

“On the United States, he’s walking on eggshells.

“He understands that the American Church is also targeted by ICE, people are afraid,” the source said, referring to the Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency currently in the spotlight for its immigration crackdown.”

The pope is operating in a context that is “hyper-polarised, where the Church is also targeted through the populations it helps, like migrants or the Hispanic community”, the source added.

Wednesday, February 25, 2026

Victims of serial abuser face ‘further harm’ following fresh delays over settlement payments, says solicitor

Further delays in paying settlements to people abused by Malachy Finegan and others will further harm victims, according to a solicitor for many of those who have taken High Court action against a Catholic diocese.

Dromore Diocese failed to meet a deadline to pay an agreed total settlement of just over £1m to victims of Finegan, the former principal of St Colman’s College in Newry and a prolific abuser of boys.

On Monday, the High Court suspended payment of compensation and any further pending cases after an application by the trustee of the diocese arguing clarification was needed over whether parish assets can be sold to cover the liabilities.

Finegan, who died in 2002, groomed and sexually abused boys while he taught and worked at St Colman’s College in Newry, Co Down and later when moved to parishes in the diocese.

Millions of pounds in damages have already been paid out in lawsuits mounted over failures to prevent him from targeting pupils.

In 2021 church authorities set up a redress scheme for survivors of sexual abuse perpetrated by clergy within the Diocese, with payments capped at £80,000.

Other steps have also been taken to liquidate or realise assets to help compensate claimants. Last year the sale of the Bishop’s House in Newry was completed, while the sale of associated land remains pending.

Claire McKeegan, solicitor for the five men awarded damages in September last year, said it is “deeply regrettable that further delay is being inflicted on these clients”.

“Cases will now take longer still to get to trial and ultimately for them to obtain justice for the abuse and torment that was perpetrated on them,” said Ms McKeegan of Phoenix Law.

“It is a matter of deep concern that they are being further harmed by the diocese now in its refusal to pay the claimants the compensation that they committed to pay in September 2025.”

In total, at the end of 2024 the Dromore Diocesan Trust had total assets, cash and investments of approximately £37.5m, the Irish News previously reported. 

However, most of the assets are under parish control, the diocese argues.

According to the diocese’s accounts, £2.4m was paid out in compensation and legal fees in 2024 and the ‘unrestricted’ central office, or curia, funds ended the year £4.9m in the red.

This and other debts led the diocese to report total funds, including assets, of just over £26m.

Overall, diocese within the north had total assets, investments and cash of approximately £400m, according to their latest accounts.

In his ruling, Mr Justice David Scoffield granted the request for a moratorium on a number of existing claims for damages already before the court.

“The costs are potentially depleting the assets available to meet the previous and existing forecast claims,” the judge said, adding the order covering existing King’s Bench claims and bids to enforce damages will be reviewed in four weeks time.

Shock after Bessborough planning permission granted

A woman whose infant brother died in the Bessborough Mother and Baby Home in Cork has expressed shock at a decision by the city council to grant planning permission for apartments on the site.

Developer Estuary View Enterprises has been granted permission for the large-scale residential development at Bessborough in Ballinure, Blackrock in Cork.

The development will involve the demolition of ten existing agricultural buildings and log cabin structures and the construction of 140 residential apartments across three blocks.

Two existing farmyard buildings are set to be redeveloped as amenities for residents.

This will include a library, a lounge, a workspace and a function space.

The proposal also involves a new pedestrian and cycle bridge, upgrades to an existing pedestrian crossing, and the creation of outdoor amenity areas.

The planning has been granted by Cork City Council, subject to 70 conditions.

The developer has to retain the services of a suitably qualified archaeologist to monitor all of the site works prior to development.

The excavation has to be monitored by a forensic archaeologist and an osteoarchaeologist/forensic anthropologist with expertise in skeletal juvenile remains.

The location of items of evidential value indicative of potential burials, such as coffin timber and nails, has to be noted and a record completed in compliance with forensic archaeological standards.

In the event of human remains being located during the course of this excavation, all work "shall cease at all parts of the proposed development site and all relevant authorities, including the City Coroner and An Garda Síochana, will be informed of the location of unidentified and previously unrecorded modern human remains".

Meanwhile, Carmel Cantwell, whose mother Bridget gave birth to a son William at Bessbourgh in December 1960, is among those who are opposed to any development at the site.

Her mother was told by nuns over two decades ago that William was buried on the grounds of the home.

She subsequently found out that he was buried in a "pauper's grave" in Carr’s Hill cemetery in the city.

Ms Cantwell said that Bessborough is a place that holds "so much trauma".

"The original site (of Bessborough) was 210 acres, 150 has already been built on providing housing, a hospital, offices and a retail park.

"Was it too much to ask that the last 60 acres surrounding the buildings be preserved as a park of remembrance for the 923 babies that died, the 31 women and the nearly 19,000 women and children that went through Bessboro, the majority separated through forced adoption?

"The grounds have never been fully examined. There are witnesses to say they saw burials in the area just outside the farmyard and against the farmyard wall," she said.

Polish bishop faces up to three years in prison for alleged cover-up in two cases of abuse

On February 18, the first criminal trial began in Poland against a bishop accused of delaying communication to civil authorities about cases of abuse committed by priests in his diocese, an unprecedented process that tests the boundaries between canon law and state legislation.

According to Aciprensa, Mons. Andrzej Jeż, bishop of Tarnów since 2012, faces a possible prison sentence of up to three years for not having notified the prosecutor’s office «immediately» of the crimes attributed to two priests under his jurisdiction.

The accusation: delayed communication to the prosecutor’s office

The Prosecutor’s Office maintains that the prelate delayed the civil report of the abuses attributed to Fr. Stanisław P. - accused of assaulting at least 95 minors between 1987 and 2018 - and to priest Tomasz K., investigated for events that occurred between 2008 and 2010.

Article 240 of the Polish Penal Code, in force since 2017, requires reporting certain crimes without delay, including sexual abuse against minors. 

The central issue of the trial is not whether the facts were reported - they were - but whether that communication occurred within the timeframe that the law considers immediate.

In the case of Fr. Stanisław P., the criminal proceedings were archived due to prescription, although he was previously expelled from the clerical state after the canonical process. 

As for Tomasz K., the prosecutor’s office prepared charges, but they were not formalized due to the priest’s delicate state of health.

The defense: «an unprecedented process» and a «scapegoat»

According to the Polish Catholic agency Katolicka Agencja Informacyjna, the first hearing before the District Court of Tarnów lasted approximately one hour. Mons. Jeż did not plead guilty.

His lawyer, Zbigniew Ćwiąkalski - former Minister of Justice - described the process as «unprecedented» in Poland and argued that the bishop has been turned into a «scapegoat.» 

He emphasized that he is not accused of concealing crimes, but of reporting too late.

The defense argues that the bishop, in addition to being subject to civil law, is bound by canon law, which requires referring the case to the Holy See and obtaining certain authorizations before initiating an ecclesiastical penal-administrative procedure. 

According to this thesis, the «immediacy» required by criminal law requires prior reliable knowledge of the facts, knowledge that - according to the defense - is obtained after the preliminary canonical process.

At the beginning of his statement, the bishop strongly condemned sexual crimes, especially when they occur in the ecclesiastical sphere. 

He also recalled that in 2015 he appointed a diocesan delegate with autonomy to receive and investigate abuse complaints.

The bishop himself stated before the court that he initially did not know about the cases and that, once he became aware, he referred them to Rome and subsequently informed the civil authorities in August 2020. 

In addition, he stated that, paradoxically, the fact of having reported led to the judicial process against him: «If we had not made those notifications, this process would not exist,» he pointed out.

Access to files and chronology of events

During his appearance, Mons. Jeż explained issues related to access to the personal files of the priests, the delegation of powers to diocesan officials, and the chronology of events in the management of the cases.

The defense also pointed out that, in many cases, the bishop is not the first to know the facts, as they can initially be concealed by third parties, and that there is no accusation of any attempt to cover up or destroy evidence.

The next hearing, in which witnesses will be heard, has been scheduled for March 2, and the last session is planned for April 15.

Clear condemnation of abuses and national context

The trial takes place in a context of growing public sensitivity in Poland. 

According to the report published in 2019 by the Polish Episcopal Conference, between 1990 and 2018, 382 complaints of abuse against minors in the ecclesiastical sphere were recorded, of which 198 affected minors under 15 years old.

It is important to emphasize that the process against Mons. Jeż, at this moment, is not judging the crimes committed by the priests - some already prescribed - but the eventual criminal responsibility of the diocesan ordinary for the management of information and the communication times to the prosecutor’s office.

Buffalo Diocese abuse victims impact statements continue Wednesday

Victim impact statements continue Wednesday in the bankruptcy case against the Diocese of Buffalo.

The fourth session will take place Thursday. 

Emotions ran high during the initial session of statements back in January.

The diocese filed for bankruptcy protection in 2020 regarding the claims of abuse. 

A settlement agreement of more than $300 million between the diocese, its parishes and some insurance carriers has been made. 

Bishop Michael Fisher said he would attend all sessions to hear the statements. He was present at the first session and listened to victims’ stories.

Fisher, in a statement, calls the statements a "long-awaited moment," and that the diocese remains committed to doing everything they can to support the victims.

"This is a long-awaited moment for those who have endured the devastating trauma of sexual abuse to speak and be heard. I will be listening intently with an empathetic heart and mind to these deeply personal accounts. It’s my hope that this opportunity provides victim-survivors a sense of justice, however painful it is for them to recount their experiences. We remain committed to doing everything we can to support their healing.”

Two additional dates have been added for victims to make statements on March 25 and 26.

Indian archbishop demands ‘justice’ after court halts digging up of Christian graves

The Catholic Church in India has welcomed an order by the country’s Supreme Court halting the forced exhumation of tribal Christians’ bodies in the central state of Chhattisgarh but says the ruling does not go far enough.

“We welcome this relief,” Archbishop Victor Henry Thakur of Raipur, capital of Chhattisgarh, told EWTN News on Feb. 20.

The Supreme Court issued an interim order on Feb. 18 directing that no further exhumation of buried bodies take place in Chhattisgarh. The ruling came on a petition filed by the Chhattisgarh Association for Justice and Equality, which cited hundreds of cases over two years in which Hindu fundamentalist groups dug up Christian dead bodies buried in ancestral villages — a practice widely seen as part of a campaign to isolate Christians.

Though Catholics in the region do not bury the dead on village lands but in cemeteries, other Christian denominations in remote tribal villages often bury the dead in ancestral lands, Thakur noted.

“The burial of tribal Christians in their villages was never an issue, but for the past few years some illogical arguments are being presented by the politically motivated and sponsored groups opposing burial of tribal Christians,” the archbishop said. “It is not only against our constitution but also a very dangerous move against the unity and integrity of India.”

‘No rest even in death’

The ecumenical United Christian Forum (UCF), which monitors anti-Christian violence, welcomed the Supreme Court’s order, describing it as a “beacon of hope” for minority communities facing hostility over burial rights. The group held a news conference at the Press Club of India in New Delhi on Feb. 19 under the title “No Rest Even in Death for Christians in India.”

“The petition detailed how burial grounds that have traditionally been accessible to all villagers are now being informally restricted to certain religious groups, effectively excluding Christians,” UCF coordinator A.C. Michael, a Catholic, said at the news conference.

“Christian families are often forced to abandon Christian burial customs and adopt the practices of the majority religion as a precondition for interment in their own villages,” Michael told EWTN News.

“Hindu fundamentalists have turned belligerent in tribal Bastar area,” Arun Pannalal, an outspoken leader of the Chhattisgarh Christian Forum, told EWTN News on Feb. 22.

“Even a 20-year-old grave was dug up, bones collected and burnt. Even the family of the deceased was forced to dig out and burn the bones,” he added.

“The exhumation of the Christian bodies in tribal areas is carried out with a divisive political agenda,” Father Sebastian Poomattam, vicar general of the Archdiocese of Raipur, told EWTN News. This, he said, is “a new strategy initiated by the Hindu nationalists to marginalize Christians” in the state, where Christians account for less than 2% of the state’s 25 million people.

EWTN News reported in March 2025 about increasing incidents of opposition to Christian funerals and hate campaigns against the Christian community in neighboring Odisha state.

In late January, tribal relatives killed a convert Christian couple — Jitendra Soren and his wife, Malati — along with their 15-year-old daughter, Sasmita, in Keonjhar District, Odisha. Two younger siblings survived the attack.

‘Relief is not enough’

“Relief is not enough. We want justice,” Thakur replied when asked about a separate Supreme Court decision refusing to overturn a ruling on notice boards erected in tribal villages banning the entry of Christian pastors and priests.

“It is unfortunate that the Supreme Court dismissed the plea challenging the Chhattisgarh High Court ruling on village hoardings that ban the entry of Christian pastors, priests, and ‘converted Christians’ by the Gram Sabha were not unconstitutional,” the archbishop said of the Feb. 16 order.

Such notices, Thakur said, “seem very discriminatory, as it violates the constitutional rights of citizens to free movement and right to propagate religion.”

Several villages in tribal areas have erected notice boards declaring the entry of pastors and priests to be strictly prohibited.

“The refusal of the judiciary to stop such blatant violation of fundamental rights guaranteed by the constitution will only aggravate the situation. This will only embolden the fundamentalists,” Poomattam cautioned.

The UCF has reported that Christians in Chhattisgarh face social boycott, including denial of access to public water sources and subsidized government rations, and face frequent assaults while police stand by.

“Chhattisgarh, a state notoriously known for social ostracization of Christians, is the No. 1 leading state in assaults against Christians with 47 incidents of reported violence,” the UCF said in its 2025 report.

Fresh tensions in Jagdalpur Diocese

Father Thomas Vadakkumkara, vicar general of the Syro-Malabar Diocese of Jagdalpur in Chhattisgarh, shared with EWTN News details of fresh tensions in the state.

Bishop Joseph Kollamparambil, he said, had traveled to a remote tribal village to meet with officials after local Hindus complained to the government that their “goddess” had disappeared because of the Church’s presence.

“The Church has been there for 28 years. How does such a case crop up now?” the diocesan official asked.

Mexican archbishop calls for peace after death of cartel leader ‘El Mencho’

The Archbishop Primate of Mexico has called on the nation to work together to rebuild peace after the death of the notorious cartel leader Nemesio Rubén Oseguera Cervantes, known as “El Mencho”, during a major military operation on Sunday 22 February.

In a statement issued by the Archdiocese of Mexico, Cardinal Aguiar said the Catholic Church remained committed to promoting peace “in all areas of our country” at a time of acute national tension. The operation that led to Oseguera Cervantes’s death was followed by widespread unrest, particularly in the western state of Jalisco, where his criminal organisation maintained its stronghold.

“The fight against evil is a permanent duty of all disciples of Jesus, the Teacher of Peace,” the cardinal said. “We are aware of the difficult times we face as a society; therefore I address this message to encourage us and to call upon us to be collaborators in the common good, promoting the justice and social peace we need.”

The archbishop urged Catholics and all people of good will to work together to heal the wounds of those who have suffered directly or indirectly from the violence. 

He invited the faithful to intensify prayer in homes and parishes across the country, asking God to restore harmony and social fraternity.

“Let us entrust this moment together to Our Lady of Guadalupe, Mother and Queen of Mexico,” he said. “May she, who accompanied the birth of our nation, intercede for us, strengthen our hearts and help us to walk as true artisans of peace, following the example of Christ our Lord.”

The Archdiocese reiterated the cardinal’s appeal on social media, calling upon the entire Church in Mexico to be collaborators in the common good, promoters of justice and sowers of hope amid mounting uncertainty.

The violence erupted after the Ministry of National Defence, known as the Secretaría de la Defensa Nacional (Sedena), confirmed that an operation had been launched to capture Oseguera Cervantes. 

Security forces located his hideout in Jalisco on Friday 20 February and began preparations for a coordinated assault, which commenced two days later.

According to Mexican authorities, the operation involved the Army, National Guard, Air Force and Navy. 

Large quantities of weapons were seized, including rocket launchers and heavy machine guns. Omar García Harfuch, Mexico’s Security Minister, stated that Oseguera Cervantes was killed during the attempted arrest. 

At least 74 people are reported to have died in the firefight, among them 25 National Guard officers.

In the hours that followed, criminal groups mounted retaliatory actions in several regions. 

Armed clashes, road blockades, arson attacks and looting were reported in Jalisco and in parts of central and north-central Mexico. 

Ten thousand soldiers have since been deployed nationwide, with a particular concentration in Jalisco, to protect the civilian population and restore order. 

The federal government urged residents in affected areas to remain indoors and avoid public gatherings while security operations continued.

Claudia Sheinbaum, President of Mexico, said there was “absolute coordination” between the federal government and state administrations. 

In messages posted on her official accounts, she called on citizens to remain calm and to rely on verified information from the Security Cabinet’s social media channels.

“Activities are proceeding normally throughout most of the country,” she said, expressing recognition for the Mexican Army, National Guard, Armed Forces and Security Cabinet. 

She added that the government was working daily for “the peace, security, justice and well-being of Mexico”.

Meanwhile, Pablo Lemus, Governor of Jalisco, announced the gradual resumption of activities in the state on Tuesday 24 February, despite the continuing security presence. 

Authorities remain on high alert as investigations continue into the events surrounding the operation and its aftermath.

Irish pub singer brings popular Mass hymns to Gen Z

An Irish pub singer has begun to include Mass hymns in his musical gigs along with cover versions and original material.

Paul Luby, 27, who hails from County Offaly in Ireland and now lives in Australia, told EWTN News that the Irish twentysomethings he plays to in bars in Sydney and Perth connect instantly with the songs, singing along and demonstrating that their Catholic upbringing is still present.

Luby even went viral recently after a recording of him singing “Here I Am, Lord” was posted on Instagram.

Luby played in bands when he was younger, performing Irish traditional music and Irish ballads. After studying English and Media at Maynooth University and moving to Sydney, he landed an ongoing gig at a place called Frank Macs.

“I was playing there a lot,” he said. “The Irish crowds would come in there, people from every part of Ireland. It was always jam-packed, and you start blasting Irish tunes.”

Luby’s idea to play “Here I Am Lord” in a Sydney pub packed with Gen Zers was rooted in memories of childhood.

“When I was growing up, my mother and father were very religious, and went to Mass every Sunday,” he told EWTN News. “I went too. I joined a choir when I was in school; we used to sing Mass hymns. They would be ingrained into you, and you just know the words.”

Luby said that when he went to college, he “tried best to keep up Mass” but it wasn’t as much as he would have liked. “I think definitely since the song kicked off and went viral, I definitely have connected more with my faith.”

He added: “I [grew] up with these hymns. At my last Sydney gig, I played with a great banjo player called Jackie, who was like, ‘Do you want to try anything different, because it’s your last gig?’ I said, “Actually, I do, I have a Mass tune, do you know, ‘Here I Am Lord’? He’s like, ‘Of course I don’t.’”

Luby said everyone loved it. “I couldn’t believe singing the chorus, everyone was singing it right back to me. It was definitely the song of the night. It surprised me and went from there.”

When the musician woke up the next morning, a video of the gig had 500,000 views.

Luby then posted other cover versions of popular hymns like “Our Lady of Knock” and “Amazing Grace,” under the theme of “Bangers and Mass.” (Editor’s note: “Bangers” are a traditional Irish pork sausage.)

“It’s a niche thing; nobody else is doing it. I thought I would put them up. People do remember Mass tunes and connect with them ... they don’t really have to be properly into their faith to connect to these tunes. I’m a devout Catholic anyway, I’d never disrespect the hymns, I’ve just sped them up a bit.”

Luby has recorded “Here I Am, Lord” and plans to release it on Spotify before St. Patrick’s Day. He’s been interviewed on Today FM, one of Ireland’s largest radio stations, and attracted wider interest.

“There was one priest who reached out to me from Houston. He’s a singer, he just said, ‘Look, you’re doing a great job, and it’s definitely resonating for a lot of people.’”

Luby said he is “just like any other artist trying to get noticed” and hopes he will get some exposure for his original tunes.

“One I wrote for my dad called ‘To Be Okay’ before I went to Australia. He had cancer and went through treatment. He came out at the end of it, thank God, he’s OK, but I wrote that for him, and I’m really proud of that tune.”

His dad is also clearly proud of his son. “He’s said to my sister, ‘What? He’s getting a few million views for singing Mass tunes?’ He’s been going into Dunnes Stores telling people that his son’s gone viral.”

Luby intends to continue doing hymns. “I think they’re great tunes, but more than that, they’re meant to be sung together, you know? And in that room, in Frank Macs in Sydney, they were all sung together, everyone felt a part of something. You have your Irish culture and that, but that brought back everyone’s faith as well. I think you don’t even need to be practicing your faith, you know, to feel something towards those hymns. So, I think it’s really something for people — even if their relationship with their faith is complicated — I think it just goes to show you everyone is connected somehow.”

He added: “My goal is to bring people joy, and I always said on my gigs, if I can even make one person dance or sing, my job is done ... So I think it’s nice when you’re intertwining [that with] the faith.”

Nigeria ‘continues to bleed endlessly,’ archbishop concerned about ‘senseless massacres’

The president of the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of Nigeria (CBCN) has raised concerns about rising insecurity in the West African country, decrying in particular what he describes as “senseless massacres” and “mass burials” in the country experiencing ongoing terrorism and banditry.

Delivering his address at the opening session of the CBCN’s 2026 first plenary meeting at the Catholic Secretariat of Nigeria Resource Centre in Durumi, Abuja, Archbishop Lucius Iwejuru Ugorji spoke at length about the country’s governance challenges and electoral irregularities, calling for proactive security measures, ethical leadership, and credible elections.

“Our country has continued to experience rising security challenges. We continue to hear sad tales of senseless massacres, mass burials, endless tears, and grief,” Ugorji said.

The archbishop, who leads Nigeria’s Archdiocese of Owerri, described the worsening wave of kidnappings and killings across Nigeria, noting that gun-wielding men in the country “operate boldly, freely, and unchallenged,” often exploiting weaknesses in the national security system to attack vulnerable communities.

He lamented that Nigeria “continues to bleed endlessly” and warned that the government must go beyond reactive responses to insecurity.

The archbishop said that authorities must invest in modern surveillance technology, strengthen intelligence systems, and ensure that perpetrators of terrorism and their sponsors are “swiftly arrested, prosecuted, and held accountable under the law to deter others.”

Ugorji also cautioned that delays in prosecuting terrorists or reintegrating former insurgents could undermine public trust, stating that such actions “give the impression of complicity on the side of government.”

The archbishop further condemned illegal mining, describing it as “national economic sabotage” that fuels terrorism and organized crime.

He said Nigeria continues to lose about $9 billion annually to illegal mining activities, which are “strongly linked to the rise and sustenance of banditry, kidnapping, and other organized crimes.”

Criminal groups, he explained, use proceeds from mineral sales to purchase weapons and finance terrorist operations.

The CBCN president also warned that hazardous chemicals used by illegal miners have caused “severe environmental degradation, soil and water contamination, loss of biodiversity, and a public health crisis,” urging the government to adopt more aggressive measures, including the use of drone technology and artificial intelligence to monitor mining sites.

Reflecting on Nigeria’s political situation, Ugorji identified poor leadership as a major cause of the nation’s challenges.

“The root of our afflictions as a nation is largely the problem of poor leadership and the wrong perception of politics among many of our leaders, merely as the rigging of elections and stealing of other people’s mandate,” he said, emphasizing that political leadership exists for the common good and requires moral integrity, stating that “a political leader worth the name is one who stands on moral high ground.”

The archbishop stressed that national wealth has not benefited all citizens, noting that despite abundant resources, “many of our fellow citizens are left behind and the gap between the rich and the poor widens.”

Ugorji also expressed concern about declining voter turnout in Nigeria’s elections, warning that continued decline would damage democracy.

He said electoral irregularities have weakened public confidence, pointing to falling participation rates over the years and cautioning that the trend “calls into question the legitimacy of elected officials in a democratic dispensation.”

To restore trust, he urged the National Assembly to ensure mandatory real-time transmission of election results to prevent manipulation, insisting that “this is the will of the people and has to be respected.”

He further warned lawmakers that “the world is watching! Above all, God is also watching.”

In his address, Ugorji highlighted the proclamation of a special Jubilee Year of St. Francis of Assisi, describing it as an opportunity for spiritual renewal and a call to peace and reconciliation in a divided world.

He encouraged parishes and Church institutions to organize retreats and urged the faithful to deepen their commitment to holiness and peace.

The CBCN president acknowledged Nigeria’s 2025 Tax Act, which seeks to reform the fiscal system, but noted that the reforms face challenges, including possible burdens on small businesses and fears that they could increase living costs and worsen hardship.

He noted growing international attention on Nigeria’s security situation following global concerns and government actions, including a national security emergency declared by President Bola Ahmed Tinubu.

At the conclusion of his address, the archbishop announced that he would step down as CBCN president at the end of the plenary session, thanking members for their support during his tenure.

“I take advantage of this opportunity to thank you for the cooperation and support I received from you all during my tenure as your chief servant,” he said.

Can the new leader of Germany’s bishops prevent a schism?

The election of the president of the German Bishops’ Conference (DBK) this week ended in a contested vote once again — and, as in 2020, the progressive Bishop Franz-Josef Overbeck of Essen came up short.

The 56 bishops and auxiliary bishops gathered in Würzburg for the spring plenary assembly of the DBK needed three ballots on Tuesday morning, after neither of the first two rounds produced the required two-thirds majority. In the final round, when a simple majority was enough, Overbeck again finished second.

In the end, it was not Overbeck but Bishop Heiner Wilmer of Hildesheim who stepped before journalists as the newly elected DBK president.

“Glory to God in the highest, and on earth peace to people of goodwill,” Wilmer said, opening his first statement to the press with the words of the angel in the Gospel of Luke.

In the brief interval between the third ballot and the obligatory press conference, the new chairman prepared an address of nearly eight minutes, which he read from his mobile phone — prompting some to wonder aloud whether the text had already been waiting on his device. “Synodality remains a spiritual attitude,” Wilmer said, reading from his phone.

Standing to his left was Bishop Georg Bätzing, who had vigorously advanced the Synodal Way, launched in 2019 as a multiyear national process that brought together bishops and lay representatives to debate questions such as power and governance, sexual morality, the priesthood, and the role of women in the Church. In recent years, the rift between the German Bishops’ Conference and the Roman Curia had steadily deepened, and the specter of schism had hung over the Church in Germany.

Plans to institutionalize the Synodal Way, described by its architects as a process of renewal, in the form of a permanent Synodal Council were halted by Pope Francis. In a renewed effort, Bätzing and his allies then sought to entrench the process under the concept of a Synodal Conference, envisioned by critics as a kind of ecclesial parliamentary simulation and supervisory body for bishops — euphemistically termed monitoring. Supporters of the process frequently invoked the need to listen to the voice of the faithful, even as a recent study found that a majority of Germans considered the Synodal Way to be “rather wrong.”

Wilmer, for his part, described his understanding of synodality as “journeying together, sharing responsibility, and bearing decisions together.”

“Christ stands at the center,” he added — a line that drew notice in the room. In the Q&A, a journalist who had covered Wilmer’s three predecessors as conference presidents remarked pointedly that never before at such press conferences had the words “Christ,” “Jesus,” and “faith” been used so often. Asked whether he intended to bring a new style to the bishops’ conference — and whether that explained his election — Wilmer replied simply: “I do not know. I cannot do otherwise. And I am grateful for the support of my fellow brothers.”

Peace, abuse crisis, and Rome

Wilmer emphasized peace — his introduction came on the fourth anniversary of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine — and the ongoing reckoning with the abuse crisis. He also appeared eager to dispel the impression that he would continue the highly public confrontational posture toward Rome associated with his predecessors, often in close cooperation with the controversial Central Committee of German Catholics (ZdK).

“Pope Francis has shown us anew that the Gospel is joy,” Wilmer said, adding: “Pope Leo XIV continues this path with spiritual clarity.”

Asked whether the Catholic Church might one day ordain women to the priesthood, Wilmer did not publicly challenge existing Church teaching. Instead, he responded: “I very much welcome that the world synod has the topic of women in offices and ministries on its agenda. And I remain convinced that the Holy Spirit is at work today. I look forward to the surprises of the Holy Spirit.”

‘God Is Not Nice,’ language debates, and climate-era missteps

Wilmer’s public profile included a 2013 book published by Herder titled “Gott ist nicht nett” (“God Is Not Nice”), in which he wrote candidly about what he called the Church’s pious jargon and his own reliance on clichés. Herder issued a second edition in 2018 after his appointment as bishop of Hildesheim.

In 2019, Wilmer drew criticism after he said in an interview with the German newspaper Kölner Stadt-Anzeiger: “The abuse of power is embedded in the DNA of the Church.” Cardinal Rainer Maria Woelki responded at the time: “If that were so, I would have to leave the Church.” 

People who knew Wilmer told CNA Deutsch, the German-language sister service of EWTN News, that the comment had been a mistake, even if, they said, his broader point had been understood. Wilmer had worked for many years as a teacher, school chaplain, and headmaster in Germany, Canada, and the United States.

Language controversies also followed him into liturgical territory. In 2021, the Diocese of Hildesheim published guidelines on gender-sensitive language, discouraging exclusive use of the generic masculine and promoting what it called a diverse address to God. 

The brochure encouraged alternatives such as saying “Christ, our brother,” instead of “Lord Jesus Christ,” and suggested expansions of the liturgical greeting “The Lord be with you.” The head of the Verein Deutsche Sprache (German Language Association), Walter Krämer, accused Wilmer of undignified ingratiation and announced his departure from the Church.

Wilmer also faced criticism for comments in 2019 praising then-16-year-old climate activist Greta Thunberg as like a young prophet and commending the Fridays for Future movement. 

The German text said Wilmer later refrained from speaking prominently on the topic amid fresh controversies surrounding Thunberg and waning public momentum for the movement — and noted that climate was not mentioned at all in his remarks upon becoming DBK president.

A wind of change — or more of the same?

Bätzing became DBK president in 2020, succeeding Cardinal Reinhard Marx. His tenure coincided with intensifying strain between German bishops and the Vatican, as efforts to formalize the Synodal Way through bodies such as a Synodal Council or Synodal Committee met repeated resistance from Rome. Bätzing ultimately did not seek reelection as conference president.

Wilmer later wrote in the German outlet Communio: “It was right not to adopt the statutes of the Synodal Committee. It was right to take seriously the concerns of the three cardinals and thus also the concerns of the Holy Father.”

Substantively, however, Wilmer did not distance himself from his voting record at Synodal Way assemblies. According to the article, he voted in favor of blessing same-sex unions and supported a text calling for a magisterial reassessment of homosexuality, arguing that same-sex sexuality, even in sexual acts, “is not a sin separating from God” and is not to be judged intrinsically disordered but evaluated according to certain values.

Some critics of the Synodal Way and the planned Synodal Conference nonetheless reacted to Wilmer’s election with cautious optimism, describing him as a very spiritual figure — prayerful and, compared with Bätzing or Overbeck, more a man of the center. 

In a previous interview with the Rheinische Post, Wilmer said he was absolutely in favor of renewal while also warning against impatience: “In Germany, we sometimes lack perseverance… not everything can be implemented within our own lifetime.”

When he appeared before the press as the newly elected chairman, the vote on the statutes of the Synodal Conference was still pending. Asked about the likelihood of Vatican approval, Wilmer replied: “From Rome I have heard the signals that Pope Francis said: ‘Synodality is the fundamental form of the Church.’ Pope Leo has confirmed this, and in this respect I am confident.”

A few hours later, the bishops’ conference announced in a brief press release that the statutes had been accepted by a majority of bishops. The much-anticipated wind of change, the article suggested, remained uncertain.

Limited authority — significant symbolism

As DBK president, Wilmer presides over the plenary assembly and the permanent council but has no direct governing authority over other bishops. The conference’s statutes state that he represents the DBK externally and is bound by its resolutions.

Even so, the chairmanship carries weight — especially in relations with Rome. Wilmer’s new role suggests a classroom reversal: the former teacher now representing his brother bishops as the conference’s public face, especially in relations with Rome.

Wilmer offered his own metaphor in response to a question at his first press conference as chairman: “I am a pilgrim on the way: in one hand the Gospel, in the other hand the people in view.”

Bishop Schneider Appeals to Pope Leo XIV to Build a Bridge between Rome and the SSPX

Bishop Athanasius Schneider appealed to Pope Leo XIV after the Priestly Society of St. Pius X (SSPX) announced its intention to proceed with episcopal consecrations, despite warnings from the Vatican that this would ‘constitute a decisive break with ecclesial communion.’

Bishop Schneider, auxiliary bishop of Astana, in Kazakhstan, gave Diane Montagna exclusive access to a text entitled Fraternal Appeal to Pope Leo XIV to Build a Bridge with the Priestly Society of Saint Pius X, which calls for pastoral generosity and ecclesial unity at a time he describes as decisive for the future of relations between the Holy See and the priestly society.

The auxiliary bishop had officially visited some of the FSSPX seminaries at the request of Bishop Guido Pozzo, under Pope Benedict XVI. His appeal comes amid debate in the Catholic world following the FSSPX's announcement, with some hoping for reconciliation and others calling for rigorous disciplinary measures.

Bishop Schneider wants to warn Pope Leo XIV against the risk of letting this ‘truly providential moment’ pass without taking decisive action. He warns that giving up the opportunity to grant the apostolic mandate would risk cementing what he calls a ‘truly unnecessary and painful’ division with the SSPX, a rift that history could not easily ignore.

At a time when the Church is talking insistently about synodality, pastoral openness and ecclesial inclusiveness, he argues that unity must extend to the faithful attached to the SSPX. The choice before the Pope, he suggests, is whether this chapter in the history of the Church will remain a moment of generosity and rapprochement or a separation that could have been avoided.

Full text of Bishop Schneider’s appeal to Pope Leo XIV

A Fraternal Appeal to Pope Leo XIV to Build a Bridge with the Priestly Society of St. Pius X

The current situation regarding the episcopal consecrations in the Priestly Society of St. Pius X (SSPX) has suddenly awakened the entire Church. Within an extraordinarily short time following the February 2ndannouncement that the SSPX will proceed with these consecrations, an intense and often emotionally charged debate has arisen throughout wide circles of the Catholic world. The spectrum of voices in this debate ranges from understanding, benevolence, neutral observation, and common sense to irrational rejection, peremptory condemnation, and even open hatred. Although there is reason for hope—and it is by no means unrealistic—that Pope Leo XIV could indeed approve the episcopal consecrations, already now proposals for the text of a bull of excommunication of the SSPX are being put forward online.

The negative reactions, though often well-intentioned, reveal that the heart of the problem has not yet been grasped with sufficient honesty and clarity. There is a tendency to remain at the surface. Priorities within the life of the Church are reversed, elevating the canonical and legal dimension—that is, a certain juridical positivism—to the supreme criterion. Moreover, there is at times a lack of historical awareness concerning the Church’s practice with respect to episcopal ordinations. Disobedience is thus too readily equated with schism. The criteria for episcopal communion with the Pope, and consequently the understanding of what truly constitutes schism, are viewed in an overly one-sided manner when compared with the practice and self-understanding of the Church in the Patristic era, the age of the Church Fathers.

In this debate, new quasi-dogmas are being established that do not exist in the Depositum fidei. These quasi-dogmas maintain that the Pope’s consent to a bishop’s consecration is of divine right, and that a consecration carried out without this consent, or even against a papal prohibition, constitutes in itself a schismatic act. However, the Church’s practice and understanding during the time of the Church Fathers, and for a long period thereafter, argue against this view. Furthermore, there is no unanimous opinion on this matter among the recognized theologians of the Church’s two-thousand-year tradition. Centuries of ecclesial practice, as well as traditional canon law, also stand in opposition to such absolutizing assertions. According to the 1917 Code of Canon Law, an episcopal consecration carried out against the will of the Pope was punished not with excommunication, but only with suspension. By this, the Church clearly manifested that she did not consider such an act to be schismatic.

The acceptance of papal primacy as a revealed truth is often confused with the concrete forms—forms that have evolved throughout history—through which a bishop expresses his hierarchical unity with the Pope. To believe in the Papal Primacy, to acknowledge the actual Pope, to adhere with him to all that the Church has taught infallibly and definitively, and to observe the validity of the sacramental liturgy, is of divine right. Yet, a reductive view that equates disobedience to a papal command with schism—even in the case of a bishop’s consecration performed against his will—was foreign to the Church Fathers and to traditional canon law. For example, in 357, St. Athanasius disobeyed the order of Pope Liberius, who instructed him to enter into hierarchical communion with the overwhelming majority of the episcopate, which was in fact Arian or semi-Arian. As a result, he was excommunicated. In this instance, St. Athanasius disobeyed out of love for the Church and for the honor of the Apostolic See, seeking precisely to safeguard the purity of doctrine from any suspicion of ambiguity.

In the first millennium of the Church’s life, episcopal consecrations were generally performed without formal papal permission, and candidates were not required to be approved by the Pope. The first canonical regulation on episcopal consecrations, issued by an Ecumenical Council, was that of Nicaea in 325, which required that a new bishop be consecrated with the consent of a majority of the bishops of the province. Shortly before his death, during a period of doctrinal confusion, St. Athanasius personally selected and consecrated his successor—St. Peter of Alexandria—, in order to ensure that no unsuitable or weak candidate would assume the episcopate. Similarly, in 1977, the Servant of God Cardinal Iosif Slipyj secretly consecrated three bishops in Rome without the approval of Pope Paul VI, fully aware that the Pope would not allow it because of the Vatican’s Ostpolitik at the time. When Rome learned of these secret consecrations, however, the penalty of excommunication was not applied.

To avoid misunderstanding, under normal circumstances—and when there is neither doctrinal confusion nor a time of extraordinary persecution—one must, of course, do everything possible to observe the canonical norms of the Church and to obey the Pope in his just injunctions, in order to preserve ecclesiastical unity both more effectively and visibly.

But the situation in the life of the Church today can be illustrated with the following parable: A fire breaks out in a large house. The fire chief allows only the use of new firefighting equipment, even though it has been shown to be less effective than the old, proven tools. A group of firefighters defies this order and continues to use the tried-and-tested equipment—and indeed, the fire is contained in many places. Yet these firefighters are labelled disobedient and schismatic, and they are punished.

To extend the metaphor further: the fire chief permits only those firefighters who acknowledge the new equipment, follow the new firefighting rules, and obey the new firehouse regulations. But given the obvious scale of the fire, the desperate struggle against it, and the insufficiency of the official firefighting team, other helpers—despite the fire chief’s prohibition—selflessly intervene with skill, knowledge, and good intentions, ultimately contributing to the success of the fire chief’s efforts.

Faced with such rigid and incomprehensible behavior, two possible explanations present themselves: either the fire chief is denying the seriousness of the fire, much like in the French comedy Tout va très bien, Madame la Marquise!; or, in fact, the fire chief desires that large parts of the house burn, so that it may later be rebuilt according to a new design.

The current crisis surrounding the announced—but as yet unapproved—episcopal consecrations in the SSPX exposes, before the eyes of the whole Church, a wound that has been smouldering for over sixty years. This wound can be figuratively described as ecclesial cancer—specifically, the ecclesial cancer of doctrinal and liturgical ambiguities.

Recently, an excellent article appeared on the Rorate Caeli blogspot, written with rare theological clarity and intellectual honesty, under the title: “The Long Shadow of Vatican II: Ambiguity as Ecclesial Cancer” (Canon of Shaftesbury: Rorate Caeli, February 10, 2026). The fundamental problem with some ambiguous statements of the Second Vatican Council is that the Council chose to prioritize a pastoral tone over doctrinal precision. One can agree with the author when he says:

“The problem isn’t that Vatican II was heretical. The problem is that it was ambiguous. And in that ambiguity, we’ve seen the seeds of confusion that have flowered into some of the most troubling theological developments in modern Church history. When the Church speaks in vague terms, even if unintentionally, then souls are at stake.”

The author continues:

“When a doctrinal ‘development’ seems to contradict what came before, or when it requires decades of theological gymnastics to reconcile with previous magisterial teaching, we have to ask: Is this development, or is it rupture disguised as development?” (Canon of Shaftesbury: Rorate Caeli, February 10, 2026).

One may reasonably assume that the SSPX desires nothing more than to help the Church emerge from this ambiguity in doctrine and liturgy and to rediscover her saving perennial clarity—just as the Church’s Magisterium, under the guidance of the Popes, has done unequivocally throughout history after every crisis marked by doctrinal confusion and ambiguity.

In fact, the Holy See should be grateful to the SSPX, because it is currently almost the only major ecclesiastical reality that forthrightly and publicly points out the existence of ambiguous and misleading elements in certain statements of the Council and the Novus Ordo Missae. In this endeavor, the SSPX is guided by a sincere love for the Church: if they did not love the Church, the Pope, and souls, they would not undertake this work, nor would they engage with the Roman authorities—and they would undoubtedly have an easier life.

The following words of Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre are deeply moving and reflect the attitude of the current leadership and most members of the SSPX:

“We believe in Peter, we believe in the successor of Peter! But as Pope Pius IX says well in his dogmatic constitution, the pope has received the Holy Ghost not to make new truths, but to maintain us in the faith of all time. This is the definition of the Pope made at the time of the First Vatican Council by Pope Pius IX. And that is why we are persuaded that in maintaining these traditions we are manifesting our love, our docility, our obedience to the Successor of Peter. We cannot remain indifferent before the degradation of faith, morals, and the liturgy. That is out of the question! We do not want to separate ourselves from the Church; on the contrary, we want the Church to continue!”

If someone considers having difficulties with the Pope to be among his greatest spiritual sufferings, that in itself is a telling proof that there is no schismatic intent. True schismatics even boast of their separation from the Apostolic See. True schismatics would never humbly implore the Pope to recognize their bishops.

How truly Catholic, then, are the following words of Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre:

“We regret infinitely, it is an immense pain for us, to think that we are in difficulty with Rome because of our faith! How is this possible? It is something that exceeds the imagination, that we should never have been able to imagine, that we should never have been able to believe, especially in our childhood–then when all was uniform, when the whole Church believed in her general unity and held the same Faith, the same Sacraments, the same sacrifice of the Mass, the same catechism.”

We must honestly examine the evident ambiguities regarding religious freedom, ecumenism, and collegiality, as well as the doctrinal imprecisions of the Novus Ordo Missae. In this regard, one should read the recently published book by Archimandrite Boniface Luykx, a Council peritus and renowned liturgical scholar, with its eloquent title A Wider View of Vatican II. Memories and Analysis of a Council Consultor.

As G. K. Chesterton once said: “Upon entering the church, we are asked to take off our hat, not our head.” It would be a tragedy if the SSPX were completely cut off, and the responsibility for such a division would rest primarily with the Holy See. The Holy See should bring the SSPX in, offering at least a minimum degree of Church integration, and then continue the doctrinal dialogue. The Holy See has shown remarkable generosity toward the Communist Party of China, allowing them to select candidates for bishops—yet her own children, the thousands upon thousands of faithful of the SSPX, are treated as second-class citizens.

The SSPX should be allowed to make a theological contribution with a view to clarifying, supplementing, and, if necessary, amending those statements in the texts of the Second Vatican Council that raise doctrinal doubts and difficulties. This must also take into account that, in these texts, the Magisterium of the Church did not intend to pronounce itself with dogmatic definitions endowed with the note of infallibility (cf. Paul VI, General Audience, January 12, 1966).

The SSPX makes exactly the same Professio fidei as that made by the Fathers of the Second Vatican Council, known as the Tridentine-Vatican Professio fidei. If, according to the explicit words of Pope Paul VI, the Second Vatican Council did not present any definitive doctrines, nor intend to do so, and if the faith of the Church remains the same before, during, and after the Council, why should the profession of faith that was valid in the Church until 1967 suddenly no longer be considered valid as a mark of true Catholic belief?

Yet the Tridentine-Vatican Professio fidei is considered by the Holy See to be insufficient for the SSPX. Would not the Tridentine-Vatican Professio fidei in fact constitute “the minimum” for ecclesial communion? If that is not a minimum, then what, honestly, would qualify as a “minimum”? The SSPX is required, as a conditio sine qua non, to make a Professio fidei by which the teachings of a pastoral, and not definitive, nature from the last Council and the subsequent Magisterium must be accepted. If this is truly the so-called “minimum requirement,” then Cardinal Victor Fernández appears to be playing games with words!

Pope Leo XIV said at the ecumenical Vespers on January 25, 2026, at the conclusion of the Week of Prayer for Christian Unity, that there is already unity between Catholics and non-Catholic Christians because they share the minimum of Christian faith: “We share the same faith in the one and only God, the Father of all people; we confess together the one Lord and true Son of God, Jesus Christ, and the one Holy Spirit, who inspires us and impels us towards full unity and the common witness to the Gospel” (Apostolic Letter In Unitate Fidei, 23 November 2025, 12). He further declared: “We are one! We already are! Let us recognize it, experience it and make it visible!”

How can this statement be reconciled with the claim made by representatives of the Holy See and some high-ranking clergy that the SSPX is not doctrinally united with the Church, given that the SSPX professes the Professio fidei of the Fathers of the Second Vatican Council—the Tridentine-Vatican Professio fidei?

Further provisional pastoral measures granted to the SSPX for the spiritual good of so many exemplary Catholic faithful would stand as a profound testimony to the pastoral charity of the Successor of Peter. In doing so, Pope Leo XIV would open his paternal heart to those Catholics who, in a certain way, live on an ecclesiastical periphery, allowing them to experience that the Apostolic See is truly a Mother also for the SSPX.

The words of Pope Benedict XVI should awaken the conscience of those in the Vatican who will decide on the permission of episcopal consecrations for the SSPX. He reminds us:

“Looking back over the past, to the divisions which in the course of the centuries have rent the Body of Christ, one continually has the impression that, at critical moments when divisions were coming about, not enough was done by the Church’s leaders to maintain or regain reconciliation and unity. One has the impression that omissions on the part of the Church have had their share of blame for the fact that these divisions were able to harden. This glance at the past imposes an obligation on us today: to make every effort to enable for all those who truly desire unity to remain in that unity or to attain it anew” (Letter to the Bishops on the occasion of the publication of the Apostolic Letter “motu proprio data” Summorum Pontificum on the use of the Roman Liturgy prior to the reform carried out in 1970, 7 July 2007).

“Can we be totally indifferent about a community which has 491 priests, 215 seminarians, 6 seminaries, 88 schools, 2 university-level institutes, 117 religious brothers, 164 religious sisters and thousands of lay faithful? Should we casually let them drift farther from the Church? And should not the great Church also allow herself to be generous in the knowledge of her great breadth, in the knowledge of the promise made to her?” (Letter to the Bishops of the Catholic Church concerning the remission of the excommunication of the four Bishops consecrated by Archbishop Lefebvre, March 10, 2009).1

Provisional and minimal pastoral measures for the SSPX, undertaken for the spiritual good of the thousands upon thousands of its faithful around the world—including a pontifical mandate for episcopal consecrations—would create the conditions necessary to calmly clarify misunderstandings, questions, and doubts of a doctrinal nature arising from certain statements in the documents of the Second Vatican Council and the subsequent Pontifical Magisterium. At the same time, such measures would provide the SSPX with the opportunity to make a constructive contribution for the good of the entire Church, while maintaining a clear distinction between what belongs to divinely revealed faith and doctrine definitively proposed by the Magisterium, and what has a primarily pastoral character in particular historical circumstances, and is therefore open to careful theological study, as has always been the practice throughout the life of the Church.

With sincere concern for the unity of the Church and the spiritual good of so many souls, I appeal with reverent and fraternal charity to our Holy Father Pope Leo XIV:

Most Holy Father, grant the Apostolic Mandate for the episcopal consecrations of the SSPX. You are also the father of your numerous sons and daughters—two generations of the faithful who have, for now, been cared for by the SSPX, who love the Pope, and who wish to be true sons and daughters of the Roman Church. Therefore, stand aside from the partisanship of others and, with a great paternal and truly Augustinian spirit, demonstrate that you are building bridges, as you promised to do before the whole world when you gave your first blessing after your election. Do not go down in the history of the Church as one who failed to build this bridge—a bridge that could be constructed at this truly Providential moment with generous will—and who instead allowed a truly unnecessary and painful further division within the Church, while at the same time synodal processes that boast of the greatest possible pastoral breadth and ecclesial inclusivity were taking place. As your Holiness recently stressed: “Let us commit ourselves to further developing ecumenical synodal practices and to sharing with one another who we are, what we do and what we teach (cf. Francis, For a Synodal Church, 24 November 2024)” (Homily of Pope Leo XIV, Ecumenical Vespers for the Week of Prayer for Christian Unity, January 25, 2026).

Most Holy Father, if you grant the Apostolic Mandate for the episcopal consecrations of the SSPX, the Church in our day will lose nothing. You will be a true bridge-builder, and even more, an exemplary bridge-builder, for you are the Supreme Pontiff, Summus Pontifex.

+ Athanasius Schneider, Auxiliary Bishop of the Archdiocese of Saint Mary in Astana

24 February 2026