Tuesday, April 28, 2026

Cathedral in Canada converted into an entertainment center: hockey and parody of religious rites

St. John the Evangelist Cathedral in Quebec has been the scene of a controversial event where hundreds of people attended the broadcast of a hockey game inside it, in an atmosphere that included music, lights, and an explicit parody of liturgical gestures.

A Cathedral Transformed into a Performance Hall

According to Tribune Chrétienne, on April 25 and 26, 2026, St. John the Evangelist Cathedral - the mother church of the Diocese of Saint-Jean–Longueuil - was used for the projection on a giant screen of a game between the Montreal Canadiens and the Tampa Bay Lightning.

The temple, built in the 19th century and dedicated to worship, hosted about 650 people who occupied the pews as if it were a sports venue. 

Inside, a large screen was installed, and the atmosphere was described as that of a real stadium, with chants, shouts, amplified music, animation with a DJ, and light shows projected onto the building’s structure.

Parody of Religious Gestures and Symbols

Beyond the use of the space, one of the most controversial aspects of the event was the imitation of elements proper to the Catholic tradition in a playful key.

During the broadcast, a participant dressed as a cardinal invited attendees to kneel for a supposed “prayer” directed at player Maurice Richard, reproducing gestures and formulas proper to Christian liturgy.

Likewise, objects similar to votive candles, adapted with the team’s colors, were distributed, while terms like “mass”, “temple” or “religion” were used to describe the event, reinforcing the symbolic identification between the sports spectacle and the religious sphere.

The Organizers Justify the Event

The promoters defended the initiative by stating that hockey is “almost a religion” in the local culture. 

However, in this case, the expression ceased to be a simple metaphor to adopt concrete forms through the reproduction of religious signs and gestures within an entertainment context.

The episode occurs in a broader context of social changes in Canada. 

In recent weeks, the debate over legislative projects related to freedom of expression and the so-called “fight against hate” has generated concern. 

At the same time, the expansion of euthanasia - legalized under the denomination of “medical assistance in dying” - continues to increase, reflecting a profound transformation in the conception of the value of life and the role of the sacred in society.

What happened in the Quebec cathedral highlights a growing cultural tension around the meaning of the sacred and its place in contemporary social life.

Santarsiero's victims ignored: exposed by the accused while the Church does not even confirm receipt of their complaint

On March 26, 2026, a notarial letter was hand-delivered to the Apostolic Nunciature in Lima. 

Its formal recipient: the Apostolic Nuncio in Peru, Mons. Paolo Rocco Gualtieri. 

Its content: a formal complaint against Mons. Antonio Santarsiero Rosa, OSJ, bishop of the diocese of Huacho and then general secretary of the Peruvian Episcopal Conference, for alleged systematic sexual abuses - including a minor in the minor diocesan seminary -and psychological maltreatment of persons under his authority. 

The file was simultaneously forwarded to the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith, presided over by Cardinal Víctor Manuel Fernández.

It was not the first time these facts had reached Rome. 

According to the dossier, documented communications about the same facts had been sent to the Vatican authorities in 2024 and 2025, with no known public response or record of action.

On April 8, 2026, Infovaticana published the complaint. 

On April 9, the Peruvian Episcopal Conference, presided over by Mons. Carlos Enrique García Camader, announced that Santarsiero was stepping away from the General Secretariat «to dedicate himself to clarifying the facts». 

On April 14, the bishop, along with his Vicar Alejandro Alvites, convened and presided over a meeting with the entire diocesan clergy in the auditorium of the I. E. P. Liceo Español San Juan Bautista de Hualmay, Huaura province. 

There, instead of maintaining the minimum reserve required in any ongoing sanction procedure, he publicly identified his own victims before the presbytery and promoted the signing of a statement of support.

Meanwhile, the victims - formal complainants in an open canonical procedure - have received nothing. 

Neither a notification of admission to processing. 

Nor a summons for supplementary proceedings. 

Nor the opening of a channel of communication and assistance. 

Nor a single word of accompaniment from the ecclesiastical authority handling the case. 

Handling it? Absolute silence.

And, while that silence drags on, the investigated party travels to Rome.

What the canonical legislator did not make explicit

Anyone who reviews the 1983 Code of Canon Law, the norms De delictis reservatis, the motu proprio Vos estis lux mundi - in its 2019 wording and in the consolidated 2023 version - and the Vademecum of the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith on handling abuse cases will find a system carefully articulated around the investigated party: right to defense, presumption of innocence, legal assistance, appeals. 

They will not find, however, a clear and enforceable procedural status for the victim. 

Not because the legislator decided to exclude them - it would be absurd to think so - but because there are principles so elementary, so obvious, so structural to the very concept of «process» in any civilized legal tradition, that the canonical legislator, presumably, did not consider it necessary to spell them out in detail.

Well then: what is not made explicit, in the current canonical practice, simply is not applied.

Upon the legislator’s silence, diocesan practice has built a regime in which the victim:

— Is not informed of the admission of the complaint.

— Is not assigned a file number.

— Is not notified of the procedural phase in which the process is.

— Is not allowed to submit writings.

— Is not allowed to provide supplementary evidence.

— Is not allowed to propose witnesses or proceedings.

— Is not allowed to make even a minimally reasonable follow-up of the case.

— Is not given notice of decisions that directly affect them.

— Is not informed of the filing, referral to Rome, or sanction imposed, except in the generic - or not so formal - terms that the authority deems appropriate.

Imagine, for a moment, transferring this model to the criminal sphere of the State. 

Imagine a victim of a serious crime who comes to report it and is told that they cannot appear in the procedure, that they will not be notified of anything, that they cannot provide evidence, that they will not have a copy of the proceedings, that they cannot appeal the filing, and that they will find out about the outcome, if at all, through the press. 

Can you imagine the absurdity? 

Can you imagine a judicial body seriously defending that such a thing is compatible with a process worthy of the name?

Well, that is, today, the de facto reality of canon law applied to sexual abuse cases.

Dozens of cases, the same pattern

The person writing this follows, along with other professionals, dozens of files opened in Spain and Latin America. 

The dynamic is always the same: the complaint is received, an internal procedure is initiated from which the victim hears nothing more, an investigation is conducted of which only the ecclesiastical authority and, if applicable, the investigated party are aware, and it is concluded - with sanction, filing, or referral to Rome - in an act of which the victim finds out, if they find out, through third parties or the press.

Therefore, this is not about local pathologies attributable to specific bishops, poorly organized curias, or negligent instructors. 

This is about a structural pattern. 

And a structural pattern requires a structural explanation.

The usual justification is the lack of resources. 

There is no personnel. No means. No budget. It is worth dismantling this argument calmly.

First, the alleged insufficiency of resources does not exempt, in any known legal system, compliance with the essential guarantees of the process. 

An overloaded body may take longer; what it cannot do is decide to dispense with notifying the parties. 

The scarcity of means affects the pace, not the substance.

Second, the elementary acts that are being omitted - acknowledgment of receipt, assignment of file number, notification of the procedural phase, opening a bidirectional communication channel - do not require extraordinary resources. 

They require will. 

The diocese of Huacho has been perfectly capable of convening its entire clergy in a parish hall and promoting the signing of a statement of support for the investigated bishop. 

The logistical capacity exists. 

The question is whom it decides to direct it toward.

Third, and perhaps most relevant: the zero cost of a receipt notification contrasts with the enormous cost - pastoral, legal, reputational, and human - of the institutional revictimization produced by silence. 

The supposed economy of means turns out, in the end, to be infinitely more expensive for the Church itself.

The core of the problem: a law without a victim

It is worth formulating the diagnosis with the utmost clarity possible: the current canonical criminal law, in its practical application, has consolidated a conception of the process in which the victim is the object of the procedure, not a subject of it. 

They are the source of the notitia criminis, but cease to exist procedurally the moment that news is incorporated into the file. 

They are the origin of the machinery, but are considered extraneous to its functioning.

This conception is incompatible with three principles that belong to the hard core of any minimally guarantee-based procedural system, and that do not need to be explicit in a specific canon to be enforceable, because they are part of the very definition of a fair process:

1. The principle of audience. Whoever has a legitimate interest in the procedure has the right to be heard in it. 

The victim of an abuse has, without question, a legitimate - and qualified - interest in the procedure followed against their aggressor. 

Denying them audience is not an organizational opportunity decision; it is a structural violation.

2. The principle of contradiction. A procedural truth cannot be built on the exclusive basis of information provided by one party. 

The initial complaint does not exhaust the victim’s possible contribution: new elements, new evidence, new testimonies, contradictions in the investigated party’s version that only the victim can point out may arise. 

Closing the door after the complaint is equivalent to deliberately renouncing an essential source of evidence.

3. The principle of information. Without information, there is no defense, no protection, no possibility of reacting to harmful decisions. 

A victim who does not know what phase their procedure is in, what decisions have been made, what deadlines apply, and what remedies are available, is a victim who has been emptied of any supposed right that is claimed to be recognized for them.

How long?

The question that remains hanging in the air is whether the Church is willing to continue maintaining this state of affairs. 

Whether it is willing to continue handling cases like that of Huacho, that of Lute in Chiclayo, and so many others, under a procedural model that, applied in any other forum, would be declared null and void outright for violation of essential guarantees.

What is not being asked is to mimetically transfer the categories of civil or criminal procedural law of the State to the canonical sphere. 

What is being asked is the minimum: that receipt be acknowledged, that a file number be assigned, that the procedural phase be reported, that a bidirectional communication channel be opened, that the victim be allowed to provide evidence and propose proceedings, that they be notified of decisions that affect them, that they be given a copy of the file when requested, and that they be allowed to appeal if applicable.

The minimum. The elemental. What is inherent to the very concept of process.

As long as this does not happen, cases like Huacho or that of Lute in Chiclayo will continue to cast a shadow over the Church that no statement, no commission, no institutional management can dispel. 

The problem is not communicational. 

It is structural. And it demands immediate normative and practical correction.

Vatican examines the decisions of Martin, Bishop of Charlotte, regarding the traditional liturgy

The Dicastery for Divine Worship has confirmed the receipt of a formal appeal against the Bishop of Charlotte, Michael Martin, for his refusal to respond to requests regarding liturgical matters, thereby opening a process that could review his actions in one of the dioceses most tense due to the implementation of Traditionis Custodes.

Rome will examine the case following the complaint against Bishop Martin

According to an official letter dated February 16, 2026, the Dicastery for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments has received a “hierarchical appeal” filed on February 9 against the Bishop of Charlotte. 

The complaint refers to the prelate’s “apparent refusal” to respond to requests related to liturgical matters.

Although the letter does not delve into the substance of the matter, it does represent a significant step: Rome formally acknowledges the existence of the conflict and opens the way to a possible review of the decisions made in the diocese.

A conflict marked by restrictions on the traditional Mass

The appeal is framed within a context of growing tension in Charlotte, where Bishop Michael Martin has strictly applied the provisions of Traditionis Custodes, the motu proprio promulgated in 2021.

Bishop Martin himself has recently defended his decisions as not responding to personal criteria, but to obedience to Vatican norms. 

In that vein, he has insisted that the faithful linked to the traditional liturgy cannot determine diocesan policy, although he has acknowledged “goodness and holiness” in them.

However, his measures have provoked widespread rejection among sectors of the faithful who consider it a particularly restrictive - and in some cases creative - application of Roman norms.

Charlotte, epicenter of liturgical tension

Since his arrival in 2024, Bishop Martin has been the protagonist of several controversial episodes. 

The most significant took place in May 2025, when he reduced from four to one the authorized locations for the celebration of the traditional Latin Mass, limiting it to a single chapel.

This decision was later followed by new provisions that affected not only the traditional liturgy but also practices widespread in sacramental life. 

Among them, the prohibition of altar rails, kneelers, and prie-dieus for the reception of Communion, in effect since January 2026.

The bishop justified these measures by appealing to the norms of the episcopal conference and to a conception of Communion as a processional act, explicitly ruling out other traditional forms.

Uncertainty about Rome’s response

The Dicastery’s admission of the appeal introduces a new element into this scenario. 

Although it does not necessarily imply a correction in the short term, it does open the possibility that the Holy See will evaluate the bishop’s actions.

Until now, Bishop Martin himself has downplayed the possibility of changes from Rome, going so far as to state that he saw “relatively few” options for the pontificate of Leo XIV to introduce substantial modifications in this area.

Swiss Catholics out of doghouse over Eucharistic desecration

A Swiss diocese has announced that three people who shared the Eucharist with their dogs have not been excommunicated because they “did not act with sacrilegious intent.”

The Diocese of Chur announced in an April 17 statement that it had completed an investigation into an incident that took place at a blessing of the animals held last October 4, at Good Shepherd Parish in Zurich.

“Due to a poor weather forecast, the blessing was moved indoors and combined with a Eucharistic celebration. During this Eucharistic celebration, three people shared portions of their hosts with their dogs,” the diocese said.

Diocesan Bishop Joseph Bonnemain heard about the incident and began an investigation.

“The findings clearly showed that the three individuals did not act with sacrilegious intent. Consequently, these individuals cannot be accused of sacrilege, as they lacked this sacrilegious intent. Therefore, they did not incur the excommunication reserved to the Apostolic See as a penalty for their actions,” the diocese said.

Canon law states that “One who throws away the consecrated species or, for a sacrilegious purpose, takes them away or keeps them, incurs a latae sententiae excommunication reserved to the Apostolic See.”

At issue, according to the diocesan statement, is whether a person can commit sacrilege against the Eucharist without intending to do so.

According to the Canon Law Society of America’s canonical commentary: “The canon envisions three possible delictual situations: disrespectfully throwing away the sacred species (usually consecrated hosts) or scattering them in an inappropriate place, intentionally taking them from the tabernacle for sacrilegious purposes (e.g. satanic ritual), or keeping them for such obscene purposes although they were obtained legitimately (e.g. at a Eucharist).”

Chur’s bishop concluded that a delict, or canonical crime, could not have taken place without sacrilegious intent on the part of the Catholics involved.

Canon law establishes that Catholics who break a law can not be punished if they are “without fault, ignorant of violating the law or precept. However, “ignorance which is crass or supine or affected” does not remit the possibility of punishment.

The diocese called the incident “deeply regrettable” and said the bishop has arranged a retreat with the entire parish team to delve deeper into Pope Francis’s apostolic exhortation on the Eucharist, Desiderio desideravi.”

According to the local website SwissCath, a rosary of reparation was held Jan. 3 at the same church where the incident occurred. The rosary of reparation was initiated by local laypeople and drew about 40 participants.

Bishop Bonnemain, a priest of Opus Dei appointed by Pope Francis in 2021 to lead the Chur diocese, has seen a number of controversies in recent years.

He has faced pushback from diocesan priests after he issued a code of conduct that enjoined clergy to avoid “​​sweeping negative assessments of allegedly unbiblical behavior based on sexual orientation,” and refrain from asking “offensive questions about intimate life and relationship status” or about “previous marriages and divorces.”

More than 40 priests refused to sign the document, arguing that the norms would prevent them from teaching Catholic doctrine on sexuality, providing suitable marriage and ordination preparation, and asking questions appropriate to their role in sacramental confession.

Priests also criticized norms requiring them to “recognize sexual rights as human rights, especially the right to sexual self-determination.”

The bishop also faced a backlash after saying that he would not sanction priests blessing same-sex civil unions, and for his proposal (later withdrawn) that marriage between a man and woman should be given a new name, such as “bio-marriage,” to distinguish it from other kinds of unions.

The Diocese of Chur itself has also reliably produced news. 

In August 2022, a female parish leader recited prayers beside a priest during the Liturgy of the Eucharist at a Mass, prompting Bonnemain to open a preliminary canonical investigation and sign a joint episcopal letter on Jan. 5 this year calling for liturgical norms to be respected.

Last December, the diocese announced that new local legal regulations meant that Church employees would no longer be automatically dismissed if they did not agree with the Church’s doctrines and moral teachings.

In Switzerland, religious corporations are subject to public employment laws. Bishop Bonnemain was part of the negotiations over the new laws in the canton of Zurich, which covers the Diocese of Chur.

The new laws mean that the Church can no longer require its employees to accept Church teaching on sexual relationships as part of the criteria for employment.

German Church defends blessings document after Pope voices concerns

Church leaders in Germany defended a document on blessings for couples in “irregular” situations after Pope Leo appeared to criticise it.

Irme Stetter-Karp, president of the Central Committee of Lay Catholics (ZdK) said that there was no reason to retract the text Segen gibt der Liebe Kraft (“Blessing gives strength to love”) because it merely recommended offering blessings to couples who did not wish to enter into a sacramental marriage or to whom this was not available.

“Nothing more and nothing less. There is no possibility of confusion with the sacrament of marriage,” she said, insisting that the German Church would continue its reform process but maintain communications with the Holy See.

“It is well known that Pope Leo is concerned that a blessing must not be confused with the sacrament of marriage,” Stetter-Karp said, observing that he “stands therefore in continuity with his predecessor Francis, which he has just confirmed when asked by journalists on his return flight from Africa”.

During his flight from Equatorial Guinea to Rome on 23 April, the Pope responded to a question about a statement from the Archbishop of Munich and Freising Cardinal Reinhard Marx commending the use of the blessings document in the archdiocese.

The joint conference of the German bishops’ conference and the ZdK issued the document in April 2025 as a platform for pastoral action following Fiducia Supplicans, the document published by the Dicastery of the Doctrine of the Faith in December 2023.

In a letter to clergy and lay ministers, Marx asked that the theological meaning of such a blessing be explained to those “who still struggle with this blessing”. Ministers who prefer not to give this blessing should refer interested couples to the relevant dean or other clergy.

A blessing is distinct from a sacramental marriage, said Marx said, but this does not mean such couples – who in many cases may have already had a civil wedding – should be marginalised in the church or in the parish. No couple should be turned away, and where necessary, this could also be the Church’s contribution to healing and reconciliation.

Pope Leo’s comments last week emphasised that “we do not agree with the formalised blessing of couples” beyond the terms of Fiducia Supplicans, which he said made clear that “all people receive blessings”.

“To go beyond that today, I think that the topic can cause more disunity than unity, and that we should look for ways to build our unity upon Jesus Christ and what Jesus Christ teaches,” he said, while arguing “that the unity or division of the Church should not revolve around sexual matters”.

Bishop Georg Bätzing of Limburg, who was president of the bishops’ conference until February this year, said: “Even if there are different assessments within the universal Church, I see this practice [of blessings] in the Diocese of Limburg in a responsible framework. It serves the people and, in my view, does not endanger the unity of the Church.”

The document originates in a request by the Synodal Way and later included the blessings of same-sex relationships presented in Fiducia Supplicans.

In most German dioceses, it is recommended or tolerated, though Augsburg, Eichstätt, Cologne, Passau and Regensburg reject it altogether. 

It is envisaged that the revised German Benedictionale will include a “blessing for couples who love each other”.

Presbyterian church stands down fourth minister in matter of months

A Presbyterian minister in Coleraine has been removed from his post but remains “in good standing”, it has emerged.

Rev Ross Collins, who had been at Ballywatt Presbyterian Church near Portrush for 12 years, is the fourth minister to be released by the Presbyterian Church in Ireland (PCI) in recent months.

There is no suggestion of any wrongdoing, and his departure is not believed to be in connection with a safeguarding issue.

Although released from his position, it is understood Rev Collins remains a minister without charge, meaning he can apply for another role if one comes up.

The PCI said: “We can confirm that the minister of Ballywatt Presbyterian Church, Rev Ross Collins, has been released from his charge.

“He remains a minister in good standing in the PCI and is available to be called to serve another congregation.

“In line with normal procedures, we will not be making any further comment.”

Rev Collins was contacted for comment but was not available.

A former minister who did not wish to be named questioned the PCI’s handling of the matter.

He said: “I’m not sure if this is an appropriate way to treat ministers.

“Being removed from your charge is a pejorative statement, so he may face reputational damage from this.

“If he goes for another job as a minister, any congregation will be asking ‘What happened at Ballywatt?’.

“From a practical point of view, he has a wife and children. How long will he get paid for and be allowed to live in the manse? Where is the church’s duty of care towards him?”

Earlier this month, Sunday Life reported that the minister of Richhill Presbyterian Church had been stood down amid an enquiry by the Armagh Presbytery.

Rev Alastair McNeely had been the minister for more than 30 years.

There is no suggestion of any wrongdoing, and his departure is not believed to be related to a safeguarding issue.

Rev McNeely was contacted for comment but was not available.

Last December, Connor Presbyterian Church minister Rev Philip Thompson was temporarily stood down.

In a separate case, Rev Alan Johnston was removed from his position at Killinchy Presbyterian Church. 

However, it is understood he has now returned to his post.

The PCI descended into chaos last November after the PSNI launched an investigation into serious safeguarding failures.

The Charity Commission for Northern Ireland also launched an enquiry.

In February, Sunday Life revealed Dermot Parsons, director of the church’s Council for Social Witness, had left his position. The circumstances surrounding his departure are not known.

Mr Parsons, who had been in the post since 2021, had overall responsibility for safeguarding the church’s congregations, care homes, addiction centres and its ex-offenders’ hostel.

It has been claimed that Mr Parsons and Rev David Brice, the secretary and convenor to the Council for Social Witness respectively, ignored a damning report in 2023 by the then head of safeguarding Dr Jacqui Montgomery-Devlin.

This highlighted failings in safeguarding including a lack of resources and inadequate record keeping.

The PSNI previously said it had received 101 safeguarding referrals relating to the PCI.

It was announced last month that Jim Gamble, who formerly headed up the Child Exploitation and Online Protection Centre, had been appointed to carry out an independent external review of the PCI’s governance and safeguarding arrangements

Archbishop Farrell: A Church in crisis is a sign that the Church is very much alive

Mary Byrne O'Connell, Patrick Byrne, Patrick Hill, John Curry, and Bridget Trench are not names we know. These people were five of the 15 visionaries here at Knock in 1879. To say the least, they were very ordinary, not well known, not unlike Bernadette Soubirous at Lourdes, or Jacinta, Francisco, and Lucía, the three children to whom Our Lady appeared in Fatima. They certainly were not wealthy or influential, if anything they were the opposite.

The apparition here at Knock was silent. Something happened and we have to make sense of it.

In Knock, we have an apparition to ordinary people - people like ourselves, and we have a silent apparition, a vision that we have to make sense of. In a very real sense, the apparition at Knock is a vision to the Church, to the people of God. The Church is the people God brought together in Christ. The Church is the people God gathered together in Christ, to whom God is close. This is the great gift of the Second Vatican Council, its great rediscovery: "God speaks to us as friends," as the Council teaches (see Dei Verbum 2).

Why do we celebrate the Mass in our own language today? Because our own language is the language of the people of God, the language of our own prayer, the language of our lives, the language of our pleas.

Why do we celebrate this Mass around the altar? Because together we are the people of God, and our Lord is in our midst, and journeys with us, as together, we work out where our Lord is bringing us.

After the vision here at Knock had taken place, people and priests together had to work out what it was. It had to be determined whether it was an authentic vision. That was an important step. But, far more important, it had to be owned by the people of God. And Knock has been owned by the people. Today it is being owned by us: our presence here today is not only an expression of our faith, but it is also an expression of ownership. In our presence and prayer here today, the vision of Knock is bearing fruit; the Lord is at work among his people - the Lord is gathering His flock, leading us home (see John 10:3-4, 11; Isa 40:11; 34:11-16; Ezek; Psalm 23:1-4).

It is not just in Knock or in places of pilgrimage that the Lord is gathering His people. The Lord is gathering His people everywhere; He is gathering them in Dublin. As we just heard in the Gospel of Mark, whose Feast we celebrate today, about the seed that grows in mystery, "the seed grows night and day, the sower knows not how" (see Mark 4:27).

A Church in Crisis - A Church that is Alive

The Kingdom of God is alive, and it is growing in ways we do not appreciate. As the parable says: "The kingdom of God is as if someone would scatter seed on the ground, and would sleep and rise night and day, and the seed would sprout and grow, he does not know" (Mark 4:26-27).

You may say to me, "but the Church is falling down around our ears!" And the Church that we knew certainly is! You may say to me, "our churches are empty, very few are going to Mass," and nobody will doubt that. You could point to a 101 things, to say that the Church in Ireland, and in Europe generally, is in crisis, and you would not be mistaken. But the gospel itself asks us to see: God is at work among us. God is at work in all of God's creatures.

The crisis is not a sign that the Church is in decline, but that the Church is alive.

Pope Francis put it wonderfully, "the Church always has difficulties," he said. The Church "is always in crisis, because she's alive," he pointed out, "living things go through crises. Only the dead don't have crises" (Video Message of the Pope's Worldwide Prayer Network, 3 August 2021).

Our Church is alive! We are in crisis, but we are alive! "Only the dead don't have crises." In his wisdom and in the light of faith, Pope Francis could see clearly that it was in the nature of a crisis to reveal what was in people's hearts (see Austen Ivereigh, A Time to Choose in The Tablet of 25 April 2026: 4).

The crisis which we are living has many causes, but its call is clear. It is a call to re-discover our calling and our mission as the Body of Christ. Pope Leo put it like this a few days ago, "Mindful that the aim of mission is not [Church's] own survival" but "the Church... [That is all of us, together are] called to live with confident courage, as a small flock bringing hope to all" (Letter of Pope Leo to the Cardinals, April 2026).

How that is to be done is something we have to work out together - "the small flock bringing hope to all"? Smallness is not the issue. Remember the mustard seed in today's Gospel! Working together is the challenge. Weakness is not the issue. Remember that the power-conscious Saint Paul learned - and learned painfully - that the "weakness of God was stronger than human strength" (see 1 Cor 1:25). Weakness is not the issue: being a living member of the Body of Christ (see 1 Cor 12:27) is the issue. Every single person is a vital part of the Body of Christ. Every one of us has something to give, something that only we can give.

The Church is the Body of Christ, and Christ is alive among us and within us. He is calling us to be with each other in Him. It is ordinary people He calls. I say again: the crisis in the Church is not a crisis of vocations, but a crisis of vocation! Together, we must work out how to live out our calling to follow Christ - our baptismal calling - in the Dublin of today. Together, we have to work out how, we share our suffering, how - together - we can carry our crosses (see Mark 8:34-25), but also how together we can discover and share "the joy of the gospel."

The visionaries at Knock had to work out what they had seen. In that, they were living out their vocation. They were being synodal, ever before the term was in use! Let us not confuse the label with the reality. The visionaries at Knock had to work out what they had seen. Together, with the priests and their bishop, those in the ministry of leadership, they had to work things out.

In our Church today, we have to let certain things go. There is loss in this, but also a liberation: letting go frees us up. The Holy Spirit is at work among us. This is what we mean by "synodality." To use another image from Saint Mark, we are attached to old wine skins (2:22) which are no longer fit for purpose. The "new thing" (see Isa 43:18-19; Rev 21:5) God is creating cannot fit into old structures. Journeying together into the future, and this is the meaning of synodality, means making decisions together and not doing things or making decisions in isolation.

All this involves a change in the style of how we are the Church, how our parishes and communities work. There are things we have to do, if we are effectively to proclaim "the Good News of God" (see Mark 1:14). We will have to recognise more profoundly our charisms, our gifts. And, as a recent Report on the Synod clearly underlines, we will certainly have to actively enable the participation of women in our one mission (see General Secretariat of the Synod, Final Report of Study Group No 5 on Women's Participation in the Life and Leadership of the Church).

What is at stake? At stake is the reality of our Christian vocation, and the credibility of our mission. Last Sunday, in Angola, Pope Leo named it forcefully: "Today we need to look to the future with hope and to build the hope of the future. Do not be afraid to do so." (Homily, Kilamba, Angola, 19 April 2026).

"Do not be afraid!" are the first words of Jesus to those to whom He is close.

Our Lady of Knock, pray for us.

Saint Mark, pray for us.

Saint John XXIII, Saint Paul VI, John Paul II, pray for us. Amen.

Monday, April 27, 2026

A joy and privilege to be received by the Pope, says Archbishop of Canterbury

THE Archbishop of Canterbury has praised the Pope for speaking out against injustice and about hope; has commended working together for the common good; and has endorsed the strengthening power of common witness, in an address after a private meeting at the Apostolic Palace in the Vatican on Monday morning.

She prayed with Pope Leo on this, the third day of a four-day visit that she has termed a pilgrimage, “continuing the journey that began in Canterbury”, and told him: “It is a joy and a privilege to be received by you, together with this delegation from Lambeth Palace.”

Giving thanks for the Anglican Centre in Rome, which she described as “a living fruit of the historic 1966 meeting between Pope Paul VI and Archbishop Michael Ramsey”, she said that that historic encounter continued to bear fruit through the Anglican-Roman Catholic International Commission, the International Anglican-Roman Catholic Commission for Unity and Mission, “and the many relationships of trust that have grown between our two Churches — signs of a shared confidence in the gospel of Jesus Christ.

“In our world today, we are called to live and to preach the gospel with renewed clarity. In the face of inhuman violence, deep division, and rapid societal change, we must keep telling a more hopeful story: that every human life has infinite value because we are precious children of God; that the human family is called to live as sisters and brothers; that we must therefore work together for the common good — always building bridges, never walls; that the poorest among us are closest to the heart of God; and that the forces of death are overcome by the risen life of Christ. This is the vision of Jesus Christ — it must be where we fix our eyes in the years to come.”

Archbishop Mullally is due to travel to Ghana and Cameroon in July, on the first of her visits around the Anglican Communion in the coming years. She said: “Your Holiness, you have spoken powerfully about the many injustices in our world today, but you have spoken even more powerfully about hope. Your pilgrimage to Africa was full of life and joy. The world needed this message at this time — thank you. It reminded us that, despite our sufferings, people long for life in all its fullness, and countless people are working each day for this vision of the common good.”

She told him: “Before ordination, I was a nurse, and that experience continues to shape my ministry. God continues to call me to a ministry of being alongside others in their suffering and sadness, and in their healing and joy.

“As I begin this ministry, I hope to be a shepherd who loves and cares for the Church, who encourages hospitality despite our differences, who speaks prophetically into our present reality, and who proclaims Christian hope with the confidence that the gospel of Jesus Christ remains good news for our world today.

“In our ecumenical journey, I believe the Holy Spirit is inviting us into a deeper practice of hospitality — not simply as welcome, but as a form of ministry: a willingness to make space for one another as those created in the image of God and called to grow more fully into his likeness.

“Already, we receive from one another gifts we cannot generate alone: depth in prayer, courage in witness, perseverance in suffering, and faithfulness in service. In these, our common witness is strengthened.”

She continued: “May we continue to work together in that hope, trusting that the one who has begun this good work among us will bring it to completion. I’m mindful, too, of how much His Majesty the King valued his recent visit, especially the shared prayer and spirit of fraternity it embodied. Please be assured of a warm welcome for the Church of England should you honour the United Kingdom with a visit.”

The Archbishop presented the Pope with gifts: an antique edition (1910) copy of The Dream of Gerontius by St John Henry Newman; a Peruvian retablo — a traditional devotional artwork — depicting the nativity scene, offered with particular sensitivity to Pope Leo’s many years’ pastoral ministry in Peru; and the personal gift of a jar of honey from the beehives in Lambeth Palace Gardens.

This was the first time that the two have met face to face, but they have already spoken in solidarity over calls for peace, after criticism of the Pope by President Trump. 

“It’s the first visit, and I think the first purpose is to start to build a relationship and to pray together; so it’s a spiritual encounter,” the Bishop in Europe, Dr Robert Innes, told Radio 4’s Sunday before the visit.

“I don’t expect there’ll be any kind of deep theological statement issued as a result, but I hope they will talk about the eucharist and ways in which we can deepen our mutual understanding and togetherness so that they’ll give renewed impetus to those other organs of inter-Church co-operation.”

A statement from Lambeth Palace before the visit said that its purpose was “to strengthen Anglican-Roman Catholic relations through prayer, personal encounter, and formal theological dialogue. It aims to deepen bonds of communion, affirm a shared witness, and encourage ongoing collaboration at both global and local levels.”

Before the visit, the Archbishop had asked Anglicans across the Church of England and around the Anglican Communion to “join and journey with me in prayer. Our world needs the peace, justice, and hope that Jesus Christ brings, and I give thanks that our Churches can walk together as we share that good news with the world.”

On Saturday, she prayed in the papal basilica’s St Peter’s and St Paul Outside the Walls. 

Concerning speculation about whether the two would be pictured praying together, Dr Innes said: “I don’t know whether we will see pictures of that encounter, but I was here when King Charles came and prayed with the Pope, and the visual image of them praying together in the Sistine Chapel was very memorable and remarkable. The symbolic impact of these kinds of occasions is what carries the ecumenical movement forward.”

On Sunday morning, the Archbishop presided at a sung eucharist with holy baptism in All Saints’, Rome, the Church of England congregation in the city, before preaching at evensong at St Paul’s Within the Walls, part of the Convocation of Episcopal Churches in Europe, later in the afternoon. 

She also made pilgrim visits to pray at the pontifical basilicas St John Lateran and St Mary Major.

She was due to join the Pope for midday prayer today in the chapel of Urban VIII. She will also meet officials from the Dicastery for Promoting Christian Unity, and will be given a tour of the Vatican Museums. 

Tonight, she will officiate at choral evensong in the Chiesa di Sant’Ignazio di Loyola, where she will commission the director of of the Anglican Centre, Bishop Anthony Ball, as her Representative to the Holy See.

Vatican restricted retired Belgian bishop

The Diocese of Namur, in southern Belgium, said April 21 that retired Bishop Rémy Vancottem was informed five years ago that he could no longer celebrate Mass in public or participate in bishops’ conference bodies due to his mishandling of an abuse case.

The 82-year-old Vancottem led the diocese from 2010 until his retirement in 2019, at the age of 75.

The disciplinary measures came to light following inquiries by the Belgian weekly magazine Humo.

The magazine published an article April 20 highlighting that the diocese will host four bishops following the return to Belgium from France of the 85-year-old Archbishop André Léonard. 

The diocese is also home to Bishop Fabien Lejeusne, who has led the diocese since December 2025, and the retired prelates Bishop Pierre Warin and Bishop Vancottem.

The magazine reported that Vancottem lived with his sister in the town of Arlon and had little contact with the local Church.

“He still strolls through the city streets daily with his sister’s dog, but he rarely speaks to anyone. There is no sign that he is an emeritus bishop: he is shabbily dressed and there is no cross on his lapel,” it said.

The magazine quoted an anonymous source saying that Vancottem had been “punished by the Vatican.” It also noted that he did not take part in Pope Francis’ 2024 visit to Belgium.

Vancottem declined to comment when contacted by the magazine.

In response to journalists following up the Humo report, the Namur diocese said that Vancottem had received a confidential letter in March 2021, delivered by Archbishop Augustin Kasujja, the then-apostolic nuncio to Belgium.

The letter informed him that he was subject to disciplinary measures following a decree signed by Cardinal Marc Ouellet, the then-prefect of the Vatican’s Dicastery for Bishops.

The Vatican imposed the restrictions after it concluded that Vancottem had failed to show “all due diligence and sufficient follow-up in an investigation requested by the Holy See” in the case of a priest who sexually abused a minor and was ultimately dismissed from the clerical state.

The diocese said that when the victim attempted to file a complaint with the civil authorities, she was informed that the statute of limitations had expired. She then contacted the Vatican.

The diocese noted that Vancottem was retired when he was told of the disciplinary measures. 

It underlined that the restrictions related to his negligent handling of the abuse case and not to any criminal or sexual acts by the bishop himself.

It said the Vatican had asked Vancottem and the diocese to respect the confidential nature of the disciplinary measures.

The diocese added that the situation would be handled differently if it occurred today, as the Church in Belgium has “a firm commitment to total transparency and zero tolerance.”

Vancottem is not the only bishop to have been subjected to confidential disciplinary measures from the Vatican. 

The most famous case is that of the U.S. Cardinal Theodore McCarrick, who faced curbs on his public activities in the late 2000s, before he was dismissed from the clerical state in 2019 for sexual abuse.

In France, which neighbors Belgium, it emerged in 2023 that the Vatican had ordered the retired French Archbishop Maurice Gardès to lead a life of prayer and penance in 2021 following allegations of sexual assault and spiritual abuse.

In an April 22 op-ed for the Belgian newspaper La Libre, journalist Bosco d’Otreppe questioned the need for secrecy in the Vancottem case.

“As such, this sanction reflects the stricter measures taken under Pope Francis’ pontificate to combat abuse. However, it is difficult to understand why the bishops’ conference has not been more transparent with the faithful on this matter,” he wrote.

He asked how Church authorities could ensure compliance with a ban on public celebration of the Mass if almost no one knew of its existence.

“More fundamentally, it is in the name of the faithful — for whom the bishop is a shepherd — that the truth must be acknowledged,” he said.

“Hiding it creates taboos and deprives Catholics of information and legitimate means to understand and participate in the life of their Church.”

Soline Humbert felt called to ordination. This Irish priest paid a price for supporting her

At the first World Day of Prayer for the Ordination of Women Priests in 1994 in Dublin, Soline Humbert's banner posed a challenge: "Imagine women priests in the Catholic Church by the year 2000." 

Later that same year, the first 32 women were ordained priests by the Church of England. In contrast, the Catholic Church remains today a cold place for women who feel called to priesthood, such as Humbert herself, and for those who support them, like Fr. Eamonn McCarthy. 

In her memoir, A Divine Calling: One Woman's Life-Long Battle for Equality in the Catholic Church (Liffey Press, 2025) Humbert recounts her decades-long struggle to bring about an end to women's exclusion from the priesthood. 

She grew up in France but moved to Ireland in 1973 to study at Trinity College Dublin. 

That is where she met McCarthy, who was a chaplain at the university from 1973-1983. In her book, she highlights the cost he has paid for supporting women's ordination, including forfeiting his appointment as a parish priest and being out of a job for five years. 

Fr. Eamonn McCarthy met Soline Humbert when he was chaplain at Trinity College Dublin and she was a student there. 

McCarthy is curate in the rural County Wicklow parishes of Holy Trinity, Donard and Our Lady of Dolours and St. Patrick in Davidstown. (Sarah Mac Donald)

"I was 32 when Soline spoke to me about her sense of vocation; it was during my time as chaplain in Trinity College. The church at the time was hard against the ordination of women," McCarthy said in an interview with NCR. 

In April 1976, the Pontifical Biblical Commission found that women could not be excluded from the priesthood on scriptural grounds. 

That report was never published. 

Instead, in October 1976, the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith declared that the church did not consider itself authorized to admit women to the priesthood.

McCarthy recalls Humbert as "an exceedingly bright young woman." She was the youngest student and only woman enrolled in the MBA course at Trinity. 

"There were four prizes on offer at the end of the MBA year," McCarthy said. "She won three of them outright and tied for the fourth." 

Humbert's revelation about sense of vocation threw McCarthy off guard and he sought guidance in prayer. 

"There's an oratory in Trinity. I spent a lot of time in that oratory, giving out to the Lord at what he had landed me into," he said. "One day I was there praying about it, and I noticed Scripture open on the seat next to me. I picked it up and read: 'It is I, do not be afraid.' It shook me. I said, 'OK, if I'm picking it up, right — let's go with it.' " 

After 58 years of priesthood under institutional pressure and being sidelined, McCarthy remains committed to the belief that the time has come for the Catholic Church to admit women to the diaconate and priesthood. 

"Because if you look at the Acts of the Apostles, Chloe was a priest and the Eucharist was led by women as well," he said. 

McCarthy was ordained in 1967 by Archbishop John Charles McQuaid, renowned for running the Archdiocese of Dublin with an iron glove from 1940-1972. 

McQuaid famously asserted on his return to Dublin in 1965 from the Second Vatican Council that despite the talk of change in the church, "No change will worry the tranquility of your Christian lives." 

In this traditional environment, McCarthy's ordination class was the biggest that Clonliffe College, Dublin's diocesan seminary, had ever seen. 

Clonliffe closed in 2019 and the seminary has since been sold for property development. 

McCarthy feels no heartbreak at its passing. 

"It's no harm," he said. "The institution is stuck in history. Christianity was doing superbly well until Constantine became involved." 

The 84-year-old priest's outlook has been influenced by Swiss theologian Fr. Hans Kung's History of the Catholic Church, in which he blamed Constantine for corrupting Christianity into an empire-like structure. 

McCarthy serves today as a curate in the rural County Wicklow parishes of Holy Trinity, Donard and Our Lady of Dolours and St. Patrick in Davidstown. 

He fell afoul of the former archbishop of Dublin, Cardinal Desmond Connell, over women's ordination, having been one of the speakers to address the first national conference on the ordination of women in 1995 in Dublin. 

Shortly before the conference, McCarthy said Vatican sources let the organizers know that discussion of women's ordination was not permitted. 

"The venue had seating capacity for 300 people and, to our delight, all the seats were filled and there was up to 30 people standing at the back," he said. 

"The opening address was given by Mary McAleese, who declared: 'They say the issue may not be discussed. They had better turn up their hearing aids!' With a degree of trepidation, I detailed something of the journey I had made in listening to a woman (Humbert) who had a sense of calling to ordination. Part of my trepidation was the possibility that the church might act against me."

Later during a sabbatical in the west of Ireland, McCarthy began to think a lot about women's ordination. 

"I had been reflecting and praying, and what had come to me was that the legacy Jesus left us was threefold — essentially that as his followers, we would a) keep his memory alive; b) as he had loved us, we too, should love one another; and c) that he would send his spirit to journey with us through life," he said. "In particular, it had come to me that, if the spirit of God is gifted to us as human beings — in baptism and confirmation — surely the obligation on church leadership is to seek to ascertain what it might be that the spirit of God is prompting in people's lives. 

After all, that gift of the spirit of God breathes life into the day-to-day existence of Christians and becomes a distinguishing characteristic of Christianity." 

He penned a letter to the then-Dublin Archbishop Connell. 

"Within days, I got a letter from him asking if we could meet." 

Over the course of two or three meetings, Connell tried to impress his viewpoint on McCarthy and "quoted the Vatican's 1994 statement (Ordinatio Sacerdotalis) which declared that ordination is reserved to men alone."

He told McCarthy he planned to install him as a parish priest in the Dublin area of Tallaght. 

"But before he could do that, I would have to make a declaration that I would support the teaching of the church, which included the statement that ordination is reserved to men alone," he said. "I told him that given the journey I had made through the previous years, that there was no way I could embrace such a declaration."

Connell dispatched McCarthy instead to a very "difficult" parish as a curate. 

Despite his efforts to minister there, the challenges ultimately forced him to leave the position. 

"That Sunday I accepted a bed from Soline and her husband Colm at their home in Dublin," McCarthy said. He stayed for a year and then moved to an apartment loaned to him by a friend. 

On April 26, 2004, Connell, who became a cardinal in 2001, retired as archbishop of Dublin and was succeeded by Archbishop Diarmuid Martin. The new archbishop asked McCarthy about his argument with Connell. 

"I told him of my journey, after which he appointed me to my present position as curate in Dunlavin parish, with responsibility for the area of Donard-Davidstown," McCarthy said. "That was at the end of September 2004 and nearly 22 years later, I am still, very happily, filling that post." 

For Humbert, it's painful to know that her friend's troubles began because of his support for her own quest for recognition. 

"It is not a very nice institution," she said. "The whole point of John Paul II's declaration was to shut down the debate on women's ordination. It was a very violent and forcible response. People were very fearful because there were a lot of denunciations and many decided they wouldn't speak about it. Theologians, religious and priests were very vulnerable, even some lay people like teachers were affected. So, it worked to that extent. The institutional church has been very slow to recognize its spiritual abuse — it does violence to one's spirit."

Humbert co-founded  BASIC (Brothers and Sisters in Christ) in 1993 to promote the ordination of women to priesthood. The nonprofit later became a part of We Are Church International. 

"Girls could not officially serve at the altar and there were big controversies if they were allowed. It was a very cold, harsh climate," she said. 

She notes the paradox that Bishop Donal Murray, auxiliary bishop in Dublin, told her during a meeting in 1993: "It is not God who calls one to the priesthood, it is the church who does. And the church is not calling women." 

Yet he was reported for having girls as altar servers on one occasion. 

"Of course we have moved since that," Humbert said. "But today it is the diaconate — commission after commission, more studying — it's still blocked. Women had been knocking at the door, and instead of opening it, we were told to stop knocking. The door is closed to us."

Leo XIV receives Sara Mullally in audience

Pope Leo XIV received Sarah Mullally, Archbishop of Canterbury and Primate of the Anglican Communion, in the Vatican this Monday, in a meeting marked by ecumenical dialogue and the doctrinal tensions that continue to separate Catholics and Anglicans. 

The visit is also preceded by the controversial episode in the Clementine Chapel regarding the presence and public gestures of Mullally in Vatican spheres.

Leo XIV Recognizes Advances and New Difficulties

In the speech delivered during the meeting, disseminated by the Holy See, the Pontiff recalled the long path traveled in ecumenical dialogue since the historic meeting between St. Paul VI and Archbishop Michael Ramsey in 1966. 

That moment initiated a process of theological dialogue that continues to this day.

Leo XIV acknowledged that advances have been made in issues that for centuries had been a cause of division. 

However, he warned that in recent decades new problems have arisen that make it more difficult to discern the path toward full communion, an implicit reference to doctrinal and disciplinary debates that also affect the Anglican Communion.

A Context Marked by Doctrinal Tensions

The figure of Sarah Mullally is not unfamiliar with these tensions. 

Her appointment as the first woman at the head of the Anglican Communion has generated internal divisions, especially in sectors that reject women’s ordination and her positions on issues such as blessings for same-sex couples or the pastoral approach toward the LGBT community.

These issues, along with other historical differences, form part of the background to which the Pope alluded when speaking of the “new problems” that have arisen in ecumenical dialogue.

Call for Unity Despite the Differences

Despite these difficulties, Leo XIV emphasized that they should not become an obstacle to the common proclamation of the Gospel. 

The Pope insisted that division among Christians weakens their witness in a world that needs the peace of Christ.

In this sense, he took up words from Pope Francis in 2024, who warned that it would be a scandal if divisions prevented fulfilling the common vocation of making Christ known.

The Pontiff added that it would also be scandalous to abandon the effort to overcome differences, even when they seem difficult to resolve, thereby reaffirming the Holy See’s commitment to ecumenical dialogue.

A Meeting in Continuity with Ecumenical Dialogue

Mullally’s visit to Rome, which takes place from April 25 to 28, is part of a series of meetings aimed at strengthening relations between the Catholic Church and the Anglican Communion.

The meeting in the Vatican also included a moment of joint prayer.

Pope recognizes 50 Spanish martyrs from the 1936 religious persecution

Pope Leo XIV has authorized this Monday the promulgation of several decrees from the Dicastery for the Causes of Saints, among which stand out the recognition of new Spanish martyrs from the religious persecution of 1936.

Spanish Martyrs from the 1936 Persecution

According to the April 27 bulletin from the Holy See, the Pontiff has approved the decree on the martyrdom of Stanislao Ortega García - a religious from the Institute of the Brothers of Christian Instruction of St. Gabriel - and 48 companions, along with the diocesan priest Emanuele Berenguer Clusella.

All of them were murdered between July and November 1936 in various locations in Catalonia, in the context of the religious persecution during the Spanish Civil War, and have been recognized as martyrs “out of hatred for the faith,” thus opening the path to their beatification.

The group is part of the cause of the so-called Gabrielist martyrs, religious dedicated primarily to education and belonging to a congregation with a strong educational presence. 

The beatification cause was instructed in the Archdiocese of Barcelona, and its diocesan phase concluded in 2005, after the collection of testimonies and documentation on the circumstances of their death.

According to the data from the cause, several of these religious were detained in the context of the anticlerical persecution and subsequently executed in various places, including Montcada i Reixac. 

Their death is framed within the wave of violence against priests, religious, and Catholic laity during the first months of the Civil War.

A Spanish Layman Recognized for the Offering of His Life

Among the approved decrees also appears the recognition of the offering of the life of the servant of God Pietro Emanuele Salado Alba, a Spanish layman and member of the “Hogar de Nazaret” association.

Born in 1968 in Chiclana de la Frontera, he died in 2012 in Ecuador. With this recognition, his cause advances in the process toward beatification, as his Christian offering is valued in extraordinary circumstances.

Other Decrees on Heroic Virtues

The Pope has also authorized the promulgation of decrees on the heroic virtues of several servants of God, including María Eletta de Jesús, a 17th-century Discalced Carmelite; María Teresa de la Santísima Trinidad, a Carmelite religious who died in the United States in 1926; and María Raffaella De Giovanna, an Italian founder of the 20th century.

World Youth Day Seoul 2027 Announces Its Patron Saints

The upcoming World Youth Day (WYD) in Seoul 2027 will feature five patron saints. 

This was announced by the Local Organizing Committee (LOC) in a statement, in which they are presented as models of faith and guides for young people through the testimony of their lives.

The Five Patron Saints of WYD Seoul 2027

The chosen patrons are Saint John Paul II (1920–2005), founder of World Youth Day; Saint Andrew Kim Taegon (1821–1846) and his companion martyrs, the first Korean Catholic priest; Saint Frances Xavier Cabrini (1850–1917), a missionary dedicated to migrants and the most needy; Saint Josephine Bakhita (1869–1947), a religious sister who experienced slavery before her conversion; and Saint Carlo Acutis (1991–2006), a young man known for his testimony in the digital realm.

As explained by the LOC, each of them represents a concrete path of Christian living in diverse contexts, from persecution to missionary action or testimony in everyday life.

A Selection Process with Youth Participation

The selection of the patrons began at the end of 2024 through a national survey in which young people, pastoral agents, and trainers participated. 

After a phase of studying the candidates, the Local Organizing Committee made the final selection.

Subsequently, a group of young volunteers spent two months delving into the lives and spirituality of the five saints. 

Based on that work, they prepared prayers and representative symbols for each one, with the aim of highlighting their testimony to new generations.

Farrell: Holiness Is a Current Call

Cardinal Kevin Farrell, prefect of the Dicastery for Laity, Family, and Life, emphasized in the statement the role of the patron saints in preparing for WYD. 

As he indicated, these figures help young people reflect on the Christian vocation in its various forms - baptismal, priestly, religious, and matrimonial - and to respond generously to following Christ.

The cardinal also expressed his hope that the example of these saints will allow young people to understand that holiness is not a distant ideal, but a concrete call that can be lived even in contexts marked by difficulties or persecutions.

The Archbishop of Seoul Highlights Its Universal Dimension

For his part, the Archbishop of Seoul, Peter Soon-taick Chung, president of the Local Organizing Committee, noted that the chosen patrons span different continents and generations, thus offering diverse references for young people.

The prelate expressed his hope that WYD participants can establish a spiritual bond with these saints and find in them a guide for living the faith in today’s reality.

Digital Initiatives to Reach Young People

The LOC has launched various contents on the official website and social media to spread the lives and spirituality of the patrons. 

Among these initiatives is an interactive tool titled «Discover Your Patron Saint,» which allows users to answer a questionnaire to identify affinities with one of the five saints.

Bishop of Fresno imposes hands in an Anglican consecration: will he be excommunicated as a schismatic?

Bishop Joseph V. Brennan, Catholic Bishop of Fresno (California) appears in a video circulated on social media actively participating by imposing hands on the elect and reciting the consecratory prayer during an Anglican episcopal ordination. 

He did not attend in choir habit from the nave, as ecumenical courtesy would allow. 

He was at the center of the rite, performing the essential gestures of consecration. 

The material has been circulated by Novus Ordo Watch.

What is seen in the video

In the video, Brennan is alongside the group of Anglican bishops at the central moment of the ceremony: the «ordinand» kneeling, hands extended over his head, the consecratory prayer. 

There is no room for interpretation: anyone familiar with the Anglican Ordinal recognizes the exact moment when the rite intends to confer the episcopate.

That the Bishop of Fresno participates in that instant - imposition of hands with the consecratory formula - is what Catholic ecumenism has never authorized.

The limits of the Ecumenical Directory

Those who minimize the episode will invoke, as always, the 1993 Ecumenical Directory. It is advisable to read it before quoting it. Nos. 118 to 121 admit the presence of a Catholic bishop at celebrations of other confessions as a fraternal gesture and common prayer. 

What the Directory does not authorize - and could not do so without contradicting previous Magisterium - is participation in the matter and form of the rite.

The correct canonical qualification

It is advisable to specify, because Canon Law admits no shortcuts. What Brennan has done is not an illicit episcopal consecration in the sense of c. 1387 - the canon applied to Écône in 1988. For Rome, Anglican orders are invalid (Apostolicae Curae, 1896), so Brennan has not “validly consecrated” anyone without pontifical mandate.

The correct qualification is another, and equally severe:

Simulation of a sacrament (c. 1379 §1, 2º CIC), in the wording of Pascite gregem Dei (2021). Performing the gestures and words proper to sacramental confection outside the conditions of validity configures this type, reserved to the Apostolic See when the active subject is a bishop.

Illicit communicatio in sacris (c. 1365), by far exceeding the limits of c. 844.

Public scandal and doctrinal confusion, which although not autonomous criminal types, are the concrete harm to the People of God.

Apostolicae Curae remains in force

Leo XIII solemnly taught in Apostolicae Curae that Anglican orders are absolute nullas et omnino irritas. 

The Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, in the 1998 Note on the Professio fidei, placed this teaching among the truths definitive tenenda: irrevocable. 

To deny them - says the Note - places the subject in opposition to Catholic doctrine.

Imposing hands in an Anglican ordination communicates, with the language of the body that is proper to the liturgy, exactly the opposite of what those two documents teach.

The asymmetry that hurts

And here comes the question that every Catholic has the right to ask aloud:

Every time the Priestly Fraternity of St. Pius X announces episcopal ordinations - invoking a state of necessity and the traditional teaching on suppletory jurisdiction - the Vatican response is immediate. 

Notes, warnings, reminders that those who participate incur latae sententiae. 

The disciplinary machinery works with speed, clarity, and doctrinal firmness.

Will it work with the same speed when the deviation goes in the opposite direction?

We do not ask that what is canonically not equivalent be equated. The Écône consecrations were valid but illicit acts, sanctioned under the current c. 1387. 

Brennan’s, if confirmed, is sacramental simulation under c. 1379. They are different types, with different penalties. 

What we do ask - and it is legitimate to ask - is that canonical discipline be applied with the same diligence in one direction and the other.

Because the faithful’s suspicion is not paranoia. There is institutional zeal to pursue deviation “by excess of tradition” and prolonged silence before deviation “by excess of modernity.” 

That asymmetry, maintained over time, communicates something that theologically unformed faithful grasp perfectly: that not all disobediences weigh the same. 

That there are tolerated disobediences and persecuted disobediences. And that the boundary between one and the other is not marked by doctrine, but by ideological sympathy.

If Brennan does not even receive a canonical notification, while bishops who agree to consecrate for the FSSPX are punctually reminded of the penalties that threaten them, the message will be as unequivocal as it is devastating.

What would correspond

Being a diocesan Bishop, the case is reserved to the Roman Pontiff. 

The channel is the Dicastery for Bishops, eventually with intervention from the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith if the doctrine on apostolic succession is considered compromised.

The minimum required - before any penal decision - is a public clarification that reaffirms the validity of Apostolicae Curae. 

Not to humiliate anyone, but to prevent silence from being read, as it inevitably will be, as tacit derogation.

Endorsement: the Mullally case in the Clementine Chapel

The Fresno episode is not an isolated fact. Mrs. Sarah Mullally, designated to occupy the See of Canterbury, visited the Clementine Chapel, where she prayed alongside Archbishop Flavio Pace, Secretary of the Dicastery for Promoting Christian Unity, and imparted a “blessing” while Msgr. Pace himself bowed and made the sign of the cross.

Making the sign of the cross before the blessing of someone the Catholic Church does not recognize as an ordained minister- remember that Apostolicae Curae is added here by Ordinatio Sacerdotalis - amounts to recognizing her as such. 

And it does so, moreover, by the second-in-command of the dicastery precisely competent in matters of Christian unity.

Two episodes, two continents, one same question: does the Church continue to teach what it has solemnly taught, or not?

ADDRESS OF POPE LEO XIV ON THE OCCASION OF THE BLESSING OF THE FOUNDATION STONE OF THE “CENTRO CUORE - PAPA FRANCESCO" OF THE GEMELLI POLYCLINIC IN ROME

Consistory Hall

Monday, 27 April 2026

________________________

Dear friends, good morning and welcome!

I welcome with pleasure your desire for the Pope to bless the first stone of the “Centro Cuore”, the new great work of the Gemelli Hospital, dedicated to Pope Francis. The name Cuore (Heart), given to the new structure, offers me a starting point for the brief reflection I will share with you.

In its primary, let us say functional, meaning, it stands for Cardiovascular Unique Offer ReEngineered. In other words, it indicates, through an acronym that is effective in its immediacy, that part of the vast complex that is the “Gemelli” where the treatment of cardiovascular diseases will be concentrated. You describe it as a new person-centred organizational model. It is a demanding challenge, which I hope you will tackle with enthusiasm, collaboration and also prayer.

But the word cuore, heart, for your hospital, means much more, because it is part of the very name of the university to which it belongs: the Catholic University of the Sacred Heart.

In this regard, I would like to recall an important historical detail. When the long-awaited moment came to seek state recognition for the new university, many people advised Father Gemelli not to name it after the Sacred Heart, as that title would have been too devotional. And the founder honestly considered the issue. 

But Blessed Armida Barelli had no doubts: the University had to be “of the Sacred Heart”, because it was precisely to the Heart of Christ that the series of “miracles” which had made the undertaking possible was owed. Gemelli listened to his trusted collaborator, and the name was also approved by the government authorities.

Today, we can say that this choice, which was prophetic at the time, remains so today, given that Pope Francis chose to dedicate his last Encyclical, Dilexit nos – almost a testament – to “the human and divine love of the Heart of Jesus Christ”.

In its first part, it recalls Christian anthropology, which understands the heart as the centre and synthesis of the human person. I would like to quote just one passage: “This profound core, present in every man and woman, is not that of the soul, but of the entire person in his or her unique psychosomatic identity. Everything finds its unity in the heart, which can be the dwelling-place of love in all its spiritual, psychic and even physical dimensions. In a word, if love reigns in our heart, we become, in a complete and luminous way, the persons we are meant to be, for every human being is created above all else for love. In the deepest fibre of our being, we were made to love and to be loved” (no. 21). 

In this part of the Encyclical, you can find the framework of principles and values that underpin the formation at your hospital, a formation which, on this occasion, I simply wish to encourage: the more “Gemelli” grows, the greater the care that must be taken over the human and Christian formation of those who work there.

The central message of Dilexit nos is, however, theological and spiritual, centred on the mystery of love of the Heart of Christ, the primary source of inspiration and support for our life and our work. 

Like an everlasting flame, this love has inspired countless witnesses of charity within the Church, including in the fields of educational and social charity. Among these we may count Father Gemelli, Blessed Armida Barelli and the other founders of the Catholic University of the Sacred Heart.

We know how much Gemelli had longed for the Faculty of Medicine, and we are certain that from above he continues to accompany its developments, especially this initiative of the Centro Cuore. 

With these sentiments, I bless you all and the first stone of the new building, invoking the intercession of Mary Most Holy, Seat of Wisdom and Health of the Sick. 

Thank you!

ADDRESS OF HIS HOLINESS POPE LEO XIV ON THE OCCASION OF THE VISIT OF THE ARCHBISHOP OF CANTERBURY

Monday, 27 April 2026

________________________


Your Grace,

Peace be with all of you.

In the joy of this Paschal season, as we continue to celebrate the resurrection of the Lord Jesus from the dead, I am pleased to welcome you and your Delegation to the Vatican.

Your visit brings to mind the memorable encounter between Saint Paul VI and Archbishop Michael Ramsey sixty years ago, the anniversary of which you marked with Cardinal Koch in Canterbury Cathedral on the morning after your installation. Since then, Archbishops of Canterbury and Bishops of Rome have continued to meet to pray together, and I am glad that we are continuing this tradition today. I am likewise grateful for the ministry of the Anglican Centre in Rome, also established sixty years ago, and I greet in a special way the Centre’s Director, Bishop Anthony Ball, whom you will commission this evening as your Representative to the Holy See.

Throughout these days of Eastertide, the first words spoken by the risen Christ resound throughout the Church: “Peace be with you” (Jn 20:19). This greeting invites us not only to accept the Lord’s gift of peace, but also to be messengers of his peace. I have often mentioned that the peace of the risen Lord is “unarmed.” This is because he always responded to violence and aggression in an unarmed way, inviting us to do likewise. Moreover, I believe that Christians must bear prophetic and humble witness to this profound reality together (cf. Message for the LIX World Day of Peace, 1 January 2026).

While our suffering world greatly needs the peace of Christ, the divisions among Christians weakens our capacity to be effective bearers of that peace. If the world is to take our preaching to heart, we must, therefore, be constant in our prayers and efforts to remove any stumbling blocks that hinder the proclamation of the Gospel. This focus on the need for unity for the sake of a more fruitful evangelization has been a theme throughout my own ministry; indeed it is reflected in the motto I chose when I became a bishop: In Illo uno unum, “In the One — that is Christ — we are one” (Saint Augustine, Enarr. in Ps., 127, 3).

In this regard, when Archbishop Michael Ramsey and Saint Paul VI announced the first theological dialogue between Anglicans and Catholics, they spoke of seeking the “restoration of complete communion in faith and sacramental life” (Common Declaration, 24 March 1966). Certainly this ecumenical journey has been complex. While much progress has been made on some historically divisive issues, new problems have arisen in recent decades, rendering the pathway to full communion more difficult to discern. I know that the Anglican Communion is also facing many of these same questions at this time. Nevertheless, we must not allow these continuing challenges to prevent us from using every possible opportunity to proclaim Christ to the world together. 

As my beloved predecessor, Pope Francis, said to the Primates of the Anglican Communion in 2024, “it would be a scandal if, due to our divisions, we did not fulfil our common vocation to make Christ known” (Address to Primates of the Anglican Communion, 2 May 2024). For my part, I add that it would also be a scandal if we did not continue to work towards overcoming our differences, no matter how intractable they may appear.

As we continue to journey together in friendship and dialogue, let us pray that the Holy Spirit, whom the Lord breathed on the disciples on the evening after his resurrection, will guide our steps as we prayerfully and humbly seek the unity which is the Lord’s will for all his disciples.

Your Grace, in thanking you for your visit today, I pray that the same Holy Spirit will remain with you always, making you fruitful in the service to which you have been called.

May God bless you and your family.

Sunday, April 26, 2026

Who is Sarah Mullally, the «bishop» received with honors in Rome

The images arriving from Rome this week do not seem normal. 

They are a visual shock. 

A woman whom the Catholic Church does not recognize as a priest or as a bishop - because doctrinally it cannot recognize her as such - appears in St. Peter’s dressed in a violet cassock, pectoral cross, episcopal ring, and all the outward signs of apostolic sacred authority. 

She is received with honors. She blesses Catholic bishops in the Clementine Chapel. 

She is accorded the treatment due to a primate. She poses in Renaissance courtyards that for centuries saw legitimate successors of the Apostles pass by. 

And tomorrow Monday, in an audience with Pope Leo XIV, the scene will reach its iconographic climax: two figures dressed in similar fashion, seated at the same level, conversing as equals.

It is worth pausing on that visual anomaly before proceeding, because it is the real issue.

We are not faced with a mere protocol anecdote. We are faced with a scene of the banalization of the sacred. 

And the damage this scene causes is not political, nor media-related, nor even strictly ecumenical: it is sacramental and catechetical. When sacred signs are used as if they were equivalent even though they are not, the capacity of the faithful people to distinguish is gradually destroyed. 

The cassock, the pectoral cross, the blessing imparted to the assembly, the episcopal treatment, the solemn reception, the photographs that tomorrow will open the news around half the world: everything communicates one thing simultaneously, even though canonical documents say otherwise. 

And what it communicates is devastating. It communicates that it makes no difference to be a valid bishop or not to be one. 

That it makes no difference to uphold Catholic doctrine or to deny it in its essentials. 

That it makes no difference to bless in accordance with the faith that the Church has professed since the Apostles or to turn the blessing into an empty gesture devoid of theological content, equivalent to a cordial greeting between civil dignitaries.

This article proposes, in its first part, to present who the bishop is who is being received with such honors - her biography, her positions, her own words. 

And in its second part, to examine what this week’s photograph means for the custody of the sacred in the Church.

Who is Sarah Mullally

Sarah Elizabeth Bowser was born in Woking, Surrey, in March 1962. 

The youngest of four siblings. She studied at Winston Churchill Comprehensive School and at Woking Sixth Form College. She chose nursing over medicine, considering, as she herself has recounted, that the former allowed for a more holistic care of the patient. 

She trained as a nurse at South Bank Polytechnic, completed theological studies at Heythrop College, specialized as an oncology nurse at the Royal Marsden Hospital, and rose to become Director of Nursing at Chelsea and Westminster Hospital. 

In 1999, at 37 years old, she was appointed Chief Nursing Officer of England, the highest position in British public nursing: a six-figure salary, an office in Whitehall, regular meetings with Prime Minister Tony Blair, and the effective rank of a senior state official.

At the peak of her administrative career, in 2001, she was «ordained» to the Anglican diaconate and presbyterate as a self-supporting minister - that is, without initially abandoning her government post. 

In 2004 she left the NHS to dedicate herself full-time to the «priestly ministry,» a decision she herself described at the time as «the biggest I have ever made in my life.» 

In 2012 she was installed as Canon Treasurer of Salisbury Cathedral. 

In 2015, consecrated Suffragan Bishop of Crediton, in the Diocese of Exeter, becoming the fourth woman made bishop in the Church of England since the episcopate was opened to women in 2014. 

In 2018, installed as the 133rd Bishop of London, the first woman in the see that is third in hierarchy within English Anglicanism. 

In 2019, Dean of the Chapels Royal. 

In 2026, elected 106th Archbishop of Canterbury and enthroned on March 25 in her cathedral, with the responsibility of presiding, as primus inter pares, over an Anglican Communion of approximately 85 million faithful spread across 42 autonomous provinces.

The Financial Times has characterized her as «theologically liberal.» She herself defines herself, in so many words, as a feminist. 

Both facts are descriptively accurate and it is worth taking them seriously: they summarize better than any gloss the theological substance of her ministry.

The priesthood that the Catholic Church does not recognize

The Catholic doctrine on the impossibility of ordaining women to the priesthood was definitively formulated by St. John Paul II in the Apostolic Letter Ordinatio Sacerdotalis of May 22, 1994:

«I declare that the Church has no authority whatsoever to confer priestly ordination on women, and that this judgment is to be definitively held by all the faithful of the Church.»

The Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, in its Responsum ad Dubium of October 28, 1995, signed by then-Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, specified that this doctrine requires the definitive assent of the faithful because it belongs to the deposit of faith taught infallibly by the ordinary and universal magisterium. 

The reasons, according to the text of John Paul II, are three: the example of Christ in choosing twelve men as apostles - a decision that cannot be explained by cultural conditioning, given that Jesus distanced himself from so many customs of his time regarding women - the constant practice of the Church that has faithfully imitated this choice, and the living magisterium that has always maintained such a reservation as belonging to the divine plan. 

The Church, the document emphasizes, does not affirm that it does not want to ordain women: it affirms that it cannot.

Mullally was ordained to the diaconate and presbyterate in 2001, consecrated bishop in 2015 in Canterbury Cathedral itself, and enthroned as Archbishop of Canterbury in March 2026. 

Each of those acts, read from Catholic doctrine, did not produce the sacramental effect it purports to produce: the outward signs were performed, but the required ministerial matter was not present. 

This is not a controversial theological opinion nor a conservative position within Catholicism: it is the definitive teaching of the Church, and it has been so long before Mullally’s appointment.

The blessings of homosexual unions

Mullally did not limit herself to supporting the liturgical opening of Anglicanism to same-sex unions: she directed it. 

From 2020 to 2023 she chaired the so-called Next Steps Group, the episcopal committee of the Living in Love and Faith (LLF) process that culminated in the approval, on February 9, 2023, of the Prayers of Love and Faith. 

These are liturgical prayers that Anglican parishes may use, at the discretion of the parish priest, to bless same-sex couples who have entered into civil marriage or registered partnership. They include prayers of thanksgiving, dedication, and God’s blessing on the couple as such.

Her speech before the General Synod on February 6, 2023, presenting the motion, contains the clearest articulation of her theological hermeneutic. It is worth transcribing it:

«This has sometimes been characterized as a disagreement between those who take Scripture seriously and those who are swept along by the whims of culture. The resources of Living in Love and Faith illustrate that this is not the case at all. People have read Scripture seriously and find a difference of meaning.»

This is the key hermeneutic thesis. Scripture, read with the same seriousness by all, would admit opposing readings on the morality of homosexual relationships, and therefore ecclesial unity can be built on that interpretive difference without the need to resolve it doctrinally. 

The pastoral letter with which Mullally presented the new prayers formulates it with even greater clarity:

«We express our joyful affirmation and celebration of LGBTQI people in our church communities. (…) For the first time, churches within the Church of England will be able to do this: it is really a first time.»

And along with the rest of the Anglican episcopate, in the same process, she signed a public letter of apology whose tone deserves to be fixed with exactness:

«We apologize together for the rejection, exclusion, and hostility that LGBTQI+ people have experienced within the Church. Our eyes have been opened to the harm we have done, especially to LGBTI+ people. We realize that this behavior has not reflected God’s universal love for all people.»

The Catholic doctrine on marriage and homosexual acts is formulated in the Catechism with crystal-clear clarity:

«Basing itself on Sacred Scripture, which presents them as grave depravations, Tradition has always declared that ‘homosexual acts are intrinsically disordered.’ They are contrary to the natural law. (…) Under no circumstances can they be approved.» (CCC 2357)

It is true that the infamous Declaration Fiducia Supplicans of the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith (December 2023) admitted the possibility of non-ritual, spontaneous, brief pastoral blessings, not equivalent to a liturgical rite, in which the minister may invoke the good of the persons who approach, without that blessing sanctioning the moral situation of their union and without any risk of confusion with matrimonial blessing. 

But it must be qualified at least that the Catholic Church resisted and that Cardinal Víctor Manuel Fernández, in the Press Note of January 4, 2024, insisted: «they are not blessings of the bond, they are not blessings of the union.» 

The Anglican Prayers of Love and Faith are exactly what that Note excludes: liturgically formalized prayers, approved by ecclesial authority, offered over the couple as such and celebratory of the bond. Mullally’s letter says it in so many words: «joyful affirmation and celebration» of the couple.

Abortion: «more pro-choice than pro-life»

On March 18, 2026, a week before her enthronement, the House of Lords debated an amendment to the British government’s Crime and Policing Bill that sought to completely decriminalize abortion in England and Wales at any stage of pregnancy - that is, to eliminate even the current restrictions that allow interrupting the pregnancy up to week 24, thereby de facto authorizing abortion up to the moment of birth. 

Mullally had announced a six-day walking pilgrimage from St. Paul’s Cathedral in London to Canterbury Cathedral, following the so-called Becket Way, as spiritual preparation for her ministry. 

The dates coincided exactly with the vote. Public pressure forced her to interrupt the pilgrimage to attend the chamber, where she did not support the infanticidal amendment. But what is decisive is not that technical vote, but her attempt at evasion and two prior elements that are worth fixing with her own words.

In previous interviews, Mullally had defined herself as «more pro-choice than pro-life.»

And in her intervention on March 19, 2026, in the House of Lords, she declared:

«I do not believe that women who act in relation to their own pregnancies should be criminally prosecuted. (…) I support the Church of England’s principled opposition to abortion, which comes accompanied by the recognition that there may exist strictly limited conditions under which abortion may be preferable to any other available alternative.»

The Catholic doctrine on procured abortion admits no gradation. The Catechism formulates it with extreme precision:

«From its earliest days, the Church has affirmed the moral evil of every procured abortion. This teaching has not changed; it remains unchangeable. Direct abortion, that is to say, abortion willed either as an end or a means, is gravely contrary to the moral law.» (CCC 2271)

«Formal cooperation in an abortion constitutes a grave offense. The Church attaches the canonical penalty of excommunication to this crime against human life.» (CCC 2272)

St. John Paul II, in Evangelium Vitae (1995), declared with magisterial authority: «direct abortion (…) always constitutes a grave moral disorder.» 

The distance between admitting abortion as «preferable» in limited conditions and rejecting its criminal prosecution, on the one hand, and declaring it «always a grave moral disorder» that the Church sanctions with excommunication, on the other, is not a distance of nuance. It is the distance between two incompatible anthropologies.

Gender pastoral care

In February 2022, from the Diocese of London, Mullally promoted the creation of an Advisory Group on «pastoral care and inclusion of LGBT+ people in the life of our church communities» and institutionally backed the observance of LGBT+ History Month. 

The Living in Love and Faith process included from its origin, along with sexuality, gender identity as an explicit object of discernment. The resulting pastoral care adopts the language of identity affirmation: people are who they themselves say they are, and the Church must accompany that self-definition with care and recognition.

The Declaration Dignitas Infinita of the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith (April 2024), approved by Pope Francis, articulated with force the Catholic doctrine on this issue:

«Gender theory is dangerous because it aims to eliminate differences in its claim to make everyone equal. These differences, in fact, are the most beautiful visible signs of the ineffable creativity of the Father.» (DI 56)

«All attempts to obscure the reference to the ineliminable sexual difference between man and woman must be denounced as contrary to human dignity.» (DI 58)

The testimony of the global South

The most serious opposition to Mullally’s appointment does not come from Catholicism nor from English conservative circles, but from within the Anglican Communion itself, and specifically from its global South. 

The Global South Fellowship of Anglican Churches - which brings together more than ten provinces with approximately 35 million faithful, mostly African - qualified her election as a «missed opportunity to unite and reform» the Church. 

Archbishop Justin Badi Arama, primate of South Sudan and current president of the GSFA, expressly declared that he does not recognize her as a spiritual leader.

These global South churches do not speak from Western cultural conservatism. They speak from a reading of Scripture and Tradition that coincides in the essentials with Catholic doctrine on marriage, priesthood, sexuality, and life. 

Their bishops uphold marriage as the union of man and woman, reject the blessing of homosexual unions, defend the inviolability of life from conception, and maintain an anthropology founded on created sexual difference. For all these reasons they have not come to Rome this week. 

And for all these reasons it would be with them - not with the one who today poses in St. Peter’s - that Christian ecumenism would have any real theological sense.

The photograph and the banalization of the sacred

So far the profile of the person and her positions. Now the real issue.

What the image communicates

Turn your eyes to the photographs that these days millions of faithful without the formation and discernment that our Infovaticana readers have will see. 

A woman crosses the courtyard of St. Damasus in the Vatican dressed in the violet cassock, sash, Roman collar, pectoral cross, and episcopal ring. Cardinals greet her, open doors for her, lead her to the pope’s office. 

She will pose next to Leo XIV. She will receive the honors due to a primate. She will bless some and others, according to the custom of bishops. 

The image will cover front pages, open TV news broadcasts, be printed in ecumenical history manuals. 

And the image will say, without words but with extreme eloquence, the following: before this person and before the successor of Peter, the sacramental signs are interchangeable.

That visual equivalence is false. And it is so in a way that matters, because sacred signs are not protocol ornaments. 

They are what St. Augustine called verba visibilia, visible words: they communicate a theological reality. The cope, the mitre, the pectoral cross, the episcopal ring, the crozier, the liturgical vestments, the gesture of blessing, the treatment as successor of the Apostles: all these signs mean something in the Christian sacramental language. 

They mean that the one who bears them has received by the laying on of hands in uninterrupted apostolic succession the power of orders, the sacramental character that configures him ontologically with Christ the Head to act in persona Christi in the sacraments. 

That power is, in Catholic faith, the only reason why the bishop dresses as he does and blesses as he does. When the sign is separated from its content, it does not remain neutral: it becomes active in the opposite sense. It communicates that the content never really mattered.

How the Church is destroyed without open persecution

The damage is not only that Sarah Mullally is in St. Peter’s this week. The damage is that she seems to occupy a sacramental place that she does not doctrinally have, and that it is allowed - even favored - for the sign to function against the truth that the sign should custody. 

In that the aesthetics of communion covers the doctrinal fracture until it becomes invisible to the untrained eye, which is the vast majority of the faithful people. In that the sacred ceases to be custodied and passes to being administered as diplomatic scenery.

It is a subtle, highly effective, and almost undetectable form of erosion of the faith. The Church has resisted throughout history open persecutions, heresies formulated frankly, declared schisms, brutal attempts at physical annihilation. 

Those threats, as terrible as they were, were recognizable. The faithful knew what to resist, knew whom not to obey, knew what to believe and what to reject. 

The threat represented this week in the Vatican is of another nature: it does not deny the doctrine frontally, but wraps its contradiction in courtesy, smiles, protocol, ecumenical language, and edifying photographs. 

And it does so in the place that amplifies it the most, the visible heart of the Catholic Church, before lenses that will broadcast the images to the whole world.

The catechetical result is devastating. 

The average faithful who this week sees the photographs will draw three simultaneous conclusions: that Catholic bishops and the Anglican primate are substantially the same; that the doctrinal differences between both churches must therefore be matters of secondary nuances or mere cultural forms; and that the positions of the Anglican primate - female priesthood, the blessing of homosexual unions, the pro-choice position on abortion, the affirmative pastoral care of gender ideology - must be doctrinally compatible with Catholic faith, since the pope receives her with honors and shares sacred signs with her. 

None of these three conclusions is true. The three will be adopted massively as if they were. 

And they will be incorporated into the religious common sense of millions of people who will no longer need any dissenting theologian to believe what the visual liturgy of the Vatican itself will have taught them.

The sign confronted with the truth

It is worth formulating it with the greatest possible clarity. Catholic doctrine holds that Sarah Mullally is not a bishop, not a priest, cannot consecrate the Eucharist, cannot validly confirm, cannot sacramentally absolve, does not bear apostolic succession, does not represent a church that is in sacramental communion with Rome. 

All this, simultaneously, is what Catholic doctrine affirms. 

The question that a Catholic may legitimately ask is not whether it is wrong for the pope to receive her. 

Diplomatic reasons to do so exist, are ancient, and are part of a legitimate way of managing inter-ecclesial relations inherited from the Second Vatican Council. 

The question is another: whether the outward signs with which that reception is clothed - the cassock, the pectoral cross, the reciprocal blessings, the episcopal treatment, the location in sacramentally dense places like the papal basilicas - are at the service of the truth of the faith or are functioning, in practice, against it. 

Whether they custody the sacred or exhibit it as mere interchangeable clothing. Whether they preach what the Church believes or contradict it before the eyes of the faithful people.

To that question, this week, one must respond with honesty. And the honest response is that the scene in St. Peter’s, for a few hours, is visually suspending the difference between the Catholic priesthood and its Anglican imitation. 

When that difference is suspended before the eyes of all, the doctrine is not left intact: it is contradicted in practice. 

And a practical contradiction, repeated in images for years, ends up weighing more than any document from the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith drafted and published on a web page that almost no one reads.

The true ecumenism

There exists an authentic Christian ecumenism, desired by Christ in his priestly prayer »That they may all be one» land mandated by the Second Vatican Council in Unitatis Redintegratio. But that ecumenism does not consist in visual equivalence nor in protocol courtesy that dissolves the differences under institutional smiles. 

It consists in the patient, demanding, doctrinally honest path toward the shared truth about God, about Christ, about the Church, about the sacraments, about man created male and female, about human life, about marriage, about the sacramental ministry that Christ instituted.

That path is not traveled by dressing equally those who believe opposite things. It is traveled by naming the differences with clarity, bearing the painful weight that such clarity entails, and working together - in truth, not in choreography - to reduce them. 

The other path, that of edifying photographs and interchangeable signs, does not bring closer: it distances, because it accustoms the Christian eye to not distinguish, and a Christianity that does not distinguish is no longer Christianity, it is a decorative religious vagueness.